Command and Communications Boat (CCB) The Command and Communications Boat (CCB or Charlie Boat) served as flagships for river squadron and river division commanders as well as command posts for Army battalion commanders. They were similar to Monitors except they contained a communications suite amidships rather than an 81mm mortar. The communications suite had five
AN/VRC-46, three AN/GRC 106, one
AN/PRC-25, and one AN/ARC-27 radios—giving it the ability to communicate with units on land, air and sea. The CCB also featured Raytheon Pathfinder 1900 radar and a Decca navigation installation. By the end of 1967 each river assault squadron contained 26 ATCs, 16
Assault Support Patrol Boats (ASPBs), five Monitors, two CCBs and one refueller (a modified LCM).
Zippo Monitor In mid-1967, when the Vietcong constructed bunkers capable of withstanding 40mm rounds, RIVFLOT 1 began exploring the idea of deploying flamethrowers on riverboats as a potential bunker buster. On 4 October, the
M132A1, an Army flamethrower vehicle, was shoehorned into an ATC. Commanders hoped the M132A1's 32-second burst and range would not only neutralize enemy bunkers but also deter river ambushes. Tests proved satisfactory, but the M132A1, weighing , was too heavy for the Navy's needs. Instead, lighter M10-8 flamethrowers were installed on six Monitors delivered in May 1968. Nicknamed "
Zippo" after the popular cigarette lighter, these Monitors mounted two M10-8 flamethrowers, each with an effective range of . With of
napalm fuel, the M10-8 could lay down a sheet of flame for 225 seconds. Sailors would make napalm by mixing a powder consisting of the coprecipitated aluminium salts of naphthenic and palmitic acids with gasoline. Compressed air propelled the napalm through the flamethrower, and a gasoline lighter acted as the trigger.
Howitzer Monitor In order to provide heavier firepower 8 Monitors were produced with an M49 105 mm howitzer mounted in a T172 turret. ==Operators==