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Australia to decommission Armidale-class boat after 14-year service

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Meanwhile, our MCDVs are 10 years older and still going for the foreseeable future.

The boat, HMAS Pirie, will be decommissioned at Darwin on 26 March after 14 years of service. Its departure from its homeport of HMAS Morenton, Brisbane was announced by the RAN on 14 March.

Australia commissioned its first Armidale-class boat, HMAS Armidale in June 2005 and inducted the final vessel in the class, HMAS Glenelg , in February 2008. Pirie is the fifth-in-class, and it was commissioned in July 2006.

The Armidale class was originally 14-strong, but one of the vessels, Bundaberg , was destroyed in a major fire in 2014. The 57 m, 305-tonne aluminium-hulled boats are constructed by Austal Ships to Det Norske Veritas standards for high-speed craft and can take on operations up to Sea State 5.

The vessel’s weapons consist of a 25 mm ATK M242 marinised Bushmaster deck cannon on an Australian-manufactured Rafael Typhoon Mk 25 stabilised mount and two 12.7 mm machine guns.

The Armidale-class boats will progressively be retired to make way for the Arafura-class offshore patrol vessels (OPVs), the first of which is scheduled for handover to the RAN in late-2021.

 
The replacements are being built

They are 4x the size. 80 foot longer.
The Armidale were twice the size of their predecessors, talk about size creep.

From this
1998_187_2-advance_2160x1080.jpg

and then this
Australia-decommissions-first-Armidale-class-patrol-boat-Pirie.jpg

and now this
Luerssen-OPV.cafd77.png
 
They're called Fast Attack Craft (or similar) and yes, lots of countries use them. They're good for places with small coastlines to defend.
I used to read about MTBs that were used by the RN in WWII. Interesting craft, Interesting sailors too,
 
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