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Post on County-class LSTs

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Hi folks,
I've some blog posts scheduled automatically for future release and the one on LSTs misfired and was posted before its due date. I recalled it to keep to the sequence of the daily "circuit breaker" pictures, which are posted at 12:01AM daily from now till 4 May 2020.

We're two weeks into the CB period. Hope you are keeping well as can be, considering the circumstances. Don't let cabin fever get you down.

My best wishes to you all,

db

Circuit Breaker Day 15 pix: Republic of Singapore Navy Tank Landing Ships LSTs at Bedok Jetty

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Announcements of Bedok Jetty exercises drew me to the place like a clarion call during my teen years in the 1980s. I loved seeing the LSTs beach themselves with their enormous bow doors wide open. RSS Excellence L202 (above) and Resolution L204 (below) seen at the landing site a few hundred metres east of the jetty on separate beaching exercises. Sorry for the poor picture quality. The print pictures, which were taken when I was a teen, have faded with age and I'm not a good photographer to begin with.  


One activity I enjoyed during my teenage years in the 1980s was tracking Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) exercises at Bedok Jetty, which was about 3km from my home. I'd watched the Sunday evening television news for the weekly announcement of SAF exercises to see if there was anything scheduled to take place at Bedok Jetty. I'd get quite excited whenever the public was advised that car parks F1 and F2 near the Bedok Jetty would be closed as that would mean the SAF would be there.

If it was a school holiday and if I'd cleared my homework during a school week, I would walk or cycle to the jetty to see what was happening. I saw Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN) Landing Ship Tanks (LSTs) beached there on several occasions. Sentries usually set up cordons east and west of the jetty at bridges that led over canals to prevent passersby from getting too close. But if you were patient, sometimes you'd luck out when the sentries removed the white tape while the LST was STILL ashore. This usually took place in the late afternoon. One suspects the sentries opened the cycling track and foot path as they wanted to return to camp.

Over the years, I saw all five active LSTs beached there or offshore. A sixth LST was mothballed off the Serapong golf course on Sentosa, opposite Pulau Brani which was then the RSN's main naval base.

Every tank landing ship was different. I liked RSS Endurance L201 the most because she was the only LST with three gun tubs on the bow (only one gun tub had a Bofors 40mm L/70, the rest were vacant). Excellence L202 was unique as she had a helideck at her stern while Intrepid L203 had an enlarged blockhouse superstructure that gave the LST a distinctive silhouette. Resolution L204 was little changed from her 1970s appearance while Persistence L205 also had a renovated bridge and was said to be a command ship. I remember making a trip to the old National Library to photocopy the Singapore entry for Jane's Fighting Ships for information on the RSN. Singapore's navy was (and still is) small compared to other naval forces and it did not take long to get yourself familiar with the Missile Gunboats (MGBs), Patrol Craft "A" and "B" class, Coastal Patrol Craft (CPCs), the LSTs and Ramp Powered Lighters (RPLs) because that was all Singapore had back then. 

Here we see Excellence L202 beached at Bedok Jetty one lazy weekday afternoon. Sadly I didn't date the pictures at the time but this must've been in the late 1980s. Note the white tape draped over comms cord in the picture below to form a token cordon, which yours truly happily breached once the ramp was up, the sentries had disappeared and it was clear the LST was about to sail away.

The LSTs were then the RSN's largest warships. It was quite a sight seeing 100 metres of LST going astern with the help of a LCVP and a stern anchor (the ship reeled in the stern anchor chain to pull the bow off the beach). The ship's PA would cackle with some order, which could not be heard clearly from shore. Door hinges would creak as the ramp was raised and clam shell doors shut slowly. A puff of smoke from the diesel exhaust vents on the side of the hull showed the engine room was ready to move slow astern. Muddy eddies would swirl round the bow as the LST pulled off the sandy bottom, gaining speed once her flat bottom moved into deeper water as the hardworking LCVP acted like a tugboat to guide the mothership astern safely.

In the fading evening night, Excellence would point her bow to the sea lanes in the Singapore Strait and cruise away silently, her job done at the Bedok Jetty.
Some crew from RSS Excellence crew (in civvie) appear to be booking in from shore. I crossed the cordon (white tape in foreground) once the ramp was up and the LST was about to pull itself off the beach.



This particular beaching exercise seemed to be supported by a Coastal Patrol Craft. All I had was an autofocus camera with minimal zoom so the name of that CPC is lost to history. Note the LCVP (above the right dinghy) returning to the LST.

Circuit breaker Day 16 pix: Republic of Singapore Navy display at the National Day Carnival 21

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Vital Force:This single picture shows you how small the Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN) was in August 1986. The 11 fast craft seen here off Bedok Jetty made up just under half of the RSN's active strength of 24 frontline fast craft. With about eight hulls (30%) in refit or under maintenance at any one time, this left a meagre force for the seaward defence of a maritime nation that was (and still is) heavily dependent on seaborne trade. The Sea Wolf-class Missile Gunboats (Lürssen TNC45) with a main armament of five Gabriel anti-ship missiles (below) were then the pride of the Navy.

The Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN) turned up in strength at the 1986 National Day Carnival held near the Bedok Jetty to mark Singapore's 21st year of independence. 

The Navy anchored more than half of its active strength of 24 fast craft off East Coast Park in a show of force that was then unprecedented. Fourteen RSN fast craft took part: Six Coastal Patrol Craft (drawn from two squadrons of 12 CPCs), four Missile Gunboats (out of six), four Patrol Craft (out of six). The tank landing ship, RSS Excellence L202, beached itself near the Bedok Jetty as an exhibition site.

