HMS Dauntless
HMS Dauntless, the second of the T45 Destroyers, joined the Fleet in November 2010, shortly after being the first of class to fire the new Sea Viper missile.
Since then she has proved her capability helping to ‘protect’ the USS Carrier Battle Group in Exercise Saxon Warrior as the American units approached the UK in May.
COMMANDING OFFICER
will Warrender
- RANK:
- Captain
- JOINED:
- 1988
- SPECIALISATION:
- Warfare
- PREVIOUS UNITS:
- HMS Corwall, HMS Argyll, HMS Montrose
Military experience
Captain Will Warrender was born in Ferozpore, India, and educated at the Queen Katherine School, Kendal, before joining the Royal Navy as a Warfare Officer in January 1988.
Following initial training at Britannia Royal Naval College he read a BA in Maritime Defence Studies, Management and Technology at the Royal Naval Engineering College, Manadon, in Plymouth.
Upon graduation he completed professional and specialist courses before moving to Scotland as the Navigating Officer of the Minehunter HMS Cromer in 1993.
Successful completion of the Fighter Control Course at the Royal Naval Air Station, Yeovilton, in September 1995 was followed by appointments to the Type 42 Destroyers Glasgow and Newcastle.
He returned to Minewarfare in December 1997 assuming consecutive commands of the Hunt Class Mine Countermeasures Vessel HMS Chiddingfold and her sister ship HMS Cattistock. These 2 years culminated with a deployment to the Baltic as part of NATO’s Mine Countermeasures Force (North) supporting the Partnership for Peace initiative.
Qualifying as a Principal Warfare Officer in 2001, he served as the Operations Officer in the Type 22 Frigate HMS Cornwall, before attending the Advanced Command and Staff Course at Shrivenham, graduating with a Masters degree in Defence Studies from King’s College London.
He was promoted to Commander in June 2004 and appointed to HMS Argyll, assuming Command later that year. His time in Argyll included a varied programme ranging from 2 operational deployments to escorting the Royal Family on their 2006 Western Isles tour.
He then served in the Ministry of Defence as the Programmer in the Directorate of Equipment Capability (Above Water Effects) where he was responsible for the programming and planning of the Royal Navy’s future capabilities, including the replacement Aircraft Carriers and Type 45 Destroyers.
He was appointed back to sea in 2009, taking Command of HMS Montrose throughout her post Docking Period sea trials before joining FOST as Commander Sea Training (CST) in December that year. In a very enjoyable 15 months as CST, and latterly as Commander Mobile Sea Training, he was responsible for delivering over 30 periods of sea training to RN and foreign warships.
Promoted to Captain in April 2011, he assumed Command of HMS Dauntless in July.
Captain Warrender is a keen sportsman having represented the Royal Navy and Combined Services at hockey; with age catching up with him he is now an enthusiastic member of the RN Veterans team.
OPERATIONS
Maritime security
CURRENT STATUS: active
British ships and units are committed to operations around the world. Operations focus on maritime security, reassurance and wider regional engagement to build regional maritime capability.
Training
CURRENT STATUS: active
The ship and her company are being put through their paces in preparation for returning to the front line.
UNIT DIARY
LATEST NEWS
TOP STORIES
Dauntless dazzles in security sweep off West Africa
01 May 2012HMS Dauntless played a key part in helping to keep...
Ready teddy go for Dauntless in Lisbon
25 April 2012HMS Dauntless visited Lisbon in Portugal on her journey to...
A big send-off for Dauntless as she heads south on maiden deployment
04 April 2012The second of Britain’s next-generation destroyers today began her maiden...
HMS Dauntless Sails To South Atlantic For Maiden Deployment
02 April 2012Portsmouth-based warship HMS Dauntless sails on Wednesday (April 4) for...
WEAPONS SYSTEM
WEAPONS SYSTEM
TYPE 45 DESTROYER
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30mm Gun
Medium Calibre gun system
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30mm Gun
Medium Calibre gun system
-
4.5Mk8 Gun
medium calibre weapon system
If you're looking for punch and firepower, then the 4.5in main gun, found on the forecastle of all the Royal Navy's frigates and destroyers, is the most obvious provider. Even in an age of missiles, there's still a need for a weapon to pulverise enemy positions and demoralise the foe - and the 4.5in gun has done so in the Falklands and Iraq. The gun can fire up to two dozen high explosive shells weighing more than 40kg (80lbs) at targets more than a dozen miles away - and nearly 18 miles if special extended-range shells are used. In various forms, the 4.5in has been the Navy's standard medium gun since before World War 2, embodied today by the Mk8 which has been in service since the early 1970s. There are two types of Mk8 used by the Fleet. The older Mod 0 (with its curved turret), which is gradually being replaced, and the angular Mod 1 (nicknamed Kryten after the robot on the sci-fi sitcom Red Dwarf) which is harder for enemy radar to pick up. The main purpose of the gun is Naval Gunfire Support – artillery bombardment of shore targets. In this role the gun is capable of firing the equivalent of a six-gun shore battery. The Mk8 can also be used effectively against surface targets at sea.
