Stealth Corvette Comes Into View

December 31, 2009 · Posted in Defence, Industry News 

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After a decade of development, testing and extended sea trials, Sweden has put two of its Visby class “stealth” corvettes (HMS Helsingborg and HMS Härnösand) into service on December 16th.

With a hull made of carbon fiber material, and topside surfaces shaped to deflect radar, the Visby is hard to spot electronically. Travelling at less than 22 kilometers an hour (13 in rough seas), the Visby is practically invisible to radar.

The 650 ton ships are armed with a 57mm gun, plus eight RBS-15 anti-ship missiles, as well as anti-submarine torpedoes, mines or depth charges. The crew is small (43), but the ship can move fast (about 70 kilometres an hour) in all kinds of weather. The Visby had radar, sonar and thermal imaging equipment. The ship is 240 feet long, 34 feet wide with a draft of less than 3 metres.

Propulsion is via waterjets, which makes the ships harder to detect by submarines. The Visby ships can also carry a helicopter, and is equipped with hull mounted and towed array sonars for hunting Russian subs off the Swedish coast.  Marport C-Tech was a major supplier of sonar equipment to the Visby class corvettes.

Five Visby class ships have been built, and all will be in service within three years.

Many foreign navies have shown significant interest in the Visby technology.

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