For Singaporeans who never saw their Navy up close, the double lines of fast craft anchored close to shore made an impressive sight. Visitors were brought out to sea on Ramp Powered Lighters (RPLs) for a closer look at the warships as RSN officers gave them a guided tour of the warships using a microphone.

Looking back, the RSN was at a pivotal moment in 1986. A new type of fast missile craft called Missile Corvettes had been ordered under Project S. Political office holders were now enlightened to the importance of the Navy and were prepared to give the RSN renewed emphasis. 

Every ship you see here has been replaced in a new, invigorated Navy that builds on the efforts and sacrifices of hardworking RSN pioneers from a different era. We honour them all.

 Swift-class CPCs backlit by the morning sun.
A 20mm Oerlikon, aimed by a spiderweb sight and Mark1 eyeball. The gun was fitted on the CPCs and Vosper Patrol Craft "A" and "B" classes.
The 1986 National Day Carnival marked the first (and only?) time the RSN displayed a County-class LST in the up-gunned configuration. RSS Excellence had two Bofors 40mm L/70 guns and two Oerlikon 20mm cannon added on deck to complement its usual armament of a single 40mm Bofors on the bow plus about six pintle-mounted 12.7mm MGs around the ship (two bow, two side of bridge, two at the stern). Note how the low tide has exposed the steep beach gradient. I took this shot early in the morning after walking to the Bedok Jetty from home and returned in the afternoon to queue up to visit the LST. 

After many trips stalking the LSTs at Bedok Jetty, my visit to Excellence was my first time aboard a tank landing ship. The trip was awesome and the RSN ambassadors did a splendid job hosting the public. Thank you for forging such a positive first impression which I fondly remember more than 30 years on. 

NOTE: So Singapore has extended the circuit breaker for four more weeks till 1 June 2020. I've no problem sustaining the daily photos till then. If there's something in particular you want to see, please drop me a line in the comments or email. Only unclassified platforms and systems please!  :-)

Circuit breaker Day 17 pix: Decommissioned Republic of Singapore Navy LSTs

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Decommissioned County-class tank landing ships were moored at the Republic of Singapore Navy's Changi Naval Base (CNB). RSS Endurance L201 is seen here tied up to seaward of RSS Excellence L202, the latter LST identifiable by her large deck crane.

It should be obvious by now that I was quite fond of the old RSN LSTs which United States Navy sailors nicknamed "large slow targets" during WW2. Yes, they were old. Yes, their flat bottom gave them a lively ride even in moderate seas. Their heads discharged waste straight to the sea. But I think the old LSTs had character and I never got tired of looking at them.

Thanks to the LST crews, the SAF never faced the problem of a foreign nation impounding our armoured vehicles. The old LSTs carried interesting cargo too on some of their voyages.... usually unloaded at night near Bedok Jetty (Tuas Naval Base wasn't built back then).

This picture was taken on 21 May 2004 when then-Prime Minister Goh Chok Tong officially opened CNB, the RSN's newest naval base.

The next day's newspaper left bittersweet memories because I got two Page 1 bylines - which is quite rare for a journalist to achieve. The opening of CNB was a happy story. The death of Republic of Singapore Air Force F-16 pilot Lieutenant Brandon "Chip" Loo was the other Page 1 story. For me, it was never easy writing about Singapore Armed Forces training deaths : (

Circuit breaker Day 18 pix: Republic of Singapore Navy RSN Changi Naval Base sail past 2004

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RSS Resolution: Don't let the empty boat davits fool you. Tonne for tonne, the Singapore Navy's Endurance-class tank landing ships (RSS Resolution seen here) can carry more landing craft than any other amphib. In reality, the Endurance LST should be classed as a Landing Platform Dock (LPD). Note the winches and reinforced hull strake, which are yet another fitted-for-but-not-with feature that characterises many RSN warships. I hope Fleet RSN will allow Endurance to be photographed at least once before her retirement with all the bells and whistles attached to show people what she is truly capable of.

On Friday 21 May 2004, the Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN) held a sail past at Changi Naval Base to mark its official opening that afternoon by then Prime Minister Mr Goh Chok Tong.

All RSN ship types took part. We present the CNB official opening sail past, with ships arranged in the sail past order.
RSS Valour:Before the Formidable-class stealth frigates arrived in 2007, Victory-class Missile Corvettes formed the Navy's sharp end of its surface fleet. In 2004, the MCVs retained their ASW suite that comprised a variable depth sonar and two triple Whitehead A.244S torpedo tubes. The 30-year-old MCVs are now the oldest RSN sirface ships. The ASW gear was removed during an upgrade and replaced by a ScanEagle UAV system. This MCV is fitted-for-but-not-with something that can be added to its superstruture in front of the bridge wings.
RSS Sea Wolf: In their time, the Sea Wolf-class Missile Gunboats (Lürssen TNC45) carried the heaviest missile armament among RSN warships. You're looking at an open secret here. This MGB is fitted-for-but-not-with another two Gabriel anti-ship missiles. Now that the MGBs have been retired, do note the extra Gabriel missile pedestal to the right of the fourth sailor from the stern. Max missile warload for MGBs was four Gabriels and up to eight Harpoons. In comparison, MCVs could carry up to eight Harpoons. 

