Girish Mahajan (Editor)

HSwMS Visby (K31)

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Name
  
Visby

Ordered
  
1995

Commissioned
  
2002

Construction started
  
17 February 1995

Length
  
73 m

Beam
  
10 m

Namesake
  
Visby

Laid down
  
17 February 1995

In service
  
2012

Launched
  
8 June 2000

Weight
  
650 tons

Builder
  
Kockums Naval Solutions

HSwMS Visby (K31) httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommons33

HSwMS Visby (K31) is the lead ship of the Visby-class corvettes. It was created as a stealth ship, and underwent a decade long testing phase before it entered service with the Swedish Navy.

Contents

HSwMS Visby (K31) HMS VISBY K31 Swedish Visbyclass corvette VISBY going ups Flickr

Design and description

HSwMS Visby (K31) HSwMS Visby K31 ShipSpottingcom Ship Photos and Ship Tracker

HSwMS Visby is the lead ship of the Visby-class corvettes. It was built by Kockums at the Karlskrona naval base, and was the first of four vessels of the class which are designed for coastal warfare.

HSwMS Visby (K31) FileK31 HSwMS Visby 8643087399jpg Wikimedia Commons

The hull of the vessel is made of carbon fiber reinforced plastic, a stealth technology, in order to make the vessel difficult to detect by other forces. A minimum of external equipment is stored outside of the vessel, with equipment such as liferafts being stored inside the hull. This hull also reduces the weight of the vessel by around half. It was intended to be radar silent until it moves within 30 kilometres (19 mi) of an enemy vessel, resulting in designer John Nillson saying of it, "Naval officers fall in love with [this] ship. It's not classically beautiful. In fact it looks like a lunchbox. But it has better maneuverability and can achieve that level of stealth."

Service

HSwMS Visby (K31) HSwMS Visby K31 Stealth Corvette

Visby completed sea trials in 2004. The ship underwent a further eight years of tests by the Swedish Defence Procurement Agency, before being delivered to the Navy in late 2012. These tests included the firing of the RBS15 Mk2 AShM, which took place in July 2012. In October 2014, Visby was amongst the Swedish vessels patrolling in an exercise for finding the source of "foreign underwater activity" which was rumoured to be a Russian submarine, identified by distress call. This rumour was denied by the Swedish authorities, who described it as a "intelligence operation".

HSwMS Visby (K31) HMS Visby K31 YouTube

HSwMS Visby (K31) HMS Visby K31 01058 YouTube

References

HSwMS Visby (K31) Wikipedia