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Pennant number

In the Royal Navy and other navies of Europe and the Commonwealth of Nations, ships are identified by pennant number (an internationalisation of pendant number, which it was called before 1948). Historically, naval ships flew a flag that identified a flotilla or type of vessel. For example, the Royal Navy used a red burgee for torpedo boats and a pennant with an H for torpedo boat destroyers. Adding a number to the type-identifying flag uniquely identified each ship.

In the current system, a letter prefix, called a flag superior, identifies the type of ship, and numerical suffix, called a flag inferior, uniquely identifies an individual ship. Not all pennant numbers have a flag superior.

Royal Navy systems

The Royal Navy first used pennants to distinguish its ships in 1661 with a proclamation that all of his majesty's ships must fly a union pennant. This distinction was further strengthened by a proclamation in 1674 which forbade merchant vessels from flying any pennants.[1]

The system of numbering pennants was adopted prior to the First World War to distinguish between ships with the same or similar names, to reduce the size and improve the security of communications, and to assist recognition when ships of the same class are together. Traditionally, a pennant number was reported with a full stop "." between the flag superior or inferior and the number, although this practice has gradually been dropped, and inter-war photos after about 1924 tend not to have the full stop painted on the hull. The system was used throughout the navies of the British Empire so that a ship could be transferred from one navy to another without changing its pennant number.

Pennant numbers were originally allocated by individual naval stations and when a ship changed station it would be allocated a new number. The Admiralty took the situation in hand and first compiled a "Naval Pendant List" in 1910, with ships grouped under the distinguishing flag of their type. In addition, ships of the 2nd and 3rd (i.e. reserve) fleets had a second flag superior distinguishing from which naval depot they were manned; "C" for Chatham, "D" for Devonport, "N" for Nore and "P" for Portsmouth. Destroyers were initially allocated the flag superior "H", but as this covered only one hundred possible combinations from H00 to H99 the letters "G" and "D" were also allocated. When ships were sunk, their pendant numbers were reissued to new ships.

The flag superior for whole ship classes has often been changed while the numbers stayed the same. For example, in 1940, the Royal Navy swapped the letters "I" and "D" around (e.g. D18 became I18 and I18 became D18) and in 1948, "K", "L" and "U" all became "F"; where there was a conflict, a 2 was added to the front of the pendant number.

During the 1970s, the service stopped painting pennant numbers on submarines on the grounds that, with the arrival of nuclear boats, they spent too little time on the surface, although submarines do continue to be issued numbers.

HMS Lancaster was initially allocated the pennant number F232, until it was realised that in the Royal Navy, form number 232 is the official report for ships that have run aground; sailors being superstitious, it was quickly changed to F229.

Second World War

No flag superior

Pendant number 13 was not allocated.

  • Capital ships, aircraft carriers, cruisers

Flag superiors

Pendant numbers 13 were not allocated to flag superiors. The letters J and K were used with three number combinations due to the number of vessels.


Flag inferiors

Flag inferiors were applied to submarines. Royal Navy submarines of the "H" and "L", and some transferred American vessels, were not issued names, only numbers. In these cases, the pendant number was simply the hull number inverted (i.e. L24 was issued pendant "24L"). Pre-war photos show the pendants painted correctly, with the flag inferior, but wartime photos show that the numbers tend to be painted "backwards", in that the inferior was painted on as a superior. For obvious reasons, the inferior "U" was not used so as not to confuse friendly ships with German U-boats. For similar reasons "V" was not used. Pendant numbers 00–10, 13, and those ending in a zero were not allocated to flag inferiors.

Post-1948

After the Second World War, in 1948, the Royal Navy adopted a rationalised "pennant" number system where the flag superior indicated the basic type of ship as follows. "F" and "A" use two or three digits, "L" and "P" up to four. Again, pennant 13 is not used (for instance the helicopter carrier Ocean (L12) was followed by Albion (L14)).

