RFA Bacchus (A404)

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RFA Bacchus (A404).png
RFA Bacchus
History
British-Royal-Fleet-Auxiliary-Ensign.svg United Kingdom
NameRFA Bacchus
Namesake Bacchus
Builder Henry Robb, Leith
Laid down18 April 1961
Launched4 June 1962
Commissioned8 November 1962
Decommissioned8 September 1981
Identification IMO number:  5033454
FateScrapped 1985
General characteristics
Tonnage4,823  gross register tons  (GRT) [1]
Displacement2,740 long tons (2,780 t) (light), 7,958 long tons (8,086 t) (full load) [1]
Length350 feet (110 m) pp, 350 feet (110 m) overall [1]
Beam55 feet (17 m) [1]
Draught22 feet (6.7 m) max [1]
PropulsionSwan Hunter-Sulzer SRD68 5-cylinder diesel engine on one shaft, 5,500 bhp (4,101 kW) [1]
Speed15 knots (28 km/h; 17 mph) [1]
Range720 tons fuel oil [1]
Complement57 [1]

RFA Bacchus (A404) was a stores ship of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA). She was the third ship to bear this name.

Built by Henry Robb of Leith for the British-India Steam Navigation Company (later P & O) and operated by the RFA on a long-term bareboat charter. She was designed to carry naval stores from UK to overseas Naval bases, she pioneered containerisation with "Chacons", small wooden containers developed at Chatham Dockyard. [2]

Bacchus was returned to her owners on 1 October 1981, and renamed Cherry Lanka on 6 November 1981. She scrapped at Gadani Beach on 31 December 1985. [3]

Her sister-ship, RFA Hebe (A406) caught fire and was a constructive total loss in 1978 in Gibraltar.

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References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 Moore, John E, ed. (1974). Jane's Fighting Ships. London: Jane's Yearbooks. p. 364. ISBN   0354005065.
  2. "RFA Bacchus". historicalrfa.org. Retrieved 18 December 2020.
  3. "Bacchus (5033454)" . Miramar Ship Index . Retrieved 18 December 2020.