Though the Gabriels had a shorter range, the RSN liked the weapon as it was just the thing needed for anti-ship sweeps in congested waters as the semi-automatic command line-of-sight guidance from the open bridge gave the MGB control of the Gabriel when merchant ships were nearby. The missile operator guided the missile by tracking a flare on its tail. Harpoon's launch and leave feature made it better suited for open waters. The Formidable-class FFS take the fitted-for-but-not-with approach to a new level with a max anti-ship missile warload twice that of the MGBs. 
Even in daylight, the RSN's fast attack craft (above) are small and hard to detect. Imagine meeting this bunch during a night encounter exercise in congested littoral waters.
RSS Gallant (above) and RSS Sovereignty:The RSN had two types of Fearless-class Patrol Vessels. The Anti-submarine Patrol Vessel (APV) was equipped with a hull-mounted sonar and two triple Whitehead A.244S torpedo tubes while the Patrol Vessel variant lacked the ASW suite. The APVs and PVs had different deck fittings.   

RSS Bedok:The Bedok-class mine countermeasure vessels (MCMVs) is a tropicalised and customised variant of Sweden's Landsort-class MCMV. The Bofors 40mm L/70 A-gun seen here has been replaced by a 25mm Bushmaster RCWS. Future MCMVs may be optionally manned. 
Challenger-class submarine:The RSN's oldest boats are its Challenger-class submarines, which first entered service with the Royal Swedish Navy around 1967/68. The effort and assets required to hunt and successfully persecute a single submarine is often out of proportion to manpower and size of the submarine itself. Even in the shallow waters of the South China Sea, a submerged and skilfully handled SSK is hard to find. [Tip for those photographing surfaced subs: Frame the sub so you can get the tail fin too.] 
Here we see the RSN in May 2004, haze grey and underway. A stirring sight indeed.

Republic of Singapore Air Force RSAF new Airbus H225M helicopter

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Engineers and team members from Singapore's Defence Science & Technology Agency (DSTA) H225M project team pose with a naked Airbus H225M medium lift helicopter. Must've been pre-COVID-19 as social distancing hasn't kicked in yet.

Working closely with the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF), DSTA's H225M project team has looked at supporting the new helicopter throughout its life cycle. 

DSTA said: "For the acquisition of the H225M medium lift helicopter, the DSTA team incorporated the display of flight information onto the helmet-mounted display to reduce the pilots’ workload, and further streamlined the new helicopter’s scheduled maintenance requirements."

Please choose a nice colour scheme for the RSAF's new H225M. Delivery could start as early as this year!

Help with identifying RSN officer, RSS Excellence L202, August 1986

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Any idea who this Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN) officer is? The photo was taken on the morning of Sunday 10 August 1986. There can't be that many Singhs in the Navy who were onboard RSS Excellence L202 for the National Day Carnival 1986. I've always wondered who he is. At the time I felt he "spoiled" the picture as I wanted the LST with nobody in the frame. But I grew to appreciate the unknown officer because he gives a sense of scale to those huge bow doors.


Circuit breaker Day 19 pix: National Day 2000 Maritime Review

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We continue with our daily spread of Singapore Armed Forces pictures with this selection from the National Day 2000 Maritime Review 20 years ago off Marina South, which some of you asked for. I hope these pictures, shared during the COVID-19 circuit breaker period, will bring you something to look forward to and stave off boredom. 

Am following closely Singapore's pandemic public communications and engagement efforts and will write something in due course. Am also concerned about SAF SAVER, particularly the erosion in value following the stock market meltdown, as well as employability issues for post-SAF careers and NSFs and will share some thoughts at the appropriate time. The health and wellbeing of SAF detachments overseas is also something I look at daily.

And yes, of course am concerned about the impact of the coronavirus on the community in Singapore, whatever passport you hold.

After this batch of RSN pictures, we'll swing back to the RSAF and Army. Tomorrow's update: Bloodhound SAMs at Missile Site Alpha. Take care everyone.

RSS Resolution led the National Day 2000 Maritime Review with a Super Puma on deck. The sail past of 36 vessels from the Republic of Singapore Navy and Police Coast Guard stretched more than 5km long.
RSS Perseverance (former casino ship Lowland Lancer, former Royal Fleet Auxiliary Sir Lancelot) took part with a Fennec on her helideck. The Landing Ship Logistics (LSL) was fitted for but not with a heavy anti-aircraft armament of four Simbad SAM launchers, one covering each quarter. Portside Simbad launch stations are visible - the square block aft of the for'ard crane and the slightly raised platform on the helideck in front of the Fennec's nose. Sadly,  Percy (as she was fondly known by the Fleet) was sold to defence contractor Glenn Defense Marine Asia in December 2003. This was a year before the December 2004 Boxing Day tsunami saw three Endurance-class LSTs deployed to Meulaboh, Indonesia. One other LST was in the Gulf, which marked the first time 191 SQN sent all four LSTs overseas for concurrent operations.

Victory-class Missile Corvettes appeared for the first time with their full battery of eight Harpoon missiles. The MCVs are usually seen with two to four Harpoons. Vigilance (90, above) and Valour (89, below) seen here. A trio of Republic of Singapore Air Force Fokker 50 Mk2S Enforcers from 121 Squadron reminded spectators of the maritime element in RSAF air ops.

Missile Gunboats RSS Sea Dragon (P78, above) and Sea Lion showing enhancements from a mid-life upgrade. Note that the orientation of Harpoon missiles is the reverse of that on the MCVs: portside then starboard.

