Military Wiki
Advertisement
HMNZS Resolution (A14)
HMNZS Resolution
HMNZS Resolution
Career (United States (USN)) Flag of the United States
Name: USNS Tenacious
Ordered: 20 February 1987
Builder: VT Halter Marine, Inc., Moss Point, Mississippi
Laid down: 26 February 1988
Launched: 17 February 1989
Commissioned: 29 September 1989
Struck: 6 February 1997
Fate: Sold to New Zealand
Career (New Zealand (RNZN)) Naval Ensign of New Zealand
Name: HMNZS Resolution
Namesake: HMS Resolution
Acquired: 6 February 1997
Homeport: Gisborne[1]
Status: Decommissioned on 27 April 2012
General characteristics
Class & type: Stalwart class ocean surveillance ship
Displacement: 2,262 tonnes
Length: 68 m (223 ft)
Beam: 13 m (43 ft)
Draught: 4.4 m (14 ft)
Propulsion: Four Caterpillar D398B diesel generators 3,200 hp (2.4 MW)
Twin shafts. Bow thruster 550 hp (410 kW)
Speed: 11 knots (20 km/h)
Range: 21,500 nautical miles (39,800 km)
Boats & landing
craft carried:
(SMB) Adventure
Complement: 41 (7 officers, 34 ratings)
Max accommodation: 45

HMNZS Resolution (A14) was the hydrographic ship of the Royal New Zealand Navy (RNZN). Originally the United States Naval Ship USNS Tenacious (T-AGOS-17), the Stalwart class ocean surveillance ship was used by the United States to locate and track Soviet submarines from 1989 to 1997, when she was transferred to the RNZN for use as a hydrographic survey ship. She served until 27 April 2012.

Construction[]

The ship's construction contract was awarded 20 February 1987 to Halter Marine, Inc of Moss Point, Mississippi, under then name Intrepid. Her keel was laid down 26 February 1988, she was launched 17 February 1989 and commissioned as USNS Tenacious on 29 September 1989.

Operational history[]

United States[]

USNS Tenacious (T-AGOS-17)

The ocean surveillance ship USNS Tenacious (T-AGOS-17), foreground, and USNS Contender (T-AGOS-2) lie tied up at Bishop's Point, Pearl Harbor, 1991.

USNS Tenacious (T-AGOS-17) was a Stalwart class ocean surveillance ship. It was originally to have been the USNS Intrepid, but following protests from veterans of the Essex-class aircraft carrier USS Intrepid it was renamed.[2] During the Cold War, Ocean Surveillance Ships patrolled the world's oceans searching for Soviet Navy submarines. Their data was collected using the Surveillance Towed Array Sensor System (SURTASS), consisting of listening devices and electronic equipment that transmit the acoustic data via satellite to shore for analysis. SURTASS is a linear array of 8,575 feet (2,614 m) deployed on a 6,000-foot (1,800 m) tow cable and neutrally buoyant. The array can operate at depths between 500 and 1,500 feet (150 and 460 m).

Tenacious was stricken from the Naval Vessel Register and sold to New Zealand on 6 February 1997.

New Zealand[]

HMNZS Resolution replaced HMNZ Ships Tui and Monowai as the Navy's primary Survey and Acoustic Research Vessel. She undertook various marine survey tasks, including for the Land Information New Zealand agency.[1]

She was named after the sailing vessel HMS Resolution, used by Captain James Cook, RN, during his second and third voyages to New Zealand between 1772 and 1779, thus recognising the extensive hydrographic survey work Cook and his team completed. HMNZS Resolution also provided a scholarship for under-privileged high school students to participate in a 10 day passage on the Spirit of New Zealand, and sometimes embarked university and high school students as part of the 'Students at Sea' program.[1]

The inshore Survey Motor Boat (SMB) Adventure was operated as a tender from HMNZS Resolution.

On 22 February 2011, Resolution was underway off Christchurch when the 2011 Canterbury earthquake occurred. NZ Navy Today said later : '..the feeling onboard was that the engines had been set in full astern with associated shuddering and shaking. It was only when a dust cloud over Christchurch was observed and chatter on VHF soon alerted the bridge team of the enormity of the disaster. With Captain Dean McDougall (CTU 654.0.1, Captain Fleet Operational Support) in an established headquarters on HMNZS Canterbury in Lyttleton, Resolution reported for duty and was subsequently called in to conduct a hydrographic confidence survey of the main channel into the Port of Lyttleton.[3]

HMNZS Resolution was decommissioned at Devonport Naval Base on 27 April 2012.[4]

See also[]

References[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 HMNZS Resolution - Navy Today, Defence Public Relations Unit, Issue 133, 8 June, Page 30
  2. USNI News:Twenty Six US Navy Ship Naming Controversies
  3. S/Lt Dave Jaquiery, 'End of an Era,' Navy Today, April–May 2012, 12.
  4. New Zealand Defence Force - "BON VOYAGE WELLINGTON" - LAST VISIT FROM HMNZS RESOLUTION

External links[]



All or a portion of this article consists of text from Wikipedia, and is therefore Creative Commons Licensed under GFDL.
The original article can be found at HMNZS Resolution (A14) and the edit history here.
Advertisement