ARM Romero

ARM Romero, also referred to as ARM Matias Romero, is a Sierra-class corvette offshore patrol vessel of the Mexican Navy. The ship was constructed at Salina Cruz Shipyard in Salina Cruz, Oaxaca, with Romero being launched on 17 September 1999 and entering service the same day.

Description
The Sierra class as built had a full load displacement of 1,344 LT and measured 70.4 m long with a beam of 10.5 m and a draught of 2.8 m. According to the Mexican Navy, the vessels have a length of 75.15 m, a beam of 10.5 m, a draught of 3.18 m and a normal displacement of 950 t. The corvettes are powered by two Caterpillar 3616 V16 diesel engines turning two shafts creating 12394 bhp total. This gave the vessels a speed of 18 kn or 23 kn. The vessels have two 260 kW and one 190 kW generators for power production.

The Sierra class mount a Saab EOS 450 optronic director for fire control, and radars operating on the E/F and I-bands for navigation, surface and air search. They are equipped with the Alenia 2 combat data system. These ships have an aft flight deck and hangar for one MBB Bo 105C helicopter. The corvettes are armed with one 57 mm Mk3 naval gun on the fore deck to engage air and surface targets. Romero alone in the class is also equipped with an SA-N-10 surface-to-air missile. The ships carry an 11 m interceptor craft capable of 50 kn. The corvettes have a complement of 75 including 10 officers.

Construction and career
The ship was constructed at Salina Cruz Shipyard in Salina Cruz, Oaxaca, Mexico. The vessel was laid down on 23 July 1998 and launched on 17 September 1999. The ship was commissioned into Mexican Navy service on 17 September 1999. In 2017, following an earthquake, Romero was dispatched to Salina Cruz with humanitarian relief supplies and supported the local population as it recovered.