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HMS Tamar is a Batch 2 River-class offshore patrol vessel of the Royal Navy. Named after the River Tamar in England, she is the fourth Batch 2 River-class vessel to be built [ 14 ] and is forward deployed long-term to the Indo-Pacific region with her sister ship HMS Spey .
HMS Collingwood (Fareham, Hampshire) HMS Dartmouth (Britannia Royal Naval College, Dartmouth, Devon) Includes Hindostan as static training ship; HMS Excellent (Whale Island, Portsmouth)
HM Ships Tamar and Spey would join the fleet in 2020 and 2021 respectively, both fulfilling overseas Forward Presence roles and releasing Type 23 frigates for roles more suited to a higher-capability warship. [12] On 21 April 2017, with construction of HMS Tamar already under way, the first steel was cut for HMS Spey.
The last HMS Tamar on Stonecutters Island is now a government marine facility, now known as the Government Dockyard. The vacated site in Central, Hong Kong Central, now known as the Tamar site , became a valuable piece of real estate and after much debate as to how to best use the site has now become the location of the new Hong Kong Government ...
The Royal Navy's principal overseas base is HMS Jufair in Bahrain. [9] A general-purpose frigate and vessels belonging to the navy's 9th Mine Counter-Measures Squadron are forward-deployed there. Two fast patrol boats, together with a forward-deployed River-class offshore patrol vessel , normally form part of the Gibraltar Squadron and are ...
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Tamar (Chinese: 添馬) is a station on MTR's shelved North Island line (NIL) proposal on the north shore of Hong Kong Island. It will be located on the former site of HMS Tamar on Hong Kong Island, Hong Kong. Tamar station will be the eastern terminus of the Tung Chung line and the western terminus of the Tseung Kwan O line. It will also act ...
HMS Tamar (1795) was a store lighter launched in 1795 and purchased that year for Navy service. She was broken up in 1798. HMS Tamar (1796) was a 38-gun fifth rate launched in 1796 and broken up in 1810. HMS Tamar (1814) was a 26-gun sixth rate launched in 1814, converted into a coal hulk in 1831 and sold in 1837.