HMS Sceptre (S104)

History
United Kingdom
Name: HMS Sceptre
Operator: Royal Navy
Ordered: 1 November 1971
Builder: Vickers
Laid down: 19 February 1974
Launched: 20 November 1976
Sponsored by: Lady Audrey White
Commissioned: 14 February 1978
Decommissioned: 10 December 2010 at Devonport[1]
Homeport: Faslane
Motto: Honour With Authority
Status: Decommissioned
Badge:
General characteristics
Class and type: Swiftsure-class submarine
Displacement: 4,900 tonnes (dived)
Length: 82.9 metres
Beam: 9.8 metres
Draught: 8.5 metres
Propulsion: One Rolls-Royce pressurised water nuclear reactor (PWR1)
Speed: In excess of 20 knots, dived
Complement: 116 officers and men
Armament:

The fifth HMS Sceptre is a Swiftsure-class submarine built by Vickers in Barrow-in-Furness. She was launched in 1976, with a bottle of cider against her hull.[1] She was commissioned on 14 February 1978, by Lady Audrey White. She was the tenth nuclear fleet submarine to enter service with the Royal Navy. She was decommissioned on 10 December 2010, at which time she was the oldest commissioned vessel in the Royal Navy still available for service.[2] In theory she is replaced by the first Astute-class submarine in service, HMS Astute.[1][3][4]

Service

Collision with a Russian submarine

Sceptre has suffered several severe accidents in her career. On 23 May 1981 she collided with a Russian submarine (K-211) and her reactor's protection systems would have performed an automatic emergency shutdown (scrammed the reactor), but her captain ordered the safety mechanisms overridden (battleshort enabled). The crew were told to say that they had hit an iceberg. Much of Sceptre's forward outer casing was torn away; there was damage to the fin with the bridge no longer there; and the propeller of the Russian boat had cut into the pressure hull. This incident was disclosed when David Forghan, Sceptre's former weapons officer, gave a television interview which was broadcast on 19 September 1991. The Soviet submarine collided with was K-211 of the Delta-III class, which on 23 May 1981 collided with an unknown submarine, identified at the time as an unknown Sturgeon-class American submarine.[5][6]

1987 refit

In 1987 Sceptre was fitted with an improved reactor core (Core Z). In March 1990, there was a coolant leak while Sceptre was at Devonport. On 20 October 1991, there was a fire onboard while the boat was moored at Faslane. In August 1995 Sceptre was forced to abort her patrol and return to Faslane after suffering, in the words of the Ministry of Defence, "an unspecified fault in the propulsion system." A defect in Sceptre's reactor was discovered in 1998, though its seriousness was not appreciated until after the investigation of another serious accident.

Scotia incident (1989)

In November 2010, it was reported in Hansard that Sceptre had snagged the nets of the fishing vessel Scotia in November 1989.[7]

Propulsion trial accident (2000)

On 6 March 2000 Sceptre suffered a serious accident while inside a drydock at the Rosyth yards while undergoing trials towards the end of a major refit. The test involved flooding the drydock, and running the main engines slowly with steam supplied from the shore. However, too much steam was used and the engines went to full speed. Sceptre broke her moorings and shot forward off the cradle she rested on. The steam line ruptured, scaffolding buckled, a crane was pushed forward some 15 feet, and the submarine moved forward some 30 feet inside the dock.

Return to active service (2003)

The investigation into the runaway also looked at Sceptre’s reactor problems, and recommended that the boat be scrapped. In January 2002, with Sceptre still laid up, Defence Minister Adam Ingram declared that the problem was "small original fabrication imperfections" in the reactor pressure vessel. He could not say how long it would take to inspect and repair the problem. In December 2003, Sceptre was accepted back into the fleet after rigorous sea trials.

Gibraltar controversy (2005)

On 3 February 2005, Sceptre put in at Gibraltar for repairs, expecting to leave within six days. British officials assured Spanish officials that damage is in the cooling system of the boat's diesel generator, not to the nuclear propulsion system. (Tireless spent much of 2000 at Gibraltar repairing a leak in her reactor coolant system.) Nonetheless Spain's Foreign Minister Miguel Angel Moratinos registered Spain's "firm protest" with Jack Straw, and insisted that Sceptre be the last British submarine repaired at Gibraltar. In addition, Peter Caruana, Gibraltar's Chief Minister, claimed that he had been misinformed about the repairs by the British Ministry of Defence, and that he had learned the true extent of the problems from Spanish sources. Apparently London officials had told him that the repairs were all external, neglecting to mention the diesel generator's cooling system. On 7 February 2005, British military spokeswoman Katherine Purdhoe announced that repairs had been completed; the boat left Gibraltar on 9 February.

Fate

HMS Sceptre was sent to the Falkland Islands to support the British garrison in March 2010, during Desire Petroleum's exploratory oil-drillings.[8][9] [10] Sceptre returned to Devonport for the last time in May 2010 and was decommissioned on 10 December 2010 after 32 years of service.[2]

Affiliations

In fiction

In the Tom Clancy novel The Hunt for Red October, Captain Mancuso claims to civilian authorities in Norfolk that the eponymous vessel is the Sceptre in order to avert suspicion from its arrival in the harbor.

In the Tom Clancy novel Red Storm Rising, HMS Sceptre takes part in a coordinated strike against Russian forces.

References

  1. 1 2 3 Sceptre's Apple Bye, Navy News, August 2010, page 11.
  2. 1 2 "Royal Naval submarine decommissioned at Plymouth". Royal Navy website. Retrieved 2010-12-15.
  3. House of Commons Hansard Written Answers for 3 Sep 2007 (Column 1631W)
  4. House of Commons Hansard Written Answers for 3 Sep 2007 (Column 1442W)
  5. Российский Подводныи Флот (Russian Submarine Fleet) at submarine.id.ru, collision #22 (Russian language) Archived 22 February 2012 at WebCite
  6. Ballantyne, Iain (2013). Hunter Killers. London: Orion. pp. 331–334. ISBN 9781409144182.
  7. https://publications.parliament.uk/pa/cm201011/cmhansrd/cm101102/text/101102w0001.htm#10110298000032
  8. "Argentina threatens to ban firms operating in the Falklands as Royal Navy sends attack submarine". London: Daily Mail. 17 March 2010. Retrieved 2010-03-17.
  9. Larcombe, Duncan; Kay, John; Hawkes, Steve. "Navy sends attack sub to Falklands". London: The Sun. Retrieved 2010-03-17.
  10. "HMS Sceptre Heads To Falklands". MoD news. Retrieved 2010-03-17.

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