Navy gets 2nd indigenous anti-sub warship

Jaswinder Singh Baidwan

Akhran da mureed
Staff member
The second anti-submarine warfare (ASW) corvette, Kadmatt, built indigenously by the GRSE shipyard here, was formally handed over to the Navy today.
The super-sophisticated frontline warship was handed over by Rear Admiral AK Verma (retd), chairman and managing director of Garden Reach Shipbuilders and Engineers Limited (GRSE), to the commanding officer of the ship, Cdr Mahesh C Moudgil, at a ceremony here.
The 109-m-long vessel has a displacement of 3,200 tonnes. It can reach a maximum speed of 25 knots with endurance of over 3,400 NM at 18 knots speed. The warship is designed to accommodate 17 officers and 106 sailors. The basic design for these ships was developed by Indian Navy’s Directorate of Naval Design while the detailed design was prepared by the in-house design department of the GRSE, Kolkata.
The GRSE is building four ASW corvette class ships under the P-28 project. INS Kamorta, the first in the class, was handed over to the Navy last year.
The ship’s main role is to protect the nation’s maritime interests against possible submarine attacks and she is a potent platform for neutralising enemy submarines with an array of weapons such as torpedoes, rocket launchers and helicopter, officials said.
The ship has excellent stealth features effective both above and below the sea surface. It is equipped with total atmospheric control ventilation system, making her fully capable to fight in nuclear, biological and chemical warfare environments.
 
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