Successive classes of Singapore Navy fast craft have grown progressively larger. Compare and contrast the 1970s vintage MGB with the 1990s era PV. The MGBs were, however, faster, more heavily armed and better protected by EW than the PVs. There is little doubt which would have remained afloat in a MGB versus PV shootout.
RSS Fearless (94), name ship of the Fearless-class Patrol Vessels, displayed a prominent bin-shaped sensor on her mast and torpedo tubes, which Freedom (86) did not have.

Mine countermeasure vessels (MCMVs) like RSS Punggol (M108) brought up the rear of the RSN ships which sailed in line astern formation. Interesting placement for the MCMV. During operations, the reverse would be the case as MCMVs would sweep ahead of the Fleet to clear sea mines. Hence their motto: Safe In My Wake.

RSN displayed its submarine for the first time
RSS Conqueror, the first RSN submarine to arrive in Singapore, made her first public appearance at the Maritime Review after the surface ships sailed past. The submarine announced her presence with a smoke flare and what looks like a periscope....
 Then her conning tower broke the surface...
There was an audible gasp from spectators and a ripple of excitement among the crowd as the sub appeared.
 Sub ahoy!



Circuit breaker Day 20 pix: Bloodhound SAM Site Seletar

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This aerial view of RAF Seletar show a Bloodhound missile site operated by Royal Air Force (RAF) 65 (SAM) Squadron in the 1960s. It was contributed by a former British serviceman who served in Singapore. The Bloodhound SAMs appear to be distributed in clusters of four, with a total of nine clusters visible. 

The 65 (SAM) SQN site at RAF Seletar was known as Missile Site One. Here're some views of MS1 seen from the Johor Strait. Pictures are from the National Archives of Singapore.

The Bloodhound site was renamed Missile Site Alpha after the Singapore Air Defence Command, the precursor to the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF), took over the RAF Bloodhounds.

The Bloodhound SAM was guided by the Type 87 Scorpion target illumination radar, visible here towering over the missile sections. 

Here's an old article I wrote on RSAF Bloodhound missile sites.


Mindef does 'national service' too

In land-scarce Singapore, even the Ministry of Defence (Mindef) performs "national service" when it gives up defence land that can be put to better uses. -My Paper

By David Boey

Thu, Mar 28, 2013
My Paper

SINGAPORE - In land-scarce Singapore, even the Ministry of Defence (Mindef) performs "national service" when it gives up defence land that can be put to better uses.

One example is the ITE College Central campus in Ang Mo Kio.

It sits on real estate once protected by Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) sentries, high fences and barbed wire, but is now an open campus whose sports facilities, FairPrice supermarket and restaurants have added much value to residents just across the road.

More than just four walls and a ceiling, the air-conditioned, Internet-enabled classrooms and well- equipped teaching facilities - you can find a Boeing 737 airliner inside, used as a teaching aid for aero-nautical-engineering students - are matched with an open concept design that encourages residents to enliven the campus.

This represents a new paradigm for school facilities that were once dormant after school hours, dead on weekends behind locked gates.

The decision to shape ITE College Central in this way underlines more than just our Government's commitment to, and support for, nurturing the next generation of industry professionals.

The very existence of the campus on former Mindef land indicates that space can be reallocated for different national needs within our lifetime, provided that we invest in good planning that ensures concurrent and competing demands for living space are weighed carefully.

The roughly 10.6ha of land taken from the SAF's Amoy Quee Camp to build the ITE has a colourful past.

The land formed part of the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) launch site for Bloodhound Mark II surface-to-air missiles and was once part of Singapore's largest pineapple plantation - run by the SAF. Amoy Quee Camp is still there, just downsized after some defence land was allocated for education purposes.

The Bloodhound launch site in Ang Mo Kio, known as Missile Site Bravo, was one of three air- force sites armed with missiles that could shoot down hostile aircraft up to 80km away.

Missile Site Bravo was developed in 1972 when defence planners at the then Ministry of Interior and Defence (now Mindef) recommended that Bloodhounds be deployed to two other launch sites, apart from the original Bloodhound base in Seletar.

Defence planners reasoned that Singapore should avoid putting all its eggs in one basket at Missile Site Alpha in Seletar, so land was set aside for missile sites Bravo in Ang Mo Kio and Charlie in Lim Chu Kang (next to Nanyang Technological University), for the air force to operate some 60 Bloodhound missiles.

Seletar was the place where Britain's Royal Air Force deployed all its Bloodhounds before British forces withdrew from Singapore. The Bloodhound missile launchers were surrounded by open land several hundred metres from the fenceline. The generous footprint around each missile site was there for a purpose.

When launched, each 8.5m- long Bloodhound was propelled into the air by a pair of ramjet motors and four powerful boost rocket motors which pushed it to twice the speed of sound.

The boosters were designed to break away from the missile once their job of getting it airborne was done. Vacant land ringed Bloodhound launch pads as you would not want missile boosters, each several metres long, falling onto populated areas.

Bloodhound missiles served Singapore for 20 years till they were phased out on April 1, 1990. Thanks to astute planning two decades back, the landscape in this corner of Ang Mo Kio has been transformed beyond recognition, with Nanyang Polytechnic and now ITE College Central built on part of the RSAF missile base.

This year, while more than 10,000 ITE students and more than 1,000 staff have moved into their advanced-learning venue at ITE College Central, few may realise that the campus would not have reached fruition if government departments had clung on to historical land-use parameters.

The seed for the growth of ITE teaching facilities was planted 20 years ago, when government planners set their eyes on the future, which is our today.

