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35_30 | mounting had its own Medium Range System (MRS) 3 radar director. Viscount Hall stated in the House |
35_31 | of Lords in 1959 that her "automatically controlled" guns were "capable of firing at more than |
35_32 | twice the speed of manned armament" and the "improvement in guns was ten times better than if the |
35_33 | ship had been with the original gun armament". However, Tigers 6-inch guns usually jammed after 30 |
35_34 | seconds firing, and couldn't deliver sustained bombardment in support of troops ashore. RN argued |
35_35 | that the first 30 seconds of engaging jet aircraft and warships was the critical determinant and |
35_36 | that aircraft would be shot down with short bursts of fire and as such limited magazine capacity |
35_37 | and gun reliability were less important than instantaneous response. The decision to complete the |
35_38 | ships was based on the availability of hulls and expectation that the cruisers could be completed |
35_39 | sooner (three years against 5 years) and cheaper (60% of the cost) than building new [8,000 ton] |
35_40 | cruisers at a time when the existing cruiser fleet was ageing and its weapons and fire control were |
35_41 | useless against modern aircraft. The RN had 21 cruisers in 1957, nine in operation and by 1961 the |
35_42 | cruiser fleet had reduced to nine of which five were in service. |
35_43 | HMS Tigers revised weapon fit was for immediate post-war requirements and the continued |
35_44 | reconstruction of the class confirmed the 1957 Defence White Paper as interim anti-aircraft ships |
35_45 | pending the introduction of guided weapons into the Royal Navy; four County-class destroyers with |
35_46 | the Seaslug missiles had been ordered by February 1957. In practice, only Tiger would be ready in |
35_47 | time and perform sufficiently well to serve any length of time as a gun cruiser. |
35_48 | By the time Tigers legend was accepted by the Board of the Admiralty in July 1954 and the Cabinet |
35_49 | in November 1954, the cruiser design, hull and machinery were really too old. Her two 6-inch |
35_50 | turrets were insufficient to guarantee surface fire and were less effective in the anti-aircraft |
35_51 | warfare role due to improvements in missiles and aircraft; also, the basic fit of three twin 3 inch |
35_52 | turrets were poor for effective, reliable coverage of the fire arcs. The planned 40mm Bofors guns |
35_53 | approved in 1954/57 as essential for close-in defence were omitted to give the crew space and |
35_54 | comfort. Air conditioning was fitted throughout the ship, and a 200-line automatic telephone |
35_55 | exchange was installed. Her first captain was reported in the House of Lords to have said "that |
35_56 | H.M.S. Tiger had been designed to cope with nuclear attacks, in that she can steam for up to a |
35_57 | fortnight through radioactive fallout with remotely controlled boiler and engine and armament |
35_58 | operating with re-circulating purified air below decks, and could operate as a fighting unit even |
35_59 | if a nuclear bomb were dropped near by." They were described in Parliament as "effective ships for |
35_60 | a long period to come, and especially is this true east of Suez, where distances are so gigantic." |
35_61 | As completed, Tiger carried: |
35_62 | a Type 992Q surface search radar at the top of the foremast, with a range of , |
35_63 | a Type 960 air warning radar at the top of the mainmast, with a range of , |
35_64 | a Type 277Q height-finding radar halfway up the mainmast, with a range of , |
35_65 | five MRS 3 fire control directors (one for each turret), each fitted with a Type 903 gunnery radar. |
35_66 | Her sonars were:
Type 174 medium range search, |
35_67 | Type 176 passive search, which shared the same dome as the Type 174,
Type 185 underwater telephone. |
35_68 | The Tigers complement was officially stated as 698 (53 officers and 645 ratings) in peacetime, and |
35_69 | 900 in wartime. |
35_70 | The Navy Estimates for 1959-60 gave her initial costs as £12,820,000, whereas Jane's Fighting Ships |
35_71 | gave her initial cost as £13,113,000. |
35_72 | Tiger was accepted by the Navy in March 1959, and commissioned on 18 March 1959.
