HMS Northumberland’s Merlin Tests Flares while Patrolling Indian Ocean

HMS Northumberland’s Merlin  Tests Flares while Patrolling Indian Ocean

In the middle of her counter-piracy and counter-drugs work, the Devonport-based frigate HMS Northumberland’s Merlin helicopter tested one of the many tricks in her box – her flares.

These are installed to decoy incoming heat-seeking missiles – fired either by other aircraft, or ground-based threats – drawing them away from the helicopter’s engines on to a much hotter target.

A crew of four Fleet Air Arm personnel – two pilots, one observer and one aircrewman – plus nine engineers and technicians, and an ‘aircraft controller’, who oversee sorties from Northumberland’s operations room in the bowels of the frigate, are responsible for the helicopter, which is embarked for the duration of the deployment.

The Merlin is one of several Flights (in this case 05) provided by 829 Naval Air Squadron in Culdrose, Cornwall, to Type 23 frigates for operations around the globe.

HMS Northumberland took over from her sister HMS Sutherland at the end of November and will be prowling some of the 2½ million square miles of sea – that’s more than eight times the size of the North Sea – which is the domain of the international maritime security effort in the region until the spring.

[mappress]
Naval Today Staff, January 22, 2013; Image: Royal Navy