Circuit breaker Day 21 pix: 106mm Recoilless Rifle and Scout Jeeps

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Gun demo:A106mm Recoilless Rifle crew at the 4 SIR Family Day in the early 1980s. The 106 could be also removed from the jeep and operated as a standalone crew-served weapon. The 106 complemented the 84mm Carl Gustav in infantry battalions. Both were recoilless weapons with a lethal backblast area that made them less suitable for use in urban areas.

My elder brother served his full-time National Service in the early 1980s with the 4th Battalion, Singapore Infantry Regiment (SIR), which was then at Bedok Camp (now home of the SAF Guards). These pictures were taken during a 4 SIR family day in Bedok Camp, likely in 1983 or 1984.

I loved attending the 4 SIR family day when the infantry battalion's various companies would introduce their weapons to the spectators. This was followed by a mock attack supported by artillery and armour. Lots of blank rounds would be fired, with thunderflashes and smoke grenades simulating the sound and fury of an infantry assault. All this was done on the parade square surrounded by four-storey barracks blocks.

Before the Spike was the MILAN. And before the Singapore Army upgraded to anti-tank guided missiles, the 106mm Recoilless Rifle (RR) was the heaviest anti-tank weapon organic to SIR battalions. The 106 jeeps were intended as fast, mobile fire support platforms. The gun was aimed using a 0.5 cal spotting rifle attached to the top of the recoilless rifle.

Crash action demos by 4 SIR Support Company were quite exciting to watch. The 106 jeeps entered the parade square one behind the other at high speed, fanned out in a line and screeched to a halt with tyres smoking. Individual gun commanders barked out orders which echoed round the parade square as spectators watched. On each jeep, the long 106 barrel would be released from its gun lock as the crew took up all-round defensive posture. Then the gunner squatting next to the gun would crank the hand wheels to point the barrel at the "enemy" before reporting the weapon ready for action.

The SIR Scout platoon was also jeep mounted. Scout jeeps were lightly armed with a single pintle-mounted 7.62mm GPMG as their role was to observe and report and not to engage in combat. 


Ouch, those elbows. For those of you who've tried it, it's not comfortable maintaining prone firing position on the parade square.
4 SIR soldiers in these pictures would be in their mid-50s by now. Hope they're all keeping well. Thank you for the family day demo which I enjoyed!

Circuit breaker Day 22 pix: Colourful F-5 camouflage schemes

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Before the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) settled on the F-16 lookalike warpaint (see below) for its upgraded F-5s, the F-5E/F fleet was painted in a colourful variety of camouflage patterns from the 1980s through to the 1990s.

We present the colourful warpaint of the now-retired RSAF F-5 Tiger II fleet.
An RF-5S Tigereye reconnaissance fighter, converted from a F-5E, wears the F-16 style camouflage that was the final warpaint pattern for the RSAF's long-serving F-5 fleet. This RF-5S was displayed at the RSAF Open House in 2003.

The F-5, which was the RSAF's first supersonic fighter jet, was delivered in a three-tone grey wrap around scheme seen below. This disruptive pattern was the dominant scheme. Some colours were sun-faded till the three tones merged into what looked like an overall pale grey when seen from a distance.

An F-5F approaches Paya Lebar Air Base with an RF-5E. Both wear the three-tone grey warpaint.
At least two F-5Es were painted in green and tan camouflage that looked similar to the one on RSAF A-4 Skyhawks. The camouflage was said to be quite effective when green/tan F-5s skimmed above ground level. In the 1980s, F-5s were also seen in a variation of the three tone grey camouflage scheme, with a deep blue and dark grey replacing two shades of grey. Sadly, I do not have a picture of this attractive camouflage scheme.
RSAF F-5s were also painted silver overall, much like the Soviet MiG-21s. While one might think that a silver painted plane is easy to spot, the silver warpaint blended well with the clouds and made the F-5 (which presented a small profile when seen head on) difficult to see.
RSAF F-5s were also seen in a non-standard camouflage scheme of dark and light grey topside and light grey on its ventral surfaces. This beauty served with RSAF 144 Squadron.

Circuit breaker Day 23 pix: Mystery auxiliary ship RSS Enterprise A 301

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Big day:The late Dr Goh Keng Swee, then Minister for Defence, arrives at Pulau Brani to officiate at the commissioning ceremony for RSS Enterprise (seen here) and two minesweepers, RSS Mercury and RSS Jupiter. The name plate attached to the bridge wing is unusual because it includes the "RSS" prefix. Usual convention just indicates the ship's name in raised capitalised gold lettering, for example Sea Wolf or Endurance. (Photo: National Archives of Singapore)

In the United States Navy, ships called Enterprise are well known. The WW2 aircraft carrier Enterprise played a major role in the Battle of Midway. The US Navy named its first nuclear-powered aircraft carrier USS Enterprise. The name got a major boost after the popular Star Trek TV series named its thespian starship Enterprise.

Here in Singapore, the Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN) auxiliary ship, RSS Enterprise (A 301), was one of the Navy's lesser known vessels. 

Few Singaporeans would have heard of her and almost nothing exists on Google about the ship. She's more stealthy than even the Formidable-class stealth frigates when it comes to digital footprint. Apart from some national archives pictures of her 1977 commissioning ceremony, there's no information online or in RSN anniversary books on RSS Enterprise. Who built her, what was her role, who formed her crew and what was her fate remains a mystery.

Enterprise was commissioned on 27 February 1977 at Pulau Brani together with the minesweepers, RSS Mercury and RSS Jupiter. For a ship of that era, Enterprise had a clean and modern looking bridge with a short mast topped by a navigation radar and an angular smoke stack. She had a crane mounted on her deck amidships, giving the auxiliary the ability to load and unload cargo on her own.