Early career |
35_73 | The early part of Tigers first commission was spent, under Captain R. E. Washbourn, on trials of |
35_74 | her new armament. After workup, now under Captain R. Hutchins, Tiger went on a round of autumn |
35_75 | flag-showing visits to Gdynia, Stockholm, Kiel and Antwerp. At the end of 1959 she deployed to the |
35_76 | Mediterranean for a year as the flagship of the Mediterranean Fleet. By late 1960, there were still |
35_77 | problems with her armament and it was planned to resolve these at her first refit at the end of |
35_78 | 1960. During a visit by the Lord Carrington (the First Lord of the Admiralty), his Naval Secretary |
35_79 | Rear-Admiral Frank Twiss "made the unpardonable error of shooting down a very expensive target |
35_80 | aircraft, to the cheers of the ship's company but to a stinging rebuke from their Lordships of the |
35_81 | Admiralty." The ship took part in operations in the Far East during the Indonesian Confrontation |
35_82 | in the early 1960s. The Navy in the early 1960s suffered manpower shortages, which resulted in a |
35_83 | "shortfall in technical personnel" in the Tiger, as a consequence some "items of its equipment |
35_84 | could not be operated", and "some of its equipment was not operational". In September 1963, the |
35_85 | Glasgow Herald said that the "Tiger already has a much-reduced crew and is virtually a floating |
35_86 | office." During the 1964 general election campaign, the leader of the opposition, Harold Wilson, |
35_87 | criticised the government for this during a speech at Plymouth. |
35_88 | Rear-Admiral Michael Pollock flew his flag in her as Flag Officer, Second-in-Command, Home Fleet, |
35_89 | from 1965 – 1966. On 10 August 1966 one of the guns accidentally fired a practice shell into |
35_90 | Devonport Dockyard during material tests of the equipment. "One member of the ship's company was |
35_91 | slightly grazed, but there were no other casualties." In October 1966, the ship was visiting |
35_92 | Cardiff at the time of the Aberfan disaster. The crew assisted with the rescue and recovery |
35_93 | operation. |
35_94 | From 2 to 4 December 1966, she hosted talks between Prime Ministers Harold Wilson (UK) and Ian |
35_95 | Smith of Rhodesia. The latter had unilaterally declared independence from Britain due to Britain's |
35_96 | insistence on the removal of white minority rule before independence. Twenty officers (including |
35_97 | all twelve midshipmen) were put ashore at Gibraltar before the talks to "make room for the three |
35_98 | delegations of the Prime Minister, the Governor of Rhodesia and Mr. Smith." When the Rhodesian |
35_99 | delegation arrived, the Tiger was a few miles off shore, and the delegation was ferried out in a |
35_100 | small craft. The Tiger then moved out to sea, but moved close to harbour when the Rhodesian |
35_101 | delegation disembarked. On Wilson's orders, the British and Rhodesian delegations were "separated |
35_102 | in all activities outside the conference room". |
35_103 | Conversion and later career |
35_104 | Tiger was placed in reserve on 18 December 1966, before undergoing conversion to a "helicopter and |
35_105 | command cruiser" from 1968–72 in HMNB Devonport. This reconstruction included removing the after |
35_106 | 6 inch mount and 3 inch mounts, installing two Seacat missile GWS 22 mounts, and building a flight |
35_107 | deck and hangar to operate four Westland Wessex (later Westland Sea King HAS 2) helicopters. Tiger |
35_108 | was given much taller funnels with squared off caps, which was such an improvement that the Blake |
35_109 | was given similar funnels in 1977. |
35_110 | Once converted, Tiger carried: |
35_111 | a Type 992Q surface search radar at the top of the foremast, with a range of , |
35_112 | a Type 965M air warning radar with an AKE-1 single bedstead aerial at the top of the mainmast, this |
35_113 | had a narrower beam than the Type 960, which was needed for air direction and was now the Royal |
35_114 | Navy standard. |
35_115 | a Type 278 height-finding radar halfway up the mainmast, which was similar to the Type 277Q, but |
35_116 | easier to maintain, |
35_117 | four MRS 3 fire control directors (one for each turret and Seacat mounting, each fitted with a Type |
35_118 | 903 gunnery radar. |
35_119 | She had excellent command, control, and communications facilities installed, and found use as a |
35_120 | flagship to task groups. |
35_121 | When plans were announced to Parliament in March 1964, it was said that the Navy did "not expect |
35_122 | this conversion work to be difficult or particularly expensive". The reconstruction of Blake and |
35_123 | Tiger was examined in the third report of the Public Accounts Committee for 1972. Michael Barnes |
35_124 | said in parliament that the refits "show too lax an attitude towards the way in which the |
35_125 | taxpayers' money is being spent". "The refits were planned to take 18 months and to cost £5 |
35_126 | million each... The Tiger refit took over five years and cost over £13 million." Rear-Admiral |
35_127 | Morgan-Giles suggested bringing HMS Eagle back into commission instead of manning the Blake and |
35_128 | Tiger, which he said were "among the worst abortions which have ever been thrust on the Royal |
35_129 | Navy." |
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