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HDMS Sehested (P547)

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Decommissioned
  
31 December 2000

Displacement
  
260 long tons (264 t)

Launched
  
5 May 1977

Draft
  
2.45 m

Namesake
  
Hannibal Sehested

Status
  
Beam
  
7.4 m (24 ft 3 in)

Length
  
46 m

Commissioned
  
19 May 1978

HDMS Sehested (P547)

Builder
  
Frederikshavn Værft A/S

Class and type
  
Willemoes-class missile boat

Address
  
A. H. Vedels Pl., København, Denmark

Similar
  
HDMS Peder Skram, Mastekranen, Nyholm Central Guardhouse, Royal Danish Naval Mu, Holmen - Copenhagen

HDMS Sehested (P 547) was a Willemoes class missile boat of the Royal Danish Navy which was in commission from 1978 until 2000. It is now docked at Holmen in Copenhagen where it serves as a museum ship, part of the Royal Danish Naval Museum. The ship is named after Hannibal Sehested, a 17th-century Danish statesman.

Ship history

The Willemoes were a Danish-manufactured class of fast attack craft built for the naval defence of Denmark during the Cold War. The eighth of ten ships of her class, Sehested was built at Frederikshavn Shipyard.

The 46-metre 264-tonne ship was laid down 22 December 1976, launched on 5 May 1977 and commissioned into the Royal Danish Navy on 19 May 1978. She was armed with a 76 mm autocannon on the foredeck, flanked by two 533 mm (21 in) torpedo tubes. Six 103 mm (4 in) rocket launchers were fitted to the superstructure, and there were eight Harpoon anti-ship missile launchers at the stern. The ship also carried sixteen mines, two Stinger surface-to-air missiles and Seagnat chaff launchers. 16 mines could only be fitted if the two 21in torpedo tubes were removed and replaced by mine holders. If the torpedo tubes were in place, the mine capacity was limited to four mines. If the four mine holders were removed, two additional 21 in torpedo tubes could be mounted, these tubes came preloaded, from the armory, and could only be reloaded, by dismounting them again. If four torpedo tubes were fitted, none of the tubes could be reloaded at a tender, aft tubes had to be dismounted. The vessel was powered by three Rolls-Royce Proteus gas turbine engines on the three shafts, while there were two GM 8V71 diesel engines on the outer two shafts only to provide low speed maneuverability. In 1999 P547 Sehested, achieved a top speed of 42.5 knots, which were the highest recorded and documented speed, for the Willmoes Cl. ever achieved.

The sharks teeth painted on the ship, were allowed by the squadron commander early 2000, due to the fate of the ship, the sister vessel P546 Rodsten, had crying eyes painted. In 2000, P546 Rodsten won the Cannonball pennant, during the race from Kiel to Korsoer Naval base, with P547 Sehested, thus being the last holder of the champion title.

In the 2000 Danish Defense Agreement (Danish: Forsvarsforliget) it was decided to phase out the Willemoes class, and Sehested was decommissioned on 31 December 2000. She was handed over to the Royal Danish Naval Museum and docked at the historic Holmen naval base in Copenhagen to serve as a museum ship.

References

HDMS Sehested (P547) Wikipedia