  • A — auxiliaries (vessels of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary, Royal Maritime Auxiliary Service, and Royal Navy Auxiliary Service, including depot ships, boom defence vessels, etc.)
  • C — cruisers (currently none in service, therefore unused)
  • D — destroyers
  • F — frigate (former escort destroyers, sloops and corvettes)
  • H — shore signal stations (military); survey vessels
  • K — miscellaneous vessels (e.g., the seabed operations vessel HMS Challenger or the helicopter support ship HMS Lofoten)
  • L — amphibious warfare ships
  • M — minesweepers
  • N — minelayers (currently none in service, therefore unused)
  • P — patrol boats
  • R — aircraft carriers
  • S — submarines
  • Y — yard vessels

Flotilla bands

1925–1939

From 1925, flotilla leaders were issued with but did not paint on pendant numbers. Instead, a broad band 4 feet (1.2 m) deep was painted round their fore-funnel. Divisional leaders wore a pendant number and had a narrower 2 feet (0.61 m) deep band on the fore-funnel, painted 3 feet (0.91 m) from the top. The Mediterranean Fleet wore black leader bands and the Atlantic – later Home Fleet wore white bands. The flotillas wore combinations of bands on their after funnel to identify them. From 1925 the following bands were worn;

  • 1st Destroyer Flotilla — one black band
  • 2nd Destroyer Flotilla — two black bands (one red from 1935)
  • 3rd Destroyer Flotilla — three black bands
  • 4th Destroyer Flotilla — no bands
  • 5th Destroyer Flotilla — one white band
  • 6th Destroyer Flotilla — two white bands
  • 8th Destroyer Flotilla (from 1935) — one black and one white band

Second World War

When single funnelled destroyers entered the fleet with the J class in 1939 and with an expansion in the number of flotillas, the system was changed accordingly. Single funnelled ships wore a 3 feet (0.91 m) deep band as a flotilla leader. As a divisional leader they had a 2 feet (0.61 m) wide vertical band the same colour as, and extending 6 feet (1.8 m) below, the upper flotilla band. Leaders bands were white for Home Fleet, red for Mediterranean Fleet, and the system of flotilla bands changed to;

  • 1st Destroyer Flotilla (Mediterranean) — 1 red, G class
  • 2nd Destroyer Flotilla (Mediterranean) — 2 red, H class
  • 3rd Destroyer Flotilla (Mediterranean) — 3 red bands, then none, I class
  • 4th Destroyer Flotilla (Mediterranean) — none, Tribal class
  • 5th Destroyer Flotilla (Mediterranean) — none, K class
  • 6th Destroyer Flotilla (Home) — 1 white, Tribal class
  • 7th Destroyer Flotilla (Home) — 2 white, J class
  • 8th Destroyer Flotilla (Home) — 3 white, F class
  • 9th Destroyer Flotilla (Home) — 1 black & 2 white, V and W class
  • 10th Destroyer Flotilla (Home) — none, V & W class
  • 11th Destroyer Flotilla (Western Approaches) — 1 black over 2 red, V and W class
  • 12th Destroyer Flotilla (Rosyth) — 1 white over 1 red, E class
  • 13th Destroyer Flotilla (Gibraltar) — 1 white over 2 red, V and W class
  • 14th Destroyer Flotilla (Home) — 1 red over 1 black, V and W class
  • 15th Destroyer Flotilla (Rosyth) — 1 red over 2 black, V and W class
  • 16th Destroyer Flotilla (Portsmouth) — 1 red over 1 white, V and W class
  • 17th Destroyer Flotilla (Western Approaches) (from 1940) — 1 red over 2 white, Town class
  • 18th Destroyer Flotilla (Channel) — 1 white & 1 black, A class
  • 19th Destroyer Flotilla (Dover)— 1 white over 2 black, B class
  • 20th Destroyer Flotilla (Portsmouth) — 2 white over 1 black, C class
  • 21st Destroyer Flotilla (China Station) — 2 white over 1 red, D class

Flotilla bands were used throughout the war although war-losses, operational requirements, and new construction broke up the homogeneity of the destroyer flotillas. Vessels were deployed as and when they were needed or available, and were often incorporated into mixed "escort groups" containing a range of vessel types such as sloops, corvettes, frigates and escort carriers. A few of the escort groups adopted funnel bands; others (like the B7 escort group) wore letters on their funnels.

Post-war

Post-war Flotillas were no longer identified by bands, but by large cast metal numbers bolted to the funnels. Flotilla leaders continued to display a large band at the top of the funnel and half leaders would carry a thin black band around the funnel.

Deck codes

Aircraft carriers and vessels operating aircraft have a deck code painted on the flight deck to aid identification by aircraft attempting to land. This is in a position clearly visible on the approach path. The Royal Navy uses a single letter (typically the first letter of the ship's name) for aircraft carriers and large vessels operating aircraft, and pairs of letters (usually letters from the ship's name) for smaller vessels. The United States Navy, with its larger fleet, uses the numeric part of the hull classification number (a system analogous to pennant numbers). Deck codes used by contemporary major British naval warships include:

International pennant numbers

Several European NATO and Commonwealth navies agreed to introduce a pennant number system based on that of the Royal Navy. The system guarantees that, amongst those navies and other navies that later joined, all pennant numbers are unique. The United States does not participate in this system; its ships are identified by unique hull classification symbols.

