Half of Australia’s first Hunter frigate is now in fabrication
A computer-generated image of the Hunter-class frigate. Note its distinguishing mast-mounted CEAFAR radar. (Image: BAE Systems Australia)
Since first steel was cut on the future HMAS Hunter on 21 June 2024, BAE Systems Australia has been making solid progress on this Royal Australian Navy (RAN) frigate.
Andy Coxall, director of acquisition and build at BAE Systems Maritime Australia, told Shephard: “We’ve actually cut steel on 39 of the 78 units – half of the ship is actually in fabrication now.”
Each frigate comprises 78 units, which together create 22 blocks. Furthermore, Coxall said: “The first consolidated block, block 11, has gone into blast and paint at Osborne Naval Shipyard.”
Block 12 encompasses mostly the frigate’s mast,
Our news & analysis is now part of Defence Insight®
A Basic-level or higher Defence Insight subscription is now required to view this content.
More from Naval Warfare
-
Shoreline vulnerability drives Gulf interest in USV networks
Ukraine’s combat-proven Magura uncrewed surface vessel is attracting Gulf state interest as the Iran war exposes gaps in layered maritime air defence, raising questions about whether low-cost attritable systems can gain a foothold in a procurement culture historically drawn to high-end Western platforms.
-
SOF Week 2026: US NSW explores 3D-printed USVs for forward-deployed operations
US Naval Special Warfare Command is assessing the feasibility of rapidly producing expendable mid-sized USVs in theatre to support SOF and maritime security missions.
-
SOF Week 2026: MARSOC selects upgraded Shark Marine dive navigation system
MARSOC is procuring the Shark Marine Dive Tablet 2 to address a longstanding combat diver navigation capability gap, improving underwater positioning, situational awareness and integration with existing diver propulsion vehicles.