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{{other ships|INS Trishul}}
{{other ships|INS Trishul}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2015}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2022}}
{{Use Indian English|date=August 2015}}
{{Use Indian English|date=August 2022}}
{|{{Infobox ship begin}}
{|{{Infobox ship begin}}
{{Infobox ship image
{{Infobox ship image
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|Hide header=
|Hide header=
|Header caption=
|Header caption=
|Ship class={{sclass-|Talwar|frigate}}
|Ship class={{sclass|Talwar|frigate}}
|Ship displacement=*3620 tons (standard)
|Ship displacement=*3620 tons (standard)
*4035 tons (full)
*4035 tons (full)
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'''INS ''Trishul''''' (F43) (Translated as ''[[Trident]]'') is the second [[frigate]] of the {{sclass-|Talwar|frigate|4}} of the [[Indian Navy]]. ''Trishul'', the guided missile frigate, joined the arsenal of Indian Navy in 2003. The ship was commissioned by the then Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Western Naval Command Vice Admiral Arun Prakash at [[St. Petersburg]], [[Russia]] on 25 June 2003. It has a complement of 32 officers and 228 sailors. In contrast to the lead ship INS ''Talwar'', the sea trials of ''Trishul'' were considerably shortened as the ship performed well. ''Trishul'' arrived in Mumbai on 23 September 2003.
'''INS ''Trishul''''' (F43) (Translated as ''[[Trident]]'') is the second [[frigate]] of the {{sclass|Talwar|frigate|4}} of the [[Indian Navy]]. ''Trishul'', the guided missile frigate, joined the arsenal of Indian Navy in 2003. The ship was commissioned by the then Flag Officer Commanding-in-Chief, Western Naval Command Vice Admiral Arun Prakash at [[St. Petersburg]], [[Russia]] on 25 June 2003. It has a complement of 32 officers and 228 sailors. In contrast to the lead ship INS ''Talwar'', the sea trials of ''Trishul'' were considerably shortened as the ship performed well. ''Trishul'' arrived in Mumbai on 23 September 2003.


==Design==
==Design==
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==Armament==
==Armament==
The [[Surface-to-air missile|surface to air weapons]] systems include one single-rail MS-196 launcher that can launch the long range [[Buk missile system|Shtil-1]] (NATO: SA-17) surface-to-air missile. Eight [[9K38 Igla|Igla-1E]] (NATO: SA-16) portable air defence missiles are on board for short-range threats. ''Trishul'' became the second Indian warship to incorporate an eight cell KBSM 3S-14NE Vertical Launcher and was the first to upload the new Indian/Russian designed missile, the supersonic [[BrahMos|BrahMos PJ-10 ASCM]] (anti-sub/ship/surface cruise missile). ''Trishul''{{'}}s VLS can launch the Indian designed [[3M-54 Klub|3M-54E Klub-N]] (NATO: SS-N-27) subsonic ASCM. ''Trishul'' has one 100 mm A-190 (E) dual purpose gun mount for surface and air targets. Its rate of fire is 60 rounds a minute at a range of 15 km.
The [[Surface-to-air missile|surface to air weapons]] systems include one single-rail MS-196 launcher that can launch the long range [[Buk missile system|Shtil-1]] (NATO: SA-17) surface-to-air missile. Eight [[9K38 Igla|Igla-1E]] (NATO: SA-16) portable air defence missiles are on board for short-range threats. ''Trishul'' became the second Indian warship to incorporate an eight cell KBSM 3S-14NE Vertical Launcher and was the first to upload the new Indian/Russian designed missile, the supersonic [[BrahMos|BrahMos PJ-10 ASCM]] (anti-sub/ship/surface cruise missile). ''Trishul''{{'}}s VLS can launch the Russian designed [[3M-54 Klub|3M-54E Klub-N]] (NATO: SS-N-27) subsonic ASCM. ''Trishul'' has one 100 mm A-190 (E) dual purpose gun mount for surface and air targets. Its rate of fire is 60 rounds a minute at a range of 15 km.