Participating countries, with their assigned number ranges,[2][3] include:

  • Argentina — (D: 1x, 2x; P: 3x, 4x; S: 2x, 3x; C: x; V: x)
  • Australia (formerly incorporated into the Royal Navy system until 1969; now uses a system based on the RN pennant number format and U.S. hull classification symbols)[4]
  • Belgium — (A:9xx; F: 9xx; M: 9xx; P:9xx)
  • Denmark — (N: 0xx; A/M/P: 5xx; F/S/Y: 3xx; L: 0xx)
  • France — (R: 9x; C/D/S: 6xx; F: 7xx; M/P/A: 6xx, 7xx; L: 9xxx)
  • Germany — (A: 5x, 51x, 14xx; D: 1xx; F: 2xx; L: 76x; M: 10xx, 26xx; P: 61xx; S: 1xx)
  • Greece — (D/P: 0x, 2xx; A/F: 4xx; L/S/M: 1xx)
  • Italy — (5xx; D 5xx; F 5xx; P 4xx; 5xxx; A 5xxx; L 9xxx; Y 5xx)
  • Kenya
  • Malaysia
  • New Zealand (F111-HMNZS Te Mana)
  • Netherlands (8xx; Y: 8xxx)
  • Norway (F/S/M: 3xx; P: 9xx; L: 45xx)
  • Poland
  • Portugal (F/M: 4xx; S: 1xx; P: 11xx0)
  • Spain (A: xx, F: 0x 1x 2x.., R: 01, 11, L: 0x, 1x.., P: 0x, 1x.., Y: xxx)
  • Sri Lanka
  • South Africa
  • Turkey (D/S: 3xx; F: 2xx; N: 1xx; A/M: 5xx; P: 1xx, 3xx, L: 4xx; Y: 1xxx)
  • United Kingdom (R: 0x; D: 0x & 1xx; F: 0x, 1xx, 2xx; S: 0x, 1xx; M: 0x, 1xx, 1xxx, 2xxx; P: 1xx, 2xx, 3xx; L: 0x, 1xx, 3xxx, 4xxx; A: any)

The NATO pennant number system added the Y (for yard) symbol for tugboats, floating cranes, docks and the like.

International Deck Codes

Royal Navy

The Royal Navy uses a single letter (typically the first letter of the ship's name) for aircraft carriers and large vessels operating aircraft, and pairs of letters (usually, letters from the ship's name) for smaller vessel.

Albion class

  • HMS Albion — AN
  • HMS Bulwark — BK

River class

  • HMS Forth — FH
  • HMS Medway — MY
  • HMS Trent — TT
  • HMS Tamar — TM
  • HMS Spey — SP

Daring class

  • HMS Daring — DA
  • HMS Dauntless — DT
  • HMS Diamond — DM
  • HMS Dragon — DN
  • HMS Defender — DF
  • HMS Duncan — DU

Duke class

  • HMS Argyll — AY
  • HMS Lancaster — LA
  • HMS Iron Duke — IR
  • HMS Montrose — MR
  • HMS Westminster — WM
  • HMS Northumberland — NL
  • HMS Richmond — RM
  • HMS Somerset — SM
  • HMS Sutherland — SU
  • HMS Kent — KT
  • HMS Portland — PD
  • HMS St Albans — SB

Invincible class

  • HMS Invincible — N
  • HMS Illustrious — L
  • HMS Ark Royal — R

Queen Elizabeth class

  • HMS Queen Elizabeth — Q
  • HMS Prince of Wales — P

Bay class

  • RFA Cardigan Bay — CB
  • RFA Lyme Bay — YB
  • RFA Mounts Bay — MB

Tide class

  • RFA Tidespring — TS
  • RFA Tiderace — TR
  • RFA Tidesurge — TU
  • RFA Tideforce — TF

Wave class

  • RFA Wave Knight — WK
  • RFA Wave Ruler — WR

Fort Rosalie Class

  • RFA Fort Rosalie — FR
  • RFA Fort Austin — FA

Individual ships

Royal Netherlands Navy

De Zeven Provinciën class

  • HNLMS De Zeven Provinciën — ZP
  • HNLMS Tromp — TR
  • HNLMS De Ruyter — DR
  • HNLMS Evertsen — EV

Holland class

  • HNLMS Holland — HL
  • HNLMS Zeeland — ZL
  • HNLMS Friesland — FR
  • HNLMS Groningen — GR

Amphibious support ships

Royal Canadian Navy

Halifax class

  • HMCS Halifax — HX
  • HMCS Vancouver — VR
  • HMCS Ville de Québec — VC
  • HMCS Toronto — TO
  • HMCS Regina — RA
  • HMCS Calgary — CY
  • HMCS Montréal — ML
  • HMCS Fredericton — FN
  • HMCS Winnipeg — WG
  • HMCS Charlottetown — CN
  • HMCS St. John's — SJ
  • HMCS Ottawa — OA

Harry DeWolf-class

  • HMCS Harry DeWolf — HF

Egyptian Navy

  • ENS Anwar El Sadat — AS
  • ENS Gamal Abdel Nasser — GN
  • ENS Tahya Misr — TM
  • ENS El Fateg — FT

German Navy

Braunschweig class

  • Braunschweig — BS
  • Magdeburg — MD
  • Erfurt — EF
  • Oldenburg — OL
  • Ludwigshafen am Rhein — LR

Sachsen-class frigate

  • Sachsen — SN
  • Hamburg — HA
  • Hessen — HE

Auxiliary ships

  • Main — MA
  • Mosel — MO

French Navy

Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier

  • FS Charles de Gaulle - G

Mistral class

  • FS Tonnerre — TO
  • FS Dixmude — DX
  • FS Mistral — MI

Horizon class

  • FS Forbin — FB
  • FS Chevalier Paul — PL

Aquitaine class

  • FS Aquitaine — QN
  • FS Provence — PC
  • FS Languedoc — LD
  • FS Auvergne — VG
  • FS Bretagne — BT

La Fayette class

  • FS La Fayette — YE
  • FS Surcouf — SF
  • FS Courbet — CO
  • FS Aconit — AT
  • FS Guépratte — GT

Royal New Zealand Navy

  • HMNZS Otago — OTA
  • HMNZS Canterbury — CAN

Portuguese Navy

Vasco da Gama class

  • NRP Vasco da Gama — VG
  • NRP Corte Real — CR
  • NRP Álvares Cabral — AC

Bartolomeu Dias class

  • NRP Bartolomeu Dias — BD
  • NRP Dom Francisco de Almeida — FA

Indonesian Navy

The Indonesian Navy uses a three letter deck code only for frigates and LPDs. The letters usually consist of first letter, third letter, and fourth letter (or last letter) of the ship's name

Ahmad Yani Class

  • KRI Ahmad Yani — AMY
  • KRI Oswald Siahaan — OWA
  • KRI Karel Satsuit Tubun-KST
  • KRI Abdul Halim Perdanakusumah-AHP
  • KRI Slamet Riyadi-SRI
  • KRI Yos Sudarso-YSO

Martadinata Class

  • KRI Raden Eddy Martadinata — REM
  • KRI I Gusti Ngurah Rai — GNR

Bung Tomo Class

  • KRI Bung Tomo-BTO
  • KRI John Lie-JLI
  • KRI Usman HARUN- USH

Fatahillah Class Corvette

  • KRI Fatahillah-FTI
  • KRI Malayahati-MLH
  • KRI Nala-NLA

Makassar- Class

  • KRI Makassar -MKS
  • KRI Banda Aceh — BAC
  • KRI Surabaya - SBY
  • KRI Banjarmasin-BJM
  • KRI Semarang-SMR

Cakra Class

  • KRI Cakra-CKA
  • KRI Nanggala-NGA

Nagapasa Class

  • KRI Nagapasa-NPS
  • KRI Ardadedali-ARD
  • KRI Alugoro-AGR

See also

References

  1. ^ Perrin, william Gordon (1922). British Flags, Their Early History, and Their Development at Sea: With an Account of the Origin of the Flag as a National Device. Cambridge University Press archive. p. 202.
  2. ^ "sci.military.naval FAQ, Part B – General Terminology & Definitions". Hazegray.org. 2002-04-28. Retrieved 2013-10-08.
  3. ^ (PDF). CCEB. January 2012. pp. 199–226. Archived from the original (PDF) on 28 August 2017. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
  4. ^ Jones, Peter (2001). "Towards Self Reliance". In Stevens, David (ed.). The Royal Australian Navy. The Australian Centenary History of Defence (vol III). South Melbourne, VIC: Oxford University Press. p. 213. ISBN 0-19-554116-2. OCLC 50418095.

