A&P Falmouth dazzles with paintwork for HMS Tamar
By Joseph Macey
16th Sep 2021 | Local News
A&P Falmouth has applied a stunning paint scheme to a Royal Navy warship for the first time.
The new Truro affiliated patrol ship HMS Tamar will start operations with a 'dazzle camouflage' paint scheme which comprises various shades of black, white and grey in strange and jarring shapes.
This is the first time the dazzle paint scheme has been used by the Royal Navy since World War 2, although the use of different shapes, angles and colour paint in this was first introduced in World War 1.
This paint finish helps to confuse submariners peering through periscopes, making it hard for them to identify ships and confusing their calculations about the target's speed and direction – hopefully causing a torpedo to miss.
The paint scheme was phased out soon after World War 2 due to the improvement of radar and optical devices.
A&P Falmouth's team applied the new paint scheme after completing a 30 day long period of planned maintenance work on HMS Tamar last month. In total, the unusual brief took more than 2,500 hours to cover the vessel's 2,200 sq.m surface area.
It also required additional fastidious preparation as A&P's painters marked out the different colour sections.
Gerald Pitts, Managing Director of Defence at A&P Falmouth said:
"This is very special first for us and it's been quite an experience to be involved in the reinstatement of such an iconic and historic paint scheme.
"This was the trial project before the rest of squadron's vessels are given the same finish, so we did need to make a few modifications to the programme once work was underway. We completed on time and to our usual high standards and the end result is really quite impressive."
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