List of minesweeper classes
   HOME

TheInfoList



OR:

This is a list of minesweeper and
minehunter A minehunter is a naval vessel that seeks, detects, and destroys individual naval mines. Minesweepers, on the other hand, clear mined areas as a whole, without prior detection of mines. A vessel that combines both of these roles is known as a ...
classes


Argentine Navy

*


Royal Australian Navy

* * – (1986–2001) * – active


Belgian Navy

* *


Brazilian Navy

* *


Bulgarian Navy

*


Canadian Navy

* * * * * * (Active)


People's Liberation Army Navy

* Wochi-class (Type 081) minehunter * Wozang-class (Type 082II) minehunter * * Type 010 oceangoing minesweeper * T-43-class oceangoing minesweeper * Wosao-class (Type 082) minesweeper * Type 529 minesweeper * Fushun-class coastal minesweeper modified Shanghai II-class gunboat for minesweeping, all in reserve and being scrapped. * Futi-class (Type 312) minesweeper / minesweeping drone *
Type 058 minesweeper The Type 058 minesweeper is a Chinese riverine minesweeper developed for the People's Liberation Army Navy The People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN; ), also known as the People's Navy, Chinese Navy, or PLA Navy, is the maritime service ...
*
Type 7102 minesweeper Type 7102 is a Chinese minesweeper developed for the People's Liberation Army Navy (PLAN), and by the early 2010s, it has already been retired from active service from PLAN. Type 7102 is designed to supplement or replace earlier Type 058, which de ...
* Type 057K minesweeper


Danish Navy

* s (fitted for MCM operations) * Holm-class multirole boats (fitted for remote controlled minesweeping) * MSF-class drone minehunters * MRD-class drone minehunters


Egyptian Navy

* *


Estonian Navy

* *


Finnish Navy

* * * *


French Navy

*


German Navy


Kriegsmarine

* R boat *


Bundesmarine

* * * * *


Greek Navy

* *


Indian Navy

* *


Italian Navy

* * ''Gaeta''-class minehunter


Japan Maritime Self-Defense Force

*


Latvian Navy

*


Malaysian Navy

*


Netherlands Navy

* * *


Nigerian Navy

*


Norwegian Navy

* * * *


Pakistan Navy

*


Polish Navy

* *


Russian Navy / Soviet Navy

* * * * * * * * * * *


Royal Saudi Navy

*


South African Navy

* *


Spanish Navy

*


Singapore Navy

*


Swedish Navy

* *


Turkish Navy

*


Royal Navy (United Kingdom)

* (112 ships in 4 sub-classes, launched 1914—1918) convoy sloops intended originally for minesweeping * Hunt-class minesweeper, ''Belvoir'' group (20 ships, launched 1916—1917) Ailsa twin-screw coastal minesweeping sloops * Hunt-class minesweeper, ''Aberdare'' group (87 ships, launched 1917—1919) Admiralty twin-screw coastal minesweeping sloops * (14 ships, launched 1917–1919) tunnel-screw coastal minesweeping sloops * (32 ships in 2 sub-classes, launched 1916—1918) paddlewheel coastal minesweeping sloops * (7 reciprocating and 14 turbine ships, launched 1933—1939) twin-screw minesweeping sloops * (14 ships, launched 1940—1942) diesel twin-screw single-role minesweeping sloops * ''Blyth''-class minesweeper (''Bangor'' class II) (19 ships, launched 1940—1943) reciprocating ''Bangor'' variant * ''Ardrossan''-class minesweeper (''Bangor'' class III) (26 ships, launched 1940—1942) turbine ''Bangor'' variant * (47 ships, launched 1940—1943 only served with the Royal Australian Navy and Royal Indian Navy) Australian ''Bangor'' variant * (403 ships, launched 1940—1945) inshore acoustic / magnetic motor minesweepers * (98 ships, launched 1941—1945) twin-screw multi-role minesweeping sloops * (22 ships, transferred from the US Navy in 1941 under the
Lend-Lease Lend-Lease, formally the Lend-Lease Act and introduced as An Act to Promote the Defense of the United States (), was a policy under which the United States supplied the United Kingdom, the Soviet Union and other Allied nations with food, oil, ...
program) twin-screw multi-role minesweeping sloops * (150 ships, launched 1941—1943) British Yard acoustic / magnetic motor minesweepers * (116 ships, launched 1952—1959) open-water minesweepers, minehunters and mine countermeasures vessels * (93 ships, launched 1954—1959) inshore minesweepers * (10 ships, launched 1952—1955) inshore minehunters * ''Wilton'' class (1 ship, launched 18 January 1972) open-water minesweeper and minehunter. Prototype ship built in Glass Reinforced Plastic (GRP) to same hull design as Ton class and forerunner of Hunt and ''Sandown'' classes also constructed in GRP. * (13 ships, launched 1978—1988) mine countermeasures vessels * (2 ships, purchased 1979) deep-water single-role minesweepers * (12 ships, launched 1982—1985) deep-water single-role minesweepers * (12 ships, launched 1990—2001) single-role minehunters


United States Navy


World War II

United States Navy minesweepers in World War II can be put into 4 groups. First there were the 49 WW1-era s. Most of them were reclassified to serve as tugs, seaplane tenders and rescue ships. The second group comprised the steel hull 2 , 71 s and 123 s that were conceptually similar to submarine chasers ( and ). They were ocean-going, but their primary area of operation was coastal waters. They carried substantial anti-submarine warfare equipment: depth charges, depth charge throwers and hedgehogs and with this they could fulfill merchant escort duties. The 18 s were ''PCE-842'' boats built as minesweepers, but considered unsatisfactory for their purpose and converted to regular patrol craft. Several ''Auk''s were given to the Royal Navy, numerous ''Admirable''s to the Soviet Union. The ''Ravens'' were the first new minesweepers after a gap of almost 2 decades and they were the first to use diesel propulsion. The ''Auks'' used diesel-electric propulsion, because the availability of electrical energy removed the need for additional service generators. At over 3000shp they were also quite powerful and thus relatively fast. The ''Admirables'' again used geared diesels, they were considerably shorter than the ''Auks'' and only had half the power,but they came with lower cost. The ''Auk'' and ''Admirable'' classes were produced in parallel and their hull numbers overlap. The third group was formed by the 481 wooden hull s, similar in size and construction to the wooden hull s. Wooden hulls were especially useful for minesweepers for it virtually eliminated the magnetic signature of the boat. These boats were smaller than their steel hull counterparts, were (probably) not going to cross the ocean under their own power and seakeeping fortunes and had no hedgehogs and only 2 depth charge throwers. The fourth group consisted of 24 s that were converted relatively late in the war, but which were much faster and also better armed than any of the other minesweepers, even after the reduction in armament that came with the conversion. The 3 were converted fishing boats and they are pretty much irrelevant because of the small quantity and lack of impact on design. In alphabetical order. * * * * * – active * * * * Littoral combat ship (LCS) with mine countermeasures module (MCM) – active and future * *


Vietnam People's Navy

* * * {{sclass2, Yevgenya, minesweeper, 1
Class Class or The Class may refer to: Common uses not otherwise categorized * Class (biology), a taxonomic rank * Class (knowledge representation), a collection of individuals or objects * Class (philosophy), an analytical concept used differentl ...
* *