Engineering:Offshore Raiding Craft
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Short description: Offshore Raiding Craft
Royal Marine Offshore Raiding Craft
| |
Class overview | |
---|---|
Builders: | Holyhead Marine Services |
Active: | 35 as of 2023 (27 troop-carrying; 8 fire-support)[1] |
General characteristics | |
Type: | Fast Assault Craft |
Displacement: | Light Load 4760 kg inc fuel & 2 crew & armour, Full load 6000 kg |
Length: | 9.1m |
Beam: | 2.9m |
Draught: | Light 0.56 m, Loaded 0.69 m |
Propulsion: | Twin Steyr M0256K43 high speed diesel engines each developing 250Hp/184Kw at 4300rpm. |
Speed: | Light load 39 knots, Full load 32 knots |
Range: | In excess of 200 nautical miles (370 km) |
Complement: | 12 Royal Marines (1 driver, 3 gunners, 8 fully equipped troops) |
Armament: | Fwd; single or twin GPMG. Aft 2 off; .50 cal, GPMG or 40mm grenade launchers, Gau mini gun |
Armour: | Dynema ballistic protection to defeat 7.62mm x 39 Ball at 20m. (optional) |
The Offshore Raiding Craft (ORC) is a small, fast boat used by the Royal Marines for troop insertion, and patrols.[2] The ORC is primarily used when undertaking strategic raiding missions, where speed and covertness is desired.[according to whom?] However, it is equally capable when conducting larger scale amphibious operations alongside the larger and more traditional LCACs, LCUs and LCVPs.[according to whom?] [3]
There are two variants of the ORC:[4][5]
- Mid Console Variant (MCV), a.k.a. the Fire Support Variant
- Aft Console Variant (ACV), a.k.a. the Troop Carrying Variant
See also
- List of active Royal Marines military watercraft
- Combat Rubber Raiding Craft
References
- ↑ "Royal Navy Fleet Poster p.21". February 2023. https://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/-/media/royal-navy-responsive/images/navynews/archivepdfs/2020s/2023/navy-news-february-2023-issue-823.pdf?rev=d6ed03242b4e475684f2ea061fb2d2d3.
- ↑ "9m Offshore Raiding Craft". Amgram. http://www.amgram.co.uk/?portfolio=orc. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
- ↑ Royal Marines - Landing Craft, royalnavy.mod.uk, Retrieved 15 June 2014
- ↑ "Green men in a boat". March 2009. p. 24. https://www.royalnavy.mod.uk/-/media/royal-navy-responsive/images/navynews/archivepdfs/2000s/2009/navy-news-march-2009-issue-656.pdf. "...a new model of their offshore raiding craft (ORC) - the somewhat uninspiringly-named mid-console variant, but let's call it the gunboat as that sums up its role so much more graphically. The existing ORCs - the troop-carrying variant - are designed with the console (the bit where you drive the thing) at the back of the craft, with seats for up to eight men in front...In these new ORCs, the console sits in the middle, allowing the gunners to be arrayed to cover every angle; this gunboat lives up to that title"
- ↑ "On land and sea - NATO's Marine forces". 11 January 2023. https://www.natomultimedia.tv/app/asset/683182. "So the ORC is our jet boat and we’ve got two variants. We’ve got the troop carrying variant, which can take six people and deliver them onto a beach, and then we’ve also got the fire support variant and that’s our kind of protection while we’re out on the water."
External links
- Royal Marines - Landing Craft (royalnavy.mod.uk)
- Video - HMS Bulwark - Offshore Raiding Craft (youtube.com)
Original source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Offshore Raiding Craft.
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