Enterprise had no gun mounts visible though RSN warships at the time had pintle mounts for 12.7mm Brownings. 

Two lift raft stations suggest a small crew, estimated around 30 officers and men. (Photo: National Archives of Singapore)
RSS Enterprise seen sandwiched between Brani Wharf and two minesweepers, RSS Jupiter and RSS Mercury. The picture was taken in 1983 when my family and I took a ferry to Sentosa for an outing. The ferry used the jetty next to Serapong Golf Course, which was opposite Brani Naval Base. I digitised the print photo to black and white as the colours in the photo have faded. I regret not taking more pictures.
RSS Enterprise (A 301) on her commissioning day watched by Missile Gunboats and tank landing ships (LSTs). Enterprise appears to have a degaussing cable around her hull, which leads to the suggestion that she could have been acquired to support the two minesweepers. Bravo Whiskey is now used by the Singapore Police Coast Guard. When this picture was taken, the Navy had yet to discover that there were unexploded bombs in the channel, Selat Sengkir. (Photo: National Archives of Singapore)

If you've more information on this mystery ship RSS Enterprise or her crew, I'd love to hear from you.

RSS Enterprise A 301 update

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When I wrote about RSS Enterprise, I thought the lack of information might be because the ship was useless AF or there was something special about her.

Realised Enterprise isn't useless AF :-)

Big thank you to the reader who sent me this picture and some tidbits. It's the best image I've seen of the auxiliary. Someday, I'd love to write her story!

Updates on Singapore Army AMX-10s and Republic of Singapore Air Force UH-1H rocket gunships coming up in subsequent "circuit breaker" postings. Please look out for them.

Circuit breaker Day 24 pix: Singapore Army AMX-10P and AMX-10 PAC 90 amphibious AFVs

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While the AMX-13 light tanks served the Singapore Army for more than 30 years, its modern stable mate from the same AMX tank factory in Roanne, France, had a much shorter service life.

Here're pictures of the AMX-10 PAC 90 tank destroyer (above) and AMX-10P 25 infantry fighting vehicle (last pix below) at the National Day Carnival at Marina South in the year 2000. The AMX-10s were acquired under Project S.

There are few pictures of Singapore Army AMX-10s in official Singapore Armed Forces publications like Pioneer magazine. Before NDP 2000, the AMX-10s were last seen in public at the Army Open House in 1997, which was the year the Bionix was unveiled. I believe the AMX-10s were shown to the public for the first time at AOH 97.
AMX-10 PAC 90 rigged from swimming. Note the raised screens over the engine deck, which are not fitted in the first AMX-10 PAC 90 image. This vehicle was displayed aboard RSS Persistence during the National Day Carnival 2000.

AMX-10P 25 with a one-person Dragar turret armed with a 25mm cannon. Note the additional pintle mounted GPMG on the rear deck.

Circuit breaker Day 25 pix: Republic of Singapore Air Force RSAF UH-1H rocket gunship

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It's amazing what you can find in a kid's sticker book on the Singapore Armed Forces (SAF).

This is one of the few photographs you'll see of a Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) Bell UH-1H Huey armed with 2.75 inch rocket pods. It was one of the stickers for the Figurine Panini sticker book I bought in the mid-1980s, when I was in my teens.

The 7-round rocket pod appears to be fitted to a hardpoint that looks similar to the Emerson Electric MAMEE system (see below), which also came with M134 7.62mm Miniguns mounted on outboard hardpoints. The 2.75 inch rockets were not known for their accuracy. But as an area suppression weapon to keep the enemy's head down just before a heliborne assault, the rocket and Minigun combo did the job far better than the handheld GPMG fired by a door gunner.

The rocket-armed UH-1H pre-dated the Aérospatiale AS.550A2/C2 Fennec LOH/LAH, which themselves pre-dated the AH-64D Apache attack helicopters.

It's perhaps fitting that the Apaches serve with 120 Squadron, which flew the UH-1Hs years ago as the Hueys also had "teeth" in the form of hard-hitting weapons that few people were aware of.


Coming soon:

  • V-200 Command Post variant
  • Your home-based learning guide to RSAF aircraft tractors and tow bars

Circuit breaker Day 26 pix: Cadillac Gage V-200 Command Post

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The Cadillac Gage V-200 Command Post (CP) was a seldom seen variant of the Singapura series. The CP variant had a square raised roof which was distinct from the round roof aperture for the RBS-70 VSHORAD variant. Republic of Singapore Air Force Field Defence Squadrons were one of the last users of the V-200 CP.

Circuit breaker Day 27 pix: Republic of Singapore Navy RSN LSTs in Operation Blue Heron in East Timor

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In 1999, I was assigned to cover the first Singapore Armed Forces (SAF) peace support mission in East Timor, codenamed Operation Blue Heron I (OBH I). It was my first time covering an SAF PSO. I was in Dili for about 14 days, hosted by Australian troops.

The Republic of Singapore Navy's (RSN) upgraded tank landing ships, RSS Excellence L202 and RSS Intrepid L203, made multiple voyages between Darwin, Australia, to Dili in East Timor in support of the United Nations International Force East Timor (INTERFET). These resupply trips were called "milk runs".