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Lynx Mk8
Helicopter weapons system
The Lynx truly is a jack of all trades, capable to taking on enemy ships (with Sea Skua missiles), enemy submarines (with Sting Ray torpedoes or depth charges), and smaller surface targets courtesy of machine-gun pods or sniper rifles. It can carry a Royal Marines boarding team, who abseil rapidly down ropes on to ships below, and regularly conducts surveillance and reconnaissance missions using its dazzling array of sensors, cameras and recording equipment. The Lynx is the backbone of the Fleet Air Arm and front-line operations by the frigate and destroyer fleets, operating over the ice of Antarctica and the sands of the Gulf, the expanse of the Indian and Atlantic Oceans, the confines of the Strait of Gibraltar or English Channel
-
Phalanx
Short range machine gun
Throwing up an impenetrable wall of fire, Phalanx is one of the deadly last lines of defence for Britain's warships. It is fitted to Type 42 and Type 45 destroyers and Bay, Wave and Fort Victoria-class ships in the RFA Capable of engaging targets around one mile away, Phalanx is a radar-controlled Gatling gun which fires 20mm shells, spewing out 3,000 rounds a minute. Like Goalkeeper, it is designed to engage incoming enemy aircraft and missiles if they penetrated a ship or task group's outer ring of defences such as Sea Viper or Sea Dart. During Operation Telic, Phalanx guns were removed from ships and were crewed by sailors defending Basra airport, the hub of British operations in southern Iraq. The guns saw extensive action against incoming rockets and mortars fired by insurgents.
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Phalanx
Short range machine gun
Throwing up an impenetrable wall of fire, Phalanx is one of the deadly last lines of defence for Britain's warships. It is fitted to Type 42 and Type 45 destroyers and Bay, Wave and Fort Victoria-class ships in the RFA Capable of engaging targets around one mile away, Phalanx is a radar-controlled Gatling gun which fires 20mm shells, spewing out 3,000 rounds a minute. Like Goalkeeper, it is designed to engage incoming enemy aircraft and missiles if they penetrated a ship or task group's outer ring of defences such as Sea Viper or Sea Dart. During Operation Telic, Phalanx guns were removed from ships and were crewed by sailors defending Basra airport, the hub of British operations in southern Iraq. The guns saw extensive action against incoming rockets and mortars fired by insurgents.
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Sea Viper
Surface to Air missile system
Sea Viper is the punch of the Type 45 destroyers, the very reason the ships exist - and the reason why that main mast is so tall. The missile provides all-round defence – not just for the destroyer but for an entire naval task group - against all aerial threats some 70 miles away. It races towards its target at speeds in excess of Mach Four (over 3,000mph) using a series of tiny jets to manoeuvre, carrying out sharp turns at G forces no human could endure. The system comprises Sampson radar (the spinning egg atop the Type 45’s main mast), a Combat Management System, long-range radar, the Sylver missile-launching system on the destroyer's forecastle and Aster 15 and Aster 30 missiles with ranges up to 20 and 75 miles respectively. Until January 28 2009 – the date of the arrival of the first Type 45, HMS Daring, in Portsmouth – Sea Viper was known as PAAMS: Principal Anti-Air Missile System. The missiles were tested at France's missile range, the Centre d’Essais de Lancement des Missiles on Île du Levant, off Toulon, using a special trials barge, Longbow, before the first successful firing from Type 45. That came off the Outer Hebrides in September 2010 at the Benbecula ranges, where HMS Dauntless successfully shot down a drone target.
ABOUT THE UNIT
KEY STATISTICS
- Pennant
D33
- Displacement
8,000tonnes
- Complement
190personnel
- Length
152Metres
- Beam
21.2metres
- Draught
5.3metres
- Top Speed
30+knots
- Range (Nautical)
7,000nautical miles
- Launch Date
23/01/07
- Commissioned date
03/06/10
- As Long As
16double decker buses










































