HMAS Vampire
Vessel numberHV000073
SUN Finance system asset codeHER001
Vessel Registration Number11
Previous owner
Royal Australian Navy
(Australian, founded 1913)
Builder
Cockatoo Island Dockyard
Vessel type
Royal Australian Navy Vessels
Date1956
MediumMetal
DimensionsVessel Dimensions: 118.65 m x 13.11 m x 5.49 m, 3950 tonnes (389.3 ft x 43 ft x 18 ft, 4013 tons)
Terms
- Cockatoo Island Dockyard
- original hull
- partially restored deck
- substantially modified superstructure
- substantially modified layout
- original gearbox
- original shaft
- destroyer
- Sydney Harbour
- steel
- steel/iron
- steel/iron
- aluminium
- monohull
- overhanging stem
- plumb transom
- displacement
- round bottom
- bilge keels
- spade rudder
- multiple decks
- wheel
- inboard
- steam turbine
- twin
- non-operational
- on public display
- floating
- drawings
- news clippings
- photos
- plans
- references
- military
- type/use
The original armament included six 4.5-inch (114 mm) dual-purpose guns in three twin mountings; two single and two twin 40/60 mm Bofors AA guns; Mark 10 Limbo anti-submarine mortar; and a quintuple 21-inch (530 mm) torpedo launcher. The cramped living spaces graphically illustrate the nature of warship design: machinery, communications and weaponry come before the comfort of the crew. When the vessel became a training ship in the early 1980s, the anti-submarine system was removed to make way for a classroom, and the ship’s compliment was 219 regular crew with an additional 75 trainees.
The 118.65 m long hull has a full load displacement of 3,950 tonnes, and the top speed is over 30 knots. At a cruising speed of 20 knots it has a range of 3,000 nautical miles or 5600 km.
HMAS VAMPIRE is now decommissioned and remains afloat and on display at the Australian National Maritime Museum. It is often used as a venue for navy reunions and volunteers operate an amateur radio station (call sign VK2CCV) from the bridge wireless office every Saturday from 0000 till 0600 UTC (the old GMT).
SignificanceHMAS VAMPIRE is a British Daring Class design destroyer that served with the Royal Australian Navy from 1959 until 1986. It was built at Cockatoo Island Dockyard in Sydney in the early 1950s. The Daring Class were the last big gunships used by the RAN before the modern era of missiles superceded heavy gun-power as the primary armament for warships. It underwent a number of modifications during its service, and operated in Pacific and Asian areas. After decommissioning in the late 1980s it was put on display at Darling Harbour, Sydney when the Australian National Maritime Museum opened in 1991. It is also used as a focal point for Navy reunion events. The Daring Class ships served with the Royal Navy, RAN and Peruvian Navy, and HMAS VAMPIRE It is the only Daring Class destroyer to have been preserved worldwide.
Vessel Highlights
c 1934
c 1930s