External links

  • "British Navy Pennant Numbers" naval-history.net

pennant, number, this, article, about, royal, navy, european, ship, pennant, numbers, united, states, equivalent, hull, classification, symbol, canadian, equivalent, hull, classification, symbol, canada, royal, navy, other, navies, europe, commonwealth, nation. This article is about Royal Navy and European ship pennant numbers For the United States equivalent see Hull classification symbol For the Canadian equivalent see Hull classification symbol Canada In the Royal Navy and other navies of Europe and the Commonwealth of Nations ships are identified by pennant number an internationalisation of pendant number which it was called before 1948 Historically naval ships flew a flag that identified a flotilla or type of vessel For example the Royal Navy used a red burgee for torpedo boats and a pennant with an H for torpedo boat destroyers Adding a number to the type identifying flag uniquely identified each ship In the current system a letter prefix called a flag superior identifies the type of ship and numerical suffix called a flag inferior uniquely identifies an individual ship Not all pennant numbers have a flag superior Contents 1 Royal Navy systems 1 1 Second World War 1 1 1 No flag superior 1 1 2 Flag superiors 1 1 3 Flag inferiors 1 2 Post 1948 1 3 Flotilla bands 1 3 1 1925 1939 1 3 2 Second World War 1 3 3 Post war 1 4 Deck codes 2 International pennant numbers 3 International Deck Codes 3 1 Royal Navy 3 2 Royal Netherlands Navy 3 3 Royal Canadian Navy 3 4 Egyptian Navy 3 5 German Navy 3 6 French Navy 3 7 Royal New Zealand Navy 3 8 Portuguese Navy 3 9 Indonesian Navy 4 See also 5 References 6 External linksRoyal Navy systems EditThe Royal Navy first used pennants to distinguish its ships in 1661 with a proclamation that all of his majesty s ships must fly a union pennant This distinction was further strengthened by a proclamation in 1674 which forbade merchant vessels from flying any pennants 1 The system of numbering pennants was adopted prior to the First World War to distinguish between ships with the same or similar names to reduce the size and improve the security of communications and to assist recognition when ships of the same class are together Traditionally a pennant number was reported with a full stop between the flag superior or inferior and the number although this practice has gradually been dropped and inter war photos after about 1924 tend not to have the full stop painted on the hull The system was used throughout the navies of the British Empire so that a ship could be transferred from one navy to another without changing its pennant number Pennant numbers were originally allocated by individual naval stations and when a ship changed station it would be allocated a new number The Admiralty took the situation in hand and first compiled a Naval Pendant List in 1910 with ships grouped under the distinguishing flag of their type In addition ships of the 2nd and 3rd i e reserve fleets had a second flag superior distinguishing from which naval depot they were manned C for Chatham D for Devonport N for Nore and P for Portsmouth Destroyers were initially allocated the flag superior H but as this covered only one hundred possible combinations from H00 to H99 the letters G and D were also allocated When ships were sunk their pendant numbers were reissued to new ships The flag superior for whole ship classes has often been changed while the numbers stayed the same For example in 1940 the Royal Navy swapped the letters I and D around e g D18 became I18 and I18 became D18 and in 1948 K L and U all became F where there was a conflict a 2 was added to the front of the pendant number During the 1970s the service stopped painting pennant numbers on submarines on the grounds that with the arrival of nuclear boats they spent too little time on the surface although submarines do continue to be issued numbers HMS Lancaster was initially allocated the pennant number F232 until it was realised that in the Royal Navy form number 232 is the official report for ships that have run aground sailors being superstitious it was quickly changed to F229 Second World War Edit No flag superior Edit Pendant number 13 was not allocated Capital ships aircraft carriers cruisersFlag superiors Edit Pendant