Canadian corvette Chicoutimi anchored in one of the Allied ports

Canadian corvette Chicoutimi anchored in one of the Allied ports

Aug 16, 2021 #canadians
Canadian corvette Chicoutimi

 

The Canadian corvette Chicoutimi (HMCS Chicoutimi) had the board number K156 and belonged to the Flower class corvettes. It was built at the Canadian Vickers Ltd. shipyards in Quebec, Canada.
Corvette “Chicoutimi”, construction began on July 05, 1940, launched on October 16, 1940, accepted into the Royal Canadian Navy on May 12, 1941.

The main characteristics of the Flower class are: displacement – 925 tons. Length – 62.4-63.4 m, draft – 3.51-3.35 m (depending on modifications), width – 10.06 m. Power plant – two boilers, one propeller. The maximum speed is 16 knots. Cruising range at a speed of 12 knots – 3500 miles. The crew is 85-90 people.
Armament: one 102-mm cannon (BL 4 inch Mk IX) at the bow, at the stern – 20-mm automatic anti-aircraft gun “Oerlikon” (Oerlikon). Anti-submarine armament: two aft installations for dropping depth charges (40-70 bombs), 2-4 onboard installations (Mk.II depth charge throwers).
Corvette Chicoutimi was involved in escorting Allied sea convoys between Canada and Great Britain (in particular, SC47, ON71). Since August 1944, it has been a training ship.

Corvette “Chicoutimi” is one of the few Canadian Flower class corvettes that have not undergone major upgrades since the moment of construction.
The Corvette was withdrawn from the Canadian Navy on June 16, 1945.




Location: Canada
Time in the photo: September 6, 1944

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *