ICGV Týr

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ICGV Týr
Career Icelandic Coast Guard
Launched: March, 1975
Commissioned: 1975
Decommissioned: still active
Fate: still active
General Characteristics
Displacement: 1214 tonnes
Length: 71.15 m
Beam: 10 m
Draft: 5.80 m
Power: 2 x 3163 kW (4300 BHP)
Propulsion: MAN 8L40/54 x 2
Speed: 20 knots
Complement: 16-19 (room for 64)
Aircraft: One helicopter
Gun: 40 mm Bofors L60 MKIII
Radars: Surface Search: Sperry; E/F-band. Navigation: Furuno; I-band
Sonar: Hull-mounted high-frequency active search

ICGV Týr is an Offshore Patrol vessel of the Ægir-class and the flagship of the Icelandic Coast Guard, built by Aarhus Flydedok a/s, in Denmark.

Týr is the biggest ship in the Icelandic Coast Guard and participated in the last Cod War. In May 1976 she survived being rammed twice by HMS Falmouth, which led Captain Guðmundur H. Kjærnested to give the order to man the guns against the much more powerful warship to deter further rammings.

Týr was originally armed with a manually loaded 57 mm M1898 Hotckiss cannon which was replaced in 1990 with the current Bofors 40 mm cannon. In 1994 a large crane was added on the starboard side of the flight deck and in 1997 the flight deck was extended. In 2001, the ship was sent to Poland for modification and received a second rudder. In 2006 she was sent to Poland again for replacement of her bridge and other renovations.


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