The Almirante Clemente class of destroyer escorts is a class of warships built for several countries. The class was designed by Ansaldo for the Venezuelan Naval Forces, currently Venezuelan Navy, in the 1950s to complement its Nueva Esparta -class destroyer .
7-616: D22 may refer to: Ships [ edit ] General Moran , an Almirante Clemente -class destroyer of the Venezuelan Navy Greek destroyer Thyella (D22) , a Fletcher -class destroyer of the Hellenic Navy HMAS ; Waterhen (D22) , a W-class destroyer of the Royal Navy and Royal Australian Navy HMS Aisne (D22) ,
14-665: A Battle-class destroyer of the Royal Navy Spanish destroyer Almirante Ferrandíz (D22) , a Fletcher -class destroyer of the Spanish Navy Other uses [ edit ] D22 road (Croatia) Darmstadt D-22 , a German sport plane Dublin 22 , a postal district in Ireland Kelantan State Route D22 , now Malaysia Federal Route 196 LNER Class D22 , a class of British steam locomotives Nissan Navara ,
21-503: A pickup Truck [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same title formed as a letter–number combination. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=D22&oldid=1132529294 " Category : Letter–number combination disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
28-491: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages General Moran The Venezuelan Navy has 6 ships originally ordered, with Indonesia had two ships and Portugal had one ship of this design. In the Portuguese Navy , these ships are referred as patrol boats. In the 1950s Venezuelan Navy, the ships were classified as DLV (Destroyer Light Vessel) or light destroyers, in
35-457: The 1980s were reclassified as ASW frigate, and are currently classified as coast guard vessels. These ships include these notable characteristics: The usage of the fin stabilizer is a weapons systems support device to stabilize the ship making it a more steady gun platform in rough seas. This can be tracked to HMS Bittern , most of the Hunt-class destroyers after refit have it, but
42-686: The very first Battle-class destroyers HMS Finisterre and HMS Camperdown have it, even ships as HMS Amethyst have it, but do not use form higher consumption of power, according to several conversations lines in the Maritime History forum MARHST in the US navy ships as USS Gyatt (DD-712) have it. The construction contracts for these destroyers were awarded on 25 January 1954, and their names were an homage to Venezuelan war of independence heroes who lie at Panteón Nacional : Two destroyer escorts of similar design
49-531: Was built for Indonesian Navy by Ansaldo. Both were completed in May 1958. They were never modernized and was stricken in 1978. In comparison with its Venezuelan sisters, the Indonesian ships had lighter anti-aircraft armaments which consisted of three 20 mm in twin mounts. They were named after National Hero of Indonesia : National Hero of Indonesia Too Many Requests If you report this error to
#485514