Girish Mahajan (Editor)

USCGC Catenary (WYTL 65606)

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Name
  
Catenary

Decommissioned
  
1 May 1995

Length
  
20 m

Displacement
  
67,130 kg

Commissioned
  
April 1962

Beam
  
19 ft 1 in (5.82 m)

Weight
  
75.2 tons

Builder
  
Jacksonville

Namesake
  
Catenary is the slack in an anchor line when a ship is at anchor.

Fate
  
Sold to the United States Merchant Marine Academy.

USCGC Catenary (WYTL-65606) was a cutter in the United States Coast Guard (USCG). Constructed by the Gibbs Gas Engine Company and commissioned in early 1962, the vessel served as part of the USCG for over 30 years before being decommissioned in mid-1995 and sold to the United States Merchant Marine Academy. During her service Catenary was based primarily on the east coast of the United States where she was utilized mainly in a law enforcement role.

Contents

Construction and design

Crewed by five personnel, Catenary was a small vessel displacing 74 tons. She was 64 ft 11 in (19.79 m) long, with a beam of 19 ft 1 in (5.82 m) and a 9 ft (2.7 m) draft. The vessel's powerplant consisted of one Caterpillar D375 V-8 diesel engine which produced 400 shaft horsepower and drove a single propeller, giving a cruising speed of 7.0 kn (13.0 km/h; 8.1 mph) and a cruising range of 3,690 nmi (6,830 km). Her maximum speed was 10.6 kn (19.6 km/h; 12.2 mph), at which she could patrol 1,130 nmi (2,090 km). She carried no armament, but was fitted with a SPN-11 detection radar. Upon completion she cost a total of $US 158,366 to construct.

History

Catenary was one of fifteen steel-hulled icebreaking small harbor tugs that were put into service in the 1960s to replace 64 ft (20 m) wooden-hulled harbor tugs that the Coast Guard had used since the 1940s. Catenary was one of six in her class constructed by the Gibbs Gas Engine Company (later acquired by Aerojet General Corp.) in Jacksonville, Florida. After being commissioned in April 1962, she was initially homeported at Gloucester City, New Jersey, and served there until June 1988 when she was reassigned to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Her duties included law enforcement and search and rescue as well as ice operations.

On 1 May 1995, Catenary was decommissioned and sold to the United States Merchant Marine Academy. She is currently serving as a training vessel under the name MV Growler. She performs training missions involving shiphandling, maneuvering, navigation, and towing, as well as participating in Merchant Marine Academy public relations trips throughout Long Island Sound, the East River, and New York Harbor. The vessel is operated by crews of midshipmen participating in the Academy's Power Squadron, a fleet of power-driven vessels used for everything from fishing to long-range trips.

References

USCGC Catenary (WYTL-65606) Wikipedia