numbers 13 were not allocated to flag superiors The letters J and K were used with three number combinations due to the number of vessels D destroyers until 1940 capital ships aircraft carriers cruisers from 1940 F destroyers until 1940 and large auxiliary combatants from 1940 G destroyers from 1940 H destroyers I capital ships aircraft carriers cruisers until 1940 destroyers from 1940 J minesweepers K corvettes frigates L escort destroyers sloops until 1941 M minelayers N minesweepers P sloops until 1939 boom defence vessels until 1940 R destroyers from 1942 sloops T river gunboats netlayers U sloops from 1941 W tugs and salvage vessels X special service vessels Z gate mooring and boom defence vessels 4 auxiliary anti aircraft vessels FY fisheries auxiliary fishing trawlers drifter etc Flag inferiors Edit Flag inferiors were applied to submarines Royal Navy submarines of the H and L and some transferred American vessels were not issued names only numbers In these cases the pendant number was simply the hull number inverted i e L24 was issued pendant 24L Pre war photos show the pendants painted correctly with the flag inferior but wartime photos show that the numbers tend to be painted backwards in that the inferior was painted on as a superior For obvious reasons the inferior U was not used so as not to confuse friendly ships with German U boats For similar reasons V was not used Pendant numbers 00 10 13 and those ending in a zero were not allocated to flag inferiors C coastal U class pre war construction F fleet River class H H class L L class M minelayer Grampus class P O class P class 31P U class wartime construction V class 211P to 299P S class wartime construction 311P to 399P T class 411P to 499P A class 511P to 599P United States Navy lend lease submarines 611P to 699P commandeered foreign construction 711P to 799P captured enemy submarines R R class S S class submarines pre war construction T T class submarines pre war construction Post 1948 Edit After the Second World War in 1948 the Royal Navy adopted a rationalised pennant number system where the flag superior indicated the basic type of ship as follows F and A use two or three digits L and P up to four Again pennant 13 is not used for instance the helicopter carrier Ocean L12 was followed by Albion L14 A auxiliaries vessels of the Royal Fleet Auxiliary Royal Maritime Auxiliary Service and Royal Navy Auxiliary Service including depot ships boom defence vessels etc C cruisers currently none in service therefore unused D destroyers F frigate former escort destroyers sloops and corvettes H shore signal stations military survey vessels K miscellaneous vessels e g the seabed operations vessel HMS Challenger or the helicopter support ship HMS Lofoten L amphibious warfare ships M minesweepers N minelayers currently none in service therefore unused P patrol boats R aircraft carriers S submarines Y yard vesselsFlotilla bands Edit 1925 1939 Edit From 1925 flotilla leaders were issued with but did not paint on pendant numbers Instead a broad band 4 feet 1 2 m deep was painted round their fore funnel Divisional leaders wore a pendant number and had a narrower 2 feet 0 61 m deep band on the fore funnel painted 3 feet 0 91 m from the top The Mediterranean Fleet wore black leader bands and the Atlantic later Home Fleet wore white bands The flotillas wore combinations of bands on their after funnel to identify them From 1925 the following bands were worn 1st Destroyer Flotilla one black band 2nd Destroyer Flotilla two black bands one red from 1935 3rd Destroyer Flotilla three black bands 4th Destroyer Flotilla no bands 5th Destroyer Flotilla one white band 6th Destroyer Flotilla two white bands 8th Destroyer Flotilla from 1935 one black and one white bandSecond World War Edit When single funnelled destroyers entered the fleet with the J class in 1939 and with an expansion in the number of flotillas the system was changed accordingly Single funnelled ships wore a 3 feet 0 91 m deep band as a flotilla leader As a divisional leader they had a 2 feet 0 61 m wide vertical band the same colour as and extending 6 feet 1 8 m below the upper flotilla band Leaders bands were white for Home Fleet red for Mediterranean Fleet and the system of flotilla bands changed to 1st Destroyer Flotilla Mediterranean 1 red G class 