CAPE SABLE, 1959
WPB
95334
Type
C
Builder:
Coast Guard Yard, Curtis Bay, MD
Commissioned:
7 July 1959
Decommissioned:
16 August 1968
Disposition:
Transferred to South Korea, 24 September 1968, as PB 5
Length:
95’ oa; 90’ wl
Navigation
Draft: 6’2”
Beam:
20’ max.
Displacement
(tons): 98 fl (C)
Main
Engines: 4 Cummins VT-600
diesels; 2 Detroit 16V149 diesels (renovated)
BHP:
2,200; 2,470 (renovated)
Performance,
Max. Speed: 22 kts.; 24 kts.
(renovated)
Performance, Cruising:
12 kts., 1,780-mi radius (1961)
Fuel
Capacity: 3,114 gallons
Complement:
15 (1961)
Electronics:
Radar:
SPS-64 (1987)
Sonar:
none
Armament:
2 .50-cal. machine guns (as completed). 2 12.7mm mg, 2
40mm Mk 64 grenade launchers (1987)
Class
history—The
95-foot or Cape class was an outgrowth of a need for shallow-draft
anti-submarine-warfare (ASW) craft brought on by the increasing tensions
during the years immediately following World War II.
The 95-footers were designed by the Coast Guard and built at the Coast Guard Yard. Their hulls were made of steel while their superstructures were made of aluminum. This proved to be problematic throughout their service lives due to electrolysis between the dissimilar metals.
These
cutters remained unnamed until January of 1964.
Ship's
history:
The Cape Sable was stationed at Santa Barbara, CA, from 1959 to 1968. She was used for law enforcement and SAR.
Sources:
Cutter History File. USCG Historian's Office, USCG HQ, Washington, D.C.
Robert Scheina. U.S. Coast Guard Cutters & Craft, 1946-1990. Annapolis, MD: Naval Institute Press, 1990.