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She was converted to a minehunter between 1967 and 1969.
The minehunter remained in service until 1987, when she was sold for breaking.
The minehunter remained inactive at Key West for a little more than two years.
Divers from the minehunter found no mines or explosives at the wreck site.
The Pluto Plus is a minehunter intended for use "in mine identification and destruction."
Wochi-class minehunter (Type 081) - 8 in active service.
The minehunter did not participate in the fleet entry, but was anchored in the harbour for the review.
A minehunter is a naval vessel that actively detects and destroys individual naval mines.
The A Class is a class of minehunter vessels in the Turkish Navy.
After the removal of fuel and useful equipment, the minehunter was cut into three sections and lifted off the reef by crane ships.
The additional deployment would include the 2nd Combat Engineer Regiment and a Navy minehunter.
They were based on the same basic hull as the Ham class minesweeper and the Ley class minehunter.
The Royal Navy Sandown class minehunter.
Unlike the previous Lindau-class minehunter, the vessel was built from glass reinforced plastic to reduce her magnetic signature.
Originally Cuxhaven was a minesweeper but was transformed into a minehunter in late 1970s.
On 7 February 1955, she was reclassified as a coastal minehunter (MHC-37).
There she was reclassified a coastal minehunter and redesignated MHC-24.
The Sandown-class is a class of minehunter originally built for the British Royal Navy.
Wozang-class minehunter (Type 082II) - 2 in active service.
A wooden hulled coastal minehunter, built as a successor to the Vanya class with new sweeps and more effective sonar.
Huon was deactivated on 23 March 2006, with plans to preserve the minehunter for four years should the need to reactivate the vessel become apparent.
Type 082II minesweeper / minehunter is the latest member of Chinese mine countermeasure vessels.
The Bulgarian government purchased two Wielingen-class frigates and one Tripartite minehunter in 2007.
The minehunter was one of the thirteen ships involved in the ceremonial entry through Sydney Heads, and anchored in the harbour for the review.
Cromer (M103), a Sandown-class minehunter launched in 1990 and decommissioned in 2001.