German frigate Köln (F211)
Köln during NATO Exercise North Star in 1991 | |
| History | |
|---|---|
| Germany | |
| Name | Köln |
| Builder | Blohm+Voss, Hamburg |
| Laid down | 16 June 1980 |
| Launched | 29 May 1981 |
| Commissioned | 19 October 1984 |
| Decommissioned | 31 July 2012 |
| Identification |
|
| Fate | To be scrapped |
| General characteristics | |
| Class & type | Bremen-class frigate |
| Displacement | 3,680 tonnes (3,620 long tons) |
| Length | 130.50 m (428 ft 2 in) |
| Beam | 14.60 m (47 ft 11 in) |
| Draft | 6.30 m (20 ft 8 in) |
| Installed power |
|
| Propulsion | 2 × propeller shafts, controllable pitch, five-bladed Sulzer-Escher propellers |
| Speed | 30 knots (56 km/h) |
| Range | more than 4,000 nmi (7,400 km) at 18 knots (33 km/h) |
| Complement | 202 crew plus 20 aviation |
| Sensors & processing systems |
|
| Electronic warfare & decoys |
|
| Armament |
|
| Aircraft carried | Place for 2 Sea Lynx Mk.88A helicopters equipped with torpedoes, air-to-surface missiles Sea Skua, and/or heavy machine gun. |
Köln was a Bremen-class frigate of the German Navy. She was the fifth ship of the class, and the fifth ship to serve with one of the navies of Germany to be named after the city of Cologne, in North Rhine-Westphalia. Her predecessor was the frigate Köln of the Bundesmarine, lead ship of the Köln class.