The two images of Intrepid (above) give you an idea of the strong swells in Dili harbour. Note how part of the gangway hanging to the side of the ship has been swamped by the waves. In hindsight, I should've asked the FCEP to make a run to starboard of the LST as the light there was much better. 
RSS Excellence (right) seen anchored off Dili with a French Navy landing platform dock, FNS Siroco. 
The ability of the RSN's LSTs to load and unload cargo and vehicles with minimal pierside facilities like harbour cranes came in useful in Dili. RSS Excellence seen here after a milk run from Darwin. The small harbour was shared by warships assigned to INTERFET and TNI vessels like the LST below.

HMAS Jervis Bay, a Royal Australian Navy (RAN) wave piercing catamaran, had a distinctive profile and was easily identifiable offshore.

Circuit breaker Day 28 pix: Republic of Singapore Air Force Airbus MRTT TLD TMX-550 tow tractor

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Pushback tugs or aircraft tow tractors are the work horses of the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) Air Power Generation Command. This is 9198 MID, a European-built TLD TMX-550 which is the latest RSAF tow tractor. Note: the four pole-mounted spot lights behind the orange beacon on the roof are NOT part of the vehicle.

9198 MID was bought for the RSAF's Airbus A330 Multi Role Tanker Transport (MRTT) aerial refuelling tanker aircraft. The TMX-550 measures 8.83m long and is 2.98m wide, and has steering wheels at both ends. Despite its flat compact look, the vehicle packs a gross weight of more than 55,000 kg.
  



Clyde Machines tow bar for the Airbus A330, A340-200, A340-300.

Circuit breaker Day 29 pix: Republic of Singapore Navy Missile Gunboats

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Fire light:A Republic of Singapore Navy Missile Gunboat fires a Gabriel anti-ship missile during a live-fire exercise in the 1990s. The Singapore navy upgraded its MGBs to carry as many as four Gabriels in single cell launchers plus up to eight Harpoon missiles, up from five Gabriels pre-upgrade.  

Today (5 May 2020) is the 53rd anniversary of the Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN).

Celebrations may be muted because of the Coronavirus pandemic. But we can always mark the occasion online by remembering how far the Navy has progressed, and pausing briefly to reflect on the efforts of the current generation of men and women who serve the RSN.

Here's an old tribute to the RSN Sea Wolf-class Missile Gunboats which I wrote for The Straits Times in May 2008. It's abit long but for those of you with oodles of time, I hope you find it interesting. 
Victory-class Missile Corvettes (left and centre) form up with an MGB (right). The MGB below is seen moments after firing a Gabriel missile. You can just make out the missile booster after it has detached from the missile body (it's the light smudge in the smoke trail above the letter C in the watermark).

Fond farewell for old warriors
RETIREMENT OF MISSILE GUNBOATS

The Straits Times
Thursday 15 May 2008
By David Boey
Though the navy’s Missile Gunboats (MGBs) have protected the seas off Singapore for over 33 years, it’s a safe bet that many Singaporeans will not recognise the warship.

Tuesday’s (13 May 2008) retirement ceremony for six Republic of Singapore Navy (RSN) MGBs -- RSS Sea Wolf, Sea Lion, Sea Dragon, Sea Tiger, Sea Hawk and Sea Scorpion – was significant as it signaled that the last warships dating from the navy’s formative years have finally called it a day.

A review of the MGB’s service history is timely – both to assess if tax payers have reaped the biggest bang for their defence dollars and to understand why the Ministry of Defence pensioned off the six ships.

Two of the six – Sea Lion and Sea Hawk – were mothballed in “keep warm” condition last year (2007). This means they were taken out of active service but maintained regularly so they could be made operationally fit rapidly if the need should arise. The manpower saved – each of the ships needs a crew of about 40 – has helped the RSN man its new class of six Formidable-class stealth frigates.

The MGBs served with the navy’s First Flotilla’s 185 Squadron, based at Changi Naval Base, alongside the 114-metre stealth frigates.

Even when they were decommisioned, the MGBs were not relics of a bygone age. Their top speed of 40 knots made them the navy’s fastest missile boats – and this record is likely to stay unchallenged for the foreseeable future.

What’s more, the MGBs were armed with more types of guided missiles than any other RSN vessel. 

Each 45-metre long MGB could carry four Gabriel anti-ship missiles, eight Harpoon anti-ship missiles – in peacetime, they usually carried two Gabriels and four Harpoons – and a Simbad launcher for two Mistral anti-aircraft missiles. The MGBs truly lived up to their name – missile gunboats.

With these points in mind, one could ask if the MGBs should have remained in active service.
To be sure, defence planners have done much since the first three MGBs were commissioned in January 1975 to ensure they pack a lethal punch. Three other MGBs were commissioned in February 1976.

The need for missile boats to protect Singapore’s access to the sea lanes was identified as early as 1968. Six MGBs were ordered from Friedrich Lürssen Werft, a German shipbuilder which amassed considerable experience building fast torpedo boats, known as S-boats, which served Germany’s Kriegsmarine with distinction during World War Two. Two were built in Germany and the construction of four locally in the early 1970s did much to expand naval construction expertise here.

The MGBs were initially armed with computer-controlled 57mm and 40mm Bofors guns, which could hit aerial and surface targets, and five Gabriel missile launchers. They carried enough fuel and provisions to sortie up to 1,000 nautical miles from base and return.

The 20-kilometre range of the Gabriels allowed MGBs to hit ships up to horizon range. Singapore was the first export customer for the combat-proven Gabriels. The missiles were good for hit-and-run operations in congested waters because they could be guided using an optical sight from the MGB, thereby lessening the risk of hitting neutral ships.