2nd Destroyer Flotilla Mediterranean 2 red H class 3rd Destroyer Flotilla Mediterranean 3 red bands then none I class 4th Destroyer Flotilla Mediterranean none Tribal class 5th Destroyer Flotilla Mediterranean none K class 6th Destroyer Flotilla Home 1 white Tribal class 7th Destroyer Flotilla Home 2 white J class 8th Destroyer Flotilla Home 3 white F class 9th Destroyer Flotilla Home 1 black amp 2 white V and W class 10th Destroyer Flotilla Home none V amp W class 11th Destroyer Flotilla Western Approaches 1 black over 2 red V and W class 12th Destroyer Flotilla Rosyth 1 white over 1 red E class 13th Destroyer Flotilla Gibraltar 1 white over 2 red V and W class 14th Destroyer Flotilla Home 1 red over 1 black V and W class 15th Destroyer Flotilla Rosyth 1 red over 2 black V and W class 16th Destroyer Flotilla Portsmouth 1 red over 1 white V and W class 17th Destroyer Flotilla Western Approaches from 1940 1 red over 2 white Town class 18th Destroyer Flotilla Channel 1 white amp 1 black A class 19th Destroyer Flotilla Dover 1 white over 2 black B class 20th Destroyer Flotilla Portsmouth 2 white over 1 black C class 21st Destroyer Flotilla China Station 2 white over 1 red D classFlotilla bands were used throughout the war although war losses operational requirements and new construction broke up the homogeneity of the destroyer flotillas Vessels were deployed as and when they were needed or available and were often incorporated into mixed escort groups containing a range of vessel types such as sloops corvettes frigates and escort carriers A few of the escort groups adopted funnel bands others like the B7 escort group wore letters on their funnels Post war Edit Post war Flotillas were no longer identified by bands but by large cast metal numbers bolted to the funnels Flotilla leaders continued to display a large band at the top of the funnel and half leaders would carry a thin black band around the funnel Deck codes Edit Aircraft carriers and vessels operating aircraft have a deck code painted on the flight deck to aid identification by aircraft attempting to land This is in a position clearly visible on the approach path The Royal Navy uses a single letter typically the first letter of the ship s name for aircraft carriers and large vessels operating aircraft and pairs of letters usually letters from the ship s name for smaller vessels The United States Navy with its larger fleet uses the numeric part of the hull classification number a system analogous to pennant numbers Deck codes used by contemporary major British naval warships include HMS Albion AN HMS Bulwark BK HMS Dauntless DT HMS Ocean O HMS Ark Royal R HMS Invincible N HMS Illustrious L HMS Queen Elizabeth Q HMS Prince of Wales P RFA Argus AS RFA Lyme Bay YB RFA Cardigan Bay CB RFA Mounts Bay MBInternational pennant numbers EditSeveral European NATO and Commonwealth navies agreed to introduce a pennant number system based on that of the Royal Navy The system guarantees that amongst those navies and other navies that later joined all pennant numbers are unique The United States does not participate in this system its ships are identified by unique hull classification symbols Participating countries with their assigned number ranges 2 3 include Argentina D 1x 2x P 3x 4x S 2x 3x C x V x Australia formerly incorporated into the Royal Navy system until 1969 now uses a system based on the RN pennant number format and U S hull classification symbols 4 Belgium A 9xx F 9xx M 9xx P 9xx Denmark N 0xx A M P 5xx F S Y 3xx L 0xx France R 9x C D S 6xx F 7xx M P A 6xx 7xx L 9xxx Germany A 5x 51x 14xx D 1xx F 2xx L 76x M 10xx 26xx P 61xx S 1xx Greece D P 0x 2xx A F 4xx L S M 1xx Italy 5xx D 5xx F 5xx P 4xx 5xxx A 5xxx L 9xxx Y 5xx Kenya Malaysia New Zealand F111 HMNZS Te Mana Netherlands 8xx Y 8xxx Norway F S M 3xx P 9xx L 45xx Poland Portugal F M 4xx S 1xx P 11xx0 Spain A xx F 0x 1x 2x R 01 11 L 0x 1x P 0x 1x Y xxx Sri Lanka South Africa Turkey D S 3xx F 2xx N 1xx A M 5xx P 1xx 3xx L 4xx Y 1xxx United Kingdom R 0x D 0x amp 1xx F 0x 1xx 2xx S 0x 1xx M 0x 1xx 1xxx 2xxx P 1xx 2xx 3xx L 0x 1xx 3xxx 4xxx A any The NATO pennant number system added the Y for yard symbol for tugboats floating cranes docks and the like International Deck Codes EditRoyal Navy Edit The Royal Navy uses a single letter typically the first letter