HMAS Cessnock (FCPB 210)


HMAS Cessnock , named for the city of Cessnock, New South Wales was a Fremantle class patrol boat of the Royal Australian Navy.

Design and construction

Starting in the late 1960s, planning began for a new class of patrol boat to replace the Attack class, with designs calling for improved seakeeping capability, and updated weapons and equipment. The Fremantles had a full load displacement of, were long overall, had a beam of, and a maximum draught of. Main propulsion machinery consisted of two MTU series 538 diesel engines, which supplied to the two propeller shafts. Exhaust was not expelled through a funnel, like most ships, but through vents below the waterline. The patrol boat could reach a maximum speed of, and had a maximum range of at. The ship's company consisted of 22 personnel. Each patrol boat was armed with a single 40 mm Bofors gun, supplemented by two.50 cal Browning machineguns and an 81-mm mortar. The mortar was removed from all ships sometime after 1988. The main weapon was originally to be two 30-mm guns on a twin-mount, but the reconditioned Bofors were selected to keep costs down; provision was made to install an updated weapon later in the class' service life, but this did not eventuate.
Cessnock was laid down by the North Queensland Engineers and Agents at Cairns, Queensland on 9 March 1981, launched on 15 January 1983, and commissioned into the RAN on 5 March 1983.

Operational history

Following Cyclone Bola in 1988, Cessnock provided assistance to 30 villages across 11 islands in Vanuatu.

Fate

Cessnock was decommissioned on 23 June 2005. She was scrapped in Darwin during 2006, at a cost of $400,000 to the Australian government.

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