The missile boats were so successful that the RSN proposed Mindef buy three improved MGBs under Project Albatross to protect Singapore’s access to the sea lanes. Though Mindef turned down the proposal in favour of more A-4 Skyhawk fighter jets, the Project led to mid-life upgrades for the Sea Wolf-class MGBs.


Pictures of the MGBs now show marked differences in their weapons, sensors and ship structure compared to the 1970s. In the mid 1980s, the revamped MGBs included the Harpoon, which could hit targets some five times farther than the Gabriels. In 1994, the 40mm Bofors gun was replaced with the RSN’s first anti-aircraft missiles, the 5-km Mistrals.

Progressive upgrades made under the watch of nine navy chiefs – including the current Rear-Admiral Chew Men Leong – indicate that naval planners understood importance of constantly upgrading warships to ensure they remain a credible deterrent.

Less obvious are additions made to the MGB’s electronic warfare capabilities, giving each ship the ability to deceive, degrade or destroy enemy radars and sensors. With space already limited on the warships, the RSN enhanced the MGBs’ ability to fight and survive missile attacks by renovating the boats to include Juliet and Eureka rooms. Each of these were crammed with secret equipment that enabled officers to detect, identity and locate enemy radars, and provided early warning of incoming anti-ship missiles.

The addition of Harpoon missiles in the late 1980s gave MGB commanders the ability to target hostile vessels that lurked over the horizon, more than 90km away. The navy and Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) cooperated so Harpoon missiles could receive vital data on the location, course and speed of target ships from RSAF observer planes.

Such cooperation spawned new tactics for wielding the MGBs in naval combat. Missile boat tactics matured from high-speed, search-and-destroy missions – done mainly in daylight – to complex integrated air power and naval missile strikes.

In 1990, the RSAF took things a step further with Project Colosa, which gave it its first radar-equipped maritime air surveillance planes. Six twin-engine Skyvan transport planes were upgraded with radars that could search for and track ships some 40-km away. Project Colosa marked a watershed, as RSN personnel were deployed for the first time as part of an RSAF squadron, thus forging closely integrated air-naval battle management.

The MGB upgrades are a prime example of the Singapore Armed Forces learning the value of integrating its fighting forces tightly. It also underscored the importance of a homegrown defence science capability to design sensors and data links that ensure information between various fighting units can be transmitted securely in real-time.

MGB upgrades emphasise why it is necessary to go beyond simply counting warship tonnage when assessing naval power. While the number of MGBs has remain unchanged for over 30 years, the just-retired MGBs had combat capabilities far more lethal than they had originally.

This brings us back to the question of whether the MGBs could have soldiered on. While the missile boats packed a hefty punch, they had two major weaknesses: they were defenceless against submarines and their small size made them unsuitable for sustained operations in the South China Sea, especially during the monsoon season. Small size also precluded the use of naval aviation like drones from their already cluttered decks.

The MGBs once reigned as the RSN’s main strike craft. They were joined by more capable assets such as missile and torpedo-armed Fokker 50 Enforcer maritime patrol aircraft, submarines, stealth frigates and missile corvettes.

The Formidable-class stealth frigates are larger, more stable and powerfully-armed warships. They can hunt and kill submarines, carry a helicopter, have space to fly naval drones and have the bandwidth to plug into the One SAF battle network.

The MGBs achieved much during their career. But the time indeed has arrived to pension off the old warriors.

END

Circuit breaker Day 30 pix: Republic of Singapore Air Force RSAF aircraft passenger stair trucks

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Stair Force One:A gleaming and highly polished aircraft passenger stair truck painted with the Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) Lion head roundel cheerfully gave the city state's air force prominent product placement when United States President Donald Trump used the telescopic stairway to disembark from Air Force One in June 2018. Despite the RSAF markings, the truck itself is believed to have come from ground handling agent, SATS. 

The Republic of Singapore Air Force (RSAF) has a new aircraft passenger stair truck for its Airbus A330 Multi Role Tanker Transport (MRTT) aerial refuelling aircraft. The European-built TLD ABS-580 is made by the same company that supplied the MRTT tow tractor/push back tug.

The telescopic stairway on the ABS-580 can reach aircraft doors between 220cm and 580cm above the ground. The stairways are weatherproof as they are made of extruded-aluminum non-slip steps, aluminum sidewalls and anodized handrails.

The letters ABS are believed to be short for "Aircraft Boarding Stairs" while the number "580" indicates the max aircraft door level that can be reached in centimetres.

The ABS-580 complements a different model of stair truck, based on an Isuzu truck chassis, that served the now-retired KC-135R aerial refuelling tankers.

Perhaps the most high profile RSAF stair truck was the one that served Air Force One when United States President Donald Trump arrived at the RSAF's Paya Lebar Air Base in June 2018 for talks with North Korean leader Kim Jong-un. Despite the RSAF insignia and the Singapore air force's name spelt in full on the sidewall of the telescopic stairway, Senang Diri believes the truck is not an MID-plate vehicle and actually came from SATS. [Note: Happy to be corrected if we're wrong and would be grateful for the MID number plate of the said truck please.]

TLD ABS-580 self-propelled aircraft passenger stair truck in the shadow of an RSAF A330 MRTT.
Foul weather cover for the ABS-580's telescopic stairway is optional.

Another model of telescopic stairway based on an Isuzu truck chassis supported the KC-135R tankers. Note the low-viz Lion head roundel compared to the first picture.

Stair Force One, the truck mounted with the RSAF's custom painted telescopic stairs, carries SATS corporate colours of white, dark blue and gold.
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