of the ship s name for aircraft carriers and large vessels operating aircraft and pairs of letters usually letters from the ship s name for smaller vessel Albion class HMS Albion AN HMS Bulwark BKRiver class HMS Forth FH HMS Medway MY HMS Trent TT HMS Tamar TM HMS Spey SPDaring class HMS Daring DA HMS Dauntless DT HMS Diamond DM HMS Dragon DN HMS Defender DF HMS Duncan DUDuke class HMS Argyll AY HMS Lancaster LA HMS Iron Duke IR HMS Montrose MR HMS Westminster WM HMS Northumberland NL HMS Richmond RM HMS Somerset SM HMS Sutherland SU HMS Kent KT HMS Portland PD HMS St Albans SBInvincible class HMS Invincible N HMS Illustrious L HMS Ark Royal RQueen Elizabeth class HMS Queen Elizabeth Q HMS Prince of Wales PBay class RFA Cardigan Bay CB RFA Lyme Bay YB RFA Mounts Bay MBTide class RFA Tidespring TS RFA Tiderace TR RFA Tidesurge TU RFA Tideforce TFWave class RFA Wave Knight WK RFA Wave Ruler WRFort Rosalie Class RFA Fort Rosalie FR RFA Fort Austin FAIndividual ships RFA Argus AS RFA Fort Victoria FVRoyal Netherlands Navy Edit De Zeven Provincien class HNLMS De Zeven Provincien ZP HNLMS Tromp TR HNLMS De Ruyter DR HNLMS Evertsen EVHolland class HNLMS Holland HL HNLMS Zeeland ZL HNLMS Friesland FR HNLMS Groningen GRAmphibious support ships HNLMS Rotterdam RD HNLMS Johan de Witt JW HNLMS Karel Doorman KDRoyal Canadian Navy Edit Halifax class HMCS Halifax HX HMCS Vancouver VR HMCS Ville de Quebec VC HMCS Toronto TO HMCS Regina RA HMCS Calgary CY HMCS Montreal ML HMCS Fredericton FN HMCS Winnipeg WG HMCS Charlottetown CN HMCS St John s SJ HMCS Ottawa OAHarry DeWolf class HMCS Harry DeWolf HFEgyptian Navy Edit ENS Anwar El Sadat AS ENS Gamal Abdel Nasser GN ENS Tahya Misr TM ENS El Fateg FTGerman Navy Edit Braunschweig class Braunschweig BS Magdeburg MD Erfurt EF Oldenburg OL Ludwigshafen am Rhein LRSachsen class frigate Sachsen SN Hamburg HA Hessen HEAuxiliary ships Main MA Mosel MOFrench Navy Edit Charles de Gaulle aircraft carrier FS Charles de Gaulle GMistral class FS Tonnerre TO FS Dixmude DX FS Mistral MIHorizon class FS Forbin FB FS Chevalier Paul PLAquitaine class FS Aquitaine QN FS Provence PC FS Languedoc LD FS Auvergne VG FS Bretagne BTLa Fayette class FS La Fayette YE FS Surcouf SF FS Courbet CO FS Aconit AT FS Guepratte GTRoyal New Zealand Navy Edit HMNZS Otago OTA HMNZS Canterbury CANPortuguese Navy Edit Vasco da Gama class NRP Vasco da Gama VG NRP Corte Real CR NRP Alvares Cabral ACBartolomeu Dias class NRP Bartolomeu Dias BD NRP Dom Francisco de Almeida FAIndonesian Navy Edit The Indonesian Navy uses a three letter deck code only for frigates and LPDs The letters usually consist of first letter third letter and fourth letter or last letter of the ship s nameAhmad Yani Class KRI Ahmad Yani AMY KRI Oswald Siahaan OWA KRI Karel Satsuit Tubun KST KRI Abdul Halim Perdanakusumah AHP KRI Slamet Riyadi SRI KRI Yos Sudarso YSOMartadinata Class KRI Raden Eddy Martadinata REM KRI I Gusti Ngurah Rai GNRBung Tomo Class KRI Bung Tomo BTO KRI John Lie JLI KRI Usman HARUN USHFatahillah Class Corvette KRI Fatahillah FTI KRI Malayahati MLH KRI Nala NLAMakassar Class KRI Makassar MKS KRI Banda Aceh BAC KRI Surabaya SBY KRI Banjarmasin BJM KRI Semarang SMRCakra Class KRI Cakra CKA KRI Nanggala NGANagapasa Class KRI Nagapasa NPS KRI Ardadedali ARD KRI Alugoro AGRSee also EditShip prefix List of squadrons and flotillas of the Royal NavyReferences Edit Perrin william Gordon 1922 British Flags Their Early History and Their Development at Sea With an Account of the Origin of the Flag as a National Device Cambridge University Press archive p 202 sci military naval FAQ Part B General Terminology amp Definitions Hazegray org 2002 04 28 Retrieved 2013 10 08 ACP 113 AI Call Sign Book for Ships PDF CCEB January 2012 pp 199 226 Archived from the original PDF on 28 August 2017 Retrieved 25 August 2017 Jones Peter 2001 Towards Self Reliance In Stevens David ed The Royal Australian Navy The Australian Centenary History of Defence vol III South Melbourne VIC Oxford University Press p 213 ISBN 0 19 554116 2 OCLC 50418095 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ships by pennant number British Navy Pennant Numbers naval history net Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pennant number amp oldid 1130817375, 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