Almirante class destroyer
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The Almirante class were two destroyers built for the
Chilean Navy The Chilean Navy ( es, Armada de Chile) is the naval warfare service branch of the Chilean Armed Forces. It is under the Ministry of National Defense. Its headquarters are at Edificio Armada de Chile, Valparaiso. History Origins and the War ...
by Vickers in Barrow in Furness, UK, in 1960, named after Chilean admirals. Their weapons and largely Marconi sensors were in advance of the RN , but their internal layout resembled that of the . They served until the late 1990s. They were fitted with a unique
Vickers Vickers was a British engineering company that existed from 1828 until 1999. It was formed in Sheffield as a steel foundry by Edward Vickers and his father-in-law, and soon became famous for casting church bells. The company went public i ...
-designed 4-inch dual purpose naval gun, which fired up to 50 rpm. The gun was in advance of the standard RN 4.5-inch guns, more automated and reliable than the 3- and 6-inch mounts, but not water-cooled. It was rejected for RN use because of doubt about its sustained firing, the large stocks of surplus WW2, single 4.5- and twin 4-inch guns which the RN claimed wrongly were close to the new 4-inch N(R) in performance, and mainly because it was a private out-of-house, Vickers designP.Marland. The Vickers 4-inch N(R) mounting in Warship 2013, Conway. London (2013)p 174-6 The ships were modernised in Britain in 1975, and decommissioned in the late 1990s.


Programme

Chile decided to upgrade its destroyer fleet in the early 1950s and turned to British yards to fulfill the order. Bids were received from Vickers and
Thornycroft Thornycroft was an English vehicle manufacturer which built coaches, buses, and trucks from 1896 until 1977. History In 1896, naval engineer John Isaac Thornycroft formed the Thornycroft Steam Carriage and Van Company which built its firs ...
;(Freedman 2006) the Vickers design was chosen. The order was announced in January 1954 and finalised in 1955. The sensors were a mixture of British- and Netherlands-made radars. Chile had considered buying a second pair of destroyers in the mid-1960s but instead purchased two s, a derivative of the , instead.


Ships

Vickers offered two similar ships to the Colombian Navy but the Colombians bought two s from Sweden instead.


Notes


References

* ''Conway's All the World's Fighting Ships 1947-1995'' * N.Freidman, British Destroyers and Frigates, Seaforth Publishing 2006
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{{DEFAULTSORT:Almirante Class Destroyer Destroyer classes Chile–United Kingdom relations