HMS Argyll
Based in Plymouth, HMS Argyll is the longest-serving Type 23 frigate in the Royal Navy. Built in the late 1980s at the Yarrow Yard in Scotstoun on the Clyde (today part of BAE Systems), she was commissioned in 1991. Following an extensive £20 million refit in Rosyth during 2009 to 2010, HMS Argyll has now emerged as one of the most up-to-date and capable frigates in the Fleet, with her structure preserved and her weapons and sensors significantly enhanced.
HMS Argyll is presently involved in a six-month deployment east of Suez, having completed an intensive work-up with the Flag Officer Sea Training organisation in 2011, where the frigate's mission is to operate under Combined Maritime Forces (CMF) to bolster maritime security and regional stability across the Middle East.
The Combined Maritime Forces are a US-led, 25-nation, multinational naval partnership which exists to promote security, stability and prosperity across some 2.5 million square miles of international waters – which encompasses some of the world's most important shipping lanes. Approximately 40 per cent of the world's shipping (critical to a stable global economy) and roughly one-third of the world's oil passes through the region, most through the chokepoint of the Strait of Hormuz, the Bab-el Mandeb Strait and the Suez Canal. Core tasking for HMS Argyll includes counter-terrorism, counter-piracy and building on established relationships with our regional allies. As with her sister Type 23s, HMS Argyll is named after a Duke.
COMMANDING OFFICER
Paul Stroude
- RANK:
- Commander
- JOINED:
- 1991
- SPECIALISATION:
- Warfare
- PREVIOUS UNITS:
- HMS Brecon, HMS Sutherland
Military experience
Born on The Wirral and educated at Birkenhead School, Paul Stroude joined the Royal Navy as a University Cadet in 1991.
Following basic training he read Naval Architecture and Shipbuilding at the University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, graduating in 1995. Training appointments during this period led to service off the coast of the former Yugoslavia (Operation GRAPPLE) and counter-smuggling patrols in Hong Kong waters.
Between 1996 and 1997 he completed his first bridge watchkeeping appointments in the offshore patrol vessel HMS Leeds Castle and the Type 23 frigate HMS Northumberland, which included tours to South America and the Falkland Islands, and with NATO's Standing Naval Force Mediterranean.
Returning to UK waters in 1998 he then served as the Navigator and Operations Officer of the fishery protection vessel HMS Lindisfarne, tasked with enforcing EU fisheries law out to the UK 200 nautical mile limit.
Qualifying as a Frigate Navigating Officer in early 2000 he went on to enjoy a remarkably varied two years as the Navigator of the Type 23 frigate HMS Sutherland, a period which encompassed a full circumnavigation of the globe with the NTG 2000 Task Group, winter multinational exercises off northern Norway, and counter-drug patrols in the Caribbean Sea.
Subsequently selected for minor war vessel command, from 2002-2003 he commanded the Hunt class patrol vessel HMS Brecon, conducting counter-terrorist and interdiction operations in Northern Ireland waters (Operation Sealion). Initial Staff Course and the Principal Warfare Officer (PWO) course followed, during which in 2004 he was promoted to Lieutenant Commander.
Appointed to the Type 22 frigate HMS Cornwall initially as PWO(U) and then Operations Officer in 2005, he saw the ship emerge from a prolonged refit and undertake a busy series of international exercises before deploying to the Arabian Gulf to protect the critical Iraqi offshore oil infrastructure as part of Operation TELIC.
On return from this deployment in 2007 he joined the United Kingdom Maritime Battle Staff for a two and a half year spell of duty, the highlight of which was a further tour to Iraq on Operation TELIC in 2008, this time as the Staff Operations Officer to Commander Task Force 158, based on the Khawr Al Amaya oil terminal, with responsibility for co-ordinating the day to day operations of the multinational ships and aircraft of the Task Force in the complex and shallow waters of the northern Arabian Gulf.
Promoted Commander in 2010, Paul Stroude assumed command of HMS Argyll in May that year. An avid student of naval history and a voracious reader, he lives in Hampshire with his wife and baby daughters, where his other hobbies include sailing, walking, fly fishing and DIY.
