HMAS Tiger Snake

HMAS Tiger Snake was a Snake-class junk built for the Royal Australian Navy during the Second World War. She was launched in 1945 and commissioned into the Royal Australian Navy on 22 August 1945 and was used by the Services Reconnaissance Department (SRD).[1]

HMAS Tiger Snake in April 1945
History
Australia
Name: Tiger Snake
Builder: J.J. Savage and Sons, Williamstown
Launched: 1945
In service: 22 August 1945
Out of service: 3 November 1945
General characteristics
Class and type: Snake-class junk
Tonnage: 80 tons (gross)
Length: 66 ft (20 m)
Beam: 17 ft (5.2 m)
Depth: 7.6 ft (2.3 m)
Installed power: Gray Marine 64 YTL diesel, single screw, 300 hp (220 kW)
Speed: 9 knots (17 km/h; 10 mph)
Range: 500 nmi (930 km; 580 mi)
Capacity: 20 tons of cargo
Complement: 9
Armament: Two Oerlikon 20 mm cannon, three or four M2 Browning machine guns or Bren Guns

Operations

On 14 July 1945, HMAS Tiger Snake transported D Company of the 2/17th Battalion on a patrol of the Baram River, Borneo.[2] She was paid off on 3 November 1945, before being handed over to the British Civil Administration in Borneo.[1]

Between 13 and 23 August 1945, HMAS Tiger Snake, carrying SRD operatives of Operation Semut IVB sailed out of Labuan, Sarawak, and moored near the mouth of the Mukah River. The operative leader, Lieutenant Rowan Waddy, and Lieutenant Ron Hoey, using a Hoehn military folboat (collapsible kayak) paddled along the Mukah to engage, with the help of local natives, any remaining hostile Japanese groups. On the way they were threatened by a crocodile the length of the folboat, but managed to deal with it. After their mission was accomplished they safely returned to Tiger Snake.[3]

Notes

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gollark: Stuxnet wasn't done remotely. They chained together a ridiculous number of zero days to attack the computers the centrifuges were physically connected to and the PLCs.
gollark: It might be fun to use it to generate *maximally* right/left-wing text.
gollark: I would assume that would be a fairly easy machine learning classifier thingy, at least if you had enough text of known wingness to train it on.
gollark: I'm sure *someone* will end up buying it anyway.

References

  • 2/17 Battalion History Committee (1998) [1990]. What We Have We Hold: A History of the 2/17 Australian Infantry Battalion, 1940–1945 (Revised ed.). Loftus, New South Wales: Australian Military History Publications. ISBN 1-876439-36-X.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Hoehn, John (2011). Commando Kayak: The Role of the Folboat in the Pacific War. Zurich, Switzerland: Hirsch. ISBN 978-3-033-01717-7.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Straczek, J.H. (1996). Royal Australian Navy: A-Z Ships, Aircraft and Shore Establishments. Sydney: Navy Public Affairs. ISBN 1876043784.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

Further reading

  • Corvettes. Australia's Naval Patrol Forces. Photofile No. 10. Marrickville: Topmill. 2001. ISBN 1-876860-21-9.
  • Lind, Lewis James (1988). Fair Winds to Australia: 200 Years of Sail on the Australia Station. Reed. ISBN 0730102165.

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