Two [[Kashtan]] Air Defence Gun/Missile mounts are ''Trishul''{{'}}s [[Close-In Weapons System]] (CIWS). The Kashtan CIWS has two [[Gryazev-Shipunov GSh-6-30|GSh-30k]] 30&nbsp;mm Gatling guns per mount firing 5,000 rounds a minute, along with eight 9M-311 Grison missiles (NATO: SA-N-11) with a range of {{convert|8|km}}. There are 64 Grison reloads (32 each mount) with a package of four missile taking less than 2 minutes to load. Forward of ''Trishul''{{'}}s [[Bridge (ship)|bridge]] and aft of the VLS is one 12-round [[RBU-6000]] anti-submarine warfare rocket launch that can fire either Splav-90R rockets or RGB-60 depth charges. Two pairs of fixed 533&nbsp;mm DTA-53 [[torpedo tube]]s are located port and starboard midships. Both can launch either SET-65E anti-sub and 53-65KE antiship torpedoes.<ref>{{cite web
Two [[Kashtan]] Air Defence Gun/Missile mounts are ''Trishul''{{'}}s [[Close-In Weapons System]] (CIWS). The Kashtan CIWS has two [[Gryazev-Shipunov GSh-6-30|GSh-30k]] 30&nbsp;mm Gatling guns per mount firing 5,000 rounds a minute, along with eight 9M-311 Grison missiles (NATO: SA-N-11) with a range of {{convert|8|km}}. There are 64 Grison reloads (32 each mount) with a package of four missile taking less than 2 minutes to load. Forward of ''Trishul''{{'}}s [[Bridge (ship)|bridge]] and aft of the VLS is one 12-round [[RBU-6000]] anti-submarine warfare rocket launch that can fire either Splav-90R rockets or RGB-60 depth charges. Two pairs of fixed 533&nbsp;mm DTA-53 [[torpedo tube]]s are located port and starboard midships. Both can launch either SET-65E anti-sub and 53-65KE antiship torpedoes.<ref>{{cite web
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In December 2005, ''Trishul'' collided with a commercial ship, ''Ambuja Laxmi'', outside the Mumbai harbour, while returning from a training mission. Radar systems installed by the port authorities and those on board ''Ambuja Laxmi'' were unable to detect ''Trishul'', and were unable to prevent the side-on collision.<ref name="accident">{{cite web|url=http://www.dailyexcelsior.com/web1/06jan16/national.htm#12 |title=Navy to keep MbPT, JNPT informed of stealth frigates movement |website=[[Daily Excelsior]] |access-date=2009-11-18 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070403004543/http://www.dailyexcelsior.com/web1/06jan16/national.htm |archive-date=3 April 2007 }}</ref>
In December 2005, ''Trishul'' collided with a commercial ship, ''Ambuja Laxmi'', outside the Mumbai harbour, while returning from a training mission. Radar systems installed by the port authorities and those on board ''Ambuja Laxmi'' were unable to detect ''Trishul'', and were unable to prevent the side-on collision.<ref name="accident">{{cite web|url=http://www.dailyexcelsior.com/web1/06jan16/national.htm#12 |title=Navy to keep MbPT, JNPT informed of stealth frigates movement |website=[[Daily Excelsior]] |access-date=2009-11-18 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070403004543/http://www.dailyexcelsior.com/web1/06jan16/national.htm |archive-date=3 April 2007 }}</ref>


In the later part of 2017, ''Trishul'' was deployed on a four-month long anti piracy mission in the region of [[Gulf of Aden]]. The ship started at Mumbai in August 2017, and returned on 23 December 2017. During the period, the ship covered {{convert|26,000|nmi}}, carried out a bilateral exercise with the [[Italian Navy]], exchange visits with the navies of Italy, Russia, United States, Japan, and Bangladesh. On 06 October 2017, ''Trishul'' successfully deterred a pirate attack on an Indian merchant vessel, MV Jag Amar.<ref name="INS Trishul Returns Home after Anti Piracy Patrol of 120 Days">{{cite web|title=INS Trishul Returns Home after Anti Piracy Patrol of 120 Days|url=https://www.indiannavy.nic.in/content/ins-trishul-returns-home-after-anti-piracy-patrol-120-days|website=Indian Navy|publisher=Ministry of Defence, Government of India|access-date=1 January 2018}}</ref>
In the later part of 2017, ''Trishul'' was deployed on a four-month long anti piracy mission in the region of [[Gulf of Aden]]. The ship started at Mumbai in August 2017, and returned on 23 December 2017. During the period, the ship covered {{convert|26,000|nmi}}, carried out a bilateral exercise with the [[Italian Navy]], exchange visits with the navies of Italy, Russia, United States, Japan, and Bangladesh. On 06 October 2017, ''Trishul'' successfully deterred a pirate attack on an Indian merchant vessel, MV Jag Amar.<ref name="INS Trishul Returns Home after Anti Piracy Patrol of 120 Days">{{cite web|title=INS Trishul Returns Home after Anti Piracy Patrol of 120 Days|url=https://www.indiannavy.nic.in/content/ins-trishul-returns-home-after-anti-piracy-patrol-120-days|website=Indian Navy|publisher=Ministry of Defence, Government of India|access-date=1 January 2022}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
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{{Talwar class frigate}}
{{Talwar class frigate}}
{{Frigates_of_the_Indian_Navy}}
{{Frigates of the Indian Navy}}


{{DEFAULTSORT:Trishul (F43)}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Trishul (F43)}}