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Trials have started on a new facility at HMS Raleigh which will be used to prove equipment for the Queen Elizabeth Class Aircraft Carriers and future Royal Fleet Auxiliary (RFA) vessels. The Heavy Replenishment-at-Sea (HRAS) demonstrator is being used to simulate the transfers of bulk stores and munitions to the new Queen Elizabeth Class (QEC) Carrier from a RFA ship while underway at sea. The trials will allow the MOD to validate data from ship motion computer modelling and enable Rolls-Royce, the company who won the contract to deliver the demonstrator, to prove their HRAS system design. They will also be used to develop safe operating procedures for the new equipment, which will be fitted to the next generation of much larger RFA supply ships. Commodore David Preston (RFA), Head of Commercially Supported Shipping at the MOD’s Defence Equipment and Support (DE&S) organisation, said:
During RAS operations ships operate as close as 55 metres of each other while underway at sea. Transfers can take place in all weather conditions, day or night, with the ships linked together between heavily tensioned wires which are used to transfer the loads on a digitally controlled load traveller. To replicate this, the HRAS facility consists of a delivery platform, including a 25 metre steel mast, and a steel ship structure, which mimics the receiving points for stores on the QEC carrier. On completion of the HRAS trials Rolls-Royce will convert the demonstrator to a training facility which includes replicas of a Type 23 and Type 45 reception points. This will be used to train Royal Navy personnel and RFA staff. A working Type 23 ship’s bow structure is also included to teach wider seamanship skills. Nigel Andrews, HRAS Project Manager for the DE&S, said:
The facility is due to be handed over to HMS Raleigh in 2014 and will then provide training for the next 25 years. The Commanding Officer of HMS Raleigh, Captain Bob Fancy, said:
Warrant Officer Dave Deakin, Seamanship Training Officer at HMS Raleigh said:
The trials are being sponsored by the DE&S organisation supported by Rolls Royce Power Engineering PLC, the company who were awarded the contract to design and build the facility. The contract to build the demonstrator, conduct the trials and deliver the trainer was signed on 18 January 2011.
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