Upgraded Royal Navy frigate HMS Lancaster ready to hit the high seas after huge overhaul
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HMS Lancaster is now bristling with the latest military kit, from the sophisticated Artisan 3D radar and improved navigational radar, to the newest Sea Ceptor missile system.
And after a series of tests at sea, Portsmouth-based Lancaster is now ready to be called upon by the navy.
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Hide AdThe news came a month after the warship – nicknamed the Red Rose – celebrated its 30th birthday.
Commander Will Blackett, Lancaster’s captain, said: ‘Throughout the Covid-19 pandemic we’ve been maintaining our focus on bringing Lancaster back to readiness so that we can play our part in Royal Navy operations again.
‘My crew have done brilliantly well getting us to this point but there is still a lot of hard work to get through.
‘HMS Lancaster has been a fabulous asset to the nation across three decades and our goal is to make these final years of her service the finest of all.’
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Hide AdThe ship’s crew used their latest spell at sea to practice drills and scenarios including their response to attack by multiple small craft, simulated by patrol boats HMS Exploit and Ranger, tackling a fire in the galley, and gunnery with close-in weapons and the main 4.5in gun.
Launched in 1990 and commissioned into the Royal Navy in 1992, she will remain based in Portsmouth for the fourth decade of her service.
Her refit was carried out at Devonport Naval Base, in Plymouth, and she returned to Portsmouth in December.
Next on the ship’s diary will be summer leave, followed by weapons training and then six weeks of fleet operational sea training to prove the ship’s company, and the vessel’s systems, are ready for global deployment.
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