LATEST NEWS
TOP STORIES
Argyll completes her six-month stint in the Gulf
27 March 2012HMS Argyll will return to Plymouth on Friday after an...
From A To B - Argyll Visits Beirut
16 March 2012The Royal Navy frigate HMS Argyll has conducted the first...
Stakes are high for HMS Argyll as she joins in major Gulf exercise
14 February 2012HMS Argyll led Britain’s participation in a major exercise in...
HMS Argyll Help Preserve The Memory Of The Fallen In UAE
10 February 2012During their visit to the United Arab Emirates (UAE), volunteers...
WEAPONS SYSTEM
Type 23 weapons 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 destroyer'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.
-
Harpoon
Anti-ship missile System
Harpoon is the long-range lance of the Type 23 frigate, capable of destroying enemy ships far beyond the horizon. Fitted to all Type 23 Frigates, the Boeing (formerly McDonnell Douglas) Harpoon is a sophisticated anti-ship missile capable of striking at targets more than 80 miles away. Harpoon uses a combination of inertial guidance and active radar homing to attack its prey. Cruising at Mach 0.9 and carrying a large high explosive warhead it is powered by a lightweight turbojet, but is accelerated at launch by a booster rocket.
-
Helicopter
Airbourne weapons System
The Merlin Mk1 have been in service with the Fleet Air Arm since the late 1990s and, after thorough testing and evaluation, the helicopters have been on the front line since 2000. Our job is to find – and if necessary destroy – enemy submarines using our state-of-the-art sonar bouys which we drop into the ocean and Sting Ray torpedoes. Beyond searching for submarines, we carry out traditional maritime helicopter duties: anti-piracy/drug-running patrols, surveillance and reconnaissance, search and rescue, and passenger and load transfers
-
Sea Wolf
Surface to Air Missile system
Seawolf is the shield of Britain’s frigate fleet against air attack. Defending Britain's frigate fleet against air attack, the Seawolf missile has been in service for more than 30 years and has proven itself in action in the Falklands. Unlike Sea Viper and Sea Dart, Seawolf is intended to defend an individual ship rather than a task group, engaging aircraft or sea-skimming missiles. It is fired either from a vertical silo on Type 23 frigates, and guided on to its target courtesy of a tracking system on the ship. The original Seawolf had a very limited range of just six miles, but the frigate fleet is in the middle of receiving the latest, more potent version of the missile system. It means that Seawolf can track – and destroy – a target the size of a cricket ball travelling at three times the speed of sound well beyond the limit of the original missile. If the system was placed in the middle of London, it could track its target over the M25 and knock it out of the sky over the North Circular - and the whole action would last under 20 seconds. Each Type 23 frigate carries out at least two Seawolf firings on ranges off the UK coast before each deployment.
-
DLH Decoy Launch System
active decoy system
The DLH system is carried by the Navy's frigates and is designed to lure attacking anti-ship missiles away from the unit.
-
Torpedo
Magazine torpedo launch System (MTLS)
Dropped by Lynx and Merlin helicopters, and launched from the MTLS, Sting Ray is a small lightweight torpedo designed to destroy enemy submarines. It weighs seven times less than torpedoes fired by submarines, racing through the water at more than 50mph at targets half a dozen miles away, delivering a 100lb explosive charge powerful enough to punch through the double hulls of modern submarines. Once Sting Ray is fired it uses the information provided initially by the helicopter and gathers fresh intelligence on its target using its sonar and onboard software which is designed not to be fooled by the enemy submarine’s decoys.
-
Towed Array
Sub Surface detection system
-
30mm Gun
Medium Calibre gun system
ABOUT THE UNIT
KEY STATISTICS
- Pennant
F231
- Displacement
4,900tonnes
- Complement
185personnel
- Length
133Metres
- Beam
16.1metres
- Draught
7.3metres
- Top Speed
28knots
- Range (Nautical)
7,800miles
- Launch Date
08/04/89
- Commissioned date
31/05/91

































































































