HMS Cardiff (D108)
See HMS Cardiff
for other ships of the name. | HMS_Cardiff_D108_(Type_42_destroyer).jpg |
| | Career | |
|---|
| Ordered: |
| Laid down: | 6 November 1972 |
| Launched: | 22 February 1974 |
| Commissioned: | 24 September 1979 |
| Decommissioned: | 14 July 2005 |
| Fate: | Awaiting Disposal |
| Struck: |
| General Characteristics |
|---|
| Displacement: | 4,820 tonnes |
| Length: | 125 m (410 ft) |
| Beam: | 14.3 m (47 ft) |
| Draught: | 5.8 m |
| Propulsion: | COGAG (Combined Gas and Gas) turbines, 2 shafts 2 turbines producing 36 MW |
| Speed: | 30 knots (56 km/h) |
| Range: |
| Complement: | 287–301 |
| Armament: | 2 x Sea Dart missile launcher 4.5 inch (114 millimetres) Mk 8 gun 2 x 20 mm Oerlikon guns 2 x Phalanx (CIWS) 2 x triple anti-submarine torpedo tubes NATO Seagnat and DLF3 decoy launchers |
| Aircraft: | Lynx HMA8 |
| Motto: |
The third and present
HMS Cardiff (D108) is a
Type 42 (Batch 1)
destroyer of the
Royal Navy.
Cardiff was built by
Vickers Shipbuilding and Engineering, launched in
1974 by
Lady Caroline Gilmore and commissioned in
1979. When decommissioned, she was one of the last ships in the
Royal Navy to have been involved in the
Falklands War.
She was under the command of Captain M. G. T. Harris for the duration of the Falklands War in
1982. During the conflict,
Cardiff's Sea Dart missile system accidentally shot down an
Army Air Corps Gazelle helicopter in a
blue-on-blue incident; four people were killed.
Cardiff made it through the conflict unscathed, while two of her sister-ships -
Sheffield and
Coventry - were sunk (and
Glasgow damaged).
In
1991,
Cardiff was deployed to the
Persian Gulf as part of a Royal Navy taskforce sent to take part in the
Gulf War. On
24 January,
Cardiff sighted three
Iraqi vessels operating from the occupied
Kuwaiti island of
Qaruh. Her
Lynx helicopter destroyed two of the vessels, which later turned out to be
minesweepers.
In
2003,
Cardiff returned to the
Persian Gulf on a six-month deployment as
Armilla Patrol ship. She returned home in August 2003.
It was announced in July
2004, as part of the
Delivering Security in a Changing World review, that
Cardiff would be decommissoned in August
2005. Decommissoned July 2005 in
Portsmouth.