History | |
---|---|
United Kingdom | |
Name | MV Wight Light |
Owner | Wightlink 2009 present |
Operator | Wightlink |
Port of registry | London |
Route | Yarmouth to Lymington 25 February 2009 – 24 March 2015. 27 March 2015 – 1 April 15 (Portsmouth-Fishbourne) Replacement for retired MV St Helen 1 April 2015- present Yarmouth-Lymington. |
Builder | Kraljevica, Croatia |
Yard number | 550 |
Launched | 26 January 2008 |
In service | 25 February 2009 |
Homeport | London |
Identification |
|
Status | In Service |
General characteristics | |
Class and type | W-Wight Class RO-RO (Roll On Roll Off) Vessel. |
Tonnage | 2,546 GT; 360 DWT |
Displacement | 1,495 tonnes |
Length | 62.4 m (204.7 ft) |
Beam | 16.1 m (52.8 ft) |
Draught | 2.30 m (7.5 ft) |
Depth | 4.50 m (14.8 ft) |
Decks | Two Passenger and two car decks (One for cars & freight & one port side mezzanine for cars/vans only) |
Installed power | 4x 740 bhp (550 kW) Volvo D16MH 16 litre 6cyl diesels |
Propulsion | 2 x Voith Schneider 21 R5/135 propeller units |
Speed | 11 knots (20 km/h; 13 mph) |
Capacity | 360 passengers, 65 cars, 110m of Freight Traffic |
Crew | 10 |
MV Wight Light is a car and passenger ferry built for the British ferry operator Wightlink. She is in service between mainland England and the Isle of Wight.
Wight Light was designed by naval architects Hart Fenton & Company and constructed at the Kraljevica shipyard in Croatia. She was launched on 26 January 2008, [1] the first of three vessels commissioned by Wightlink to replace their ageing ferries Caedmon, Cenred and Cenwulf on the Yarmouth to Lymington route. Her sister ships are Wight Sky and Wight Sun, both of which are now in service.
Wight Light was due to be delivered in late August 2008 arriving in Lymington late on 1 September 2008. She entered service on 25 February 2009.
Wight Light is in service between Yarmouth and Lymington. On 12 March 2009 Wight Light was taken out of service for repairs to her hydraulic ramp. 35-year-old Cenred was brought back from retirement. [2]
On 24 November 2014, Wightlink announced that they were going to change the way they configure their fleet in response to both falling demand on their Western Solent Lymington-Yarmouth ferry service and the need to find a replacement for their oldest vessel in their fleet, MV St Helen. [3] It was decided to transfer the Wight Light to the Portsmouth-Fishbourne route to replace the St Helen. Both sea and berthing trials were carried out in January–February and March 2015, allowing for the first commercial sailing of Wight Light on the Portsmouth-Fishbourne service on Friday 27 March 2015. Wight Light has since returned to operating the Yarmouth-Lymington route.
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) /Wikimedia Commons has media related to Wight Light (ship, 2008) . |
Wightlink is a ferry company operating routes across The Solent between Hampshire and the Isle of Wight in the south of England. It operates car ferries between Lymington and Yarmouth, and Portsmouth and Fishbourne and a fast passenger-only catamaran between Portsmouth Harbour and Ryde Pier. The company is jointly owned by Basalt Infrastructure Partners based in the United Kingdom and Fiera Infrastructure based in Canada.
Red Funnel, the trading name of the Southampton Isle of Wight and South of England Royal Mail Steam Packet Company Limited, is a ferry company that carries passengers, vehicles and freight on routes between the English mainland and the Isle of Wight. High-speed foot passenger catamarans, known as Red Jets, run between Southampton and Cowes, while vehicle ferries run between Southampton and East Cowes.
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MV Wight Sun is an Isle of Wight ferry built in 2008 for the British company Wightlink.
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MV Cenwulf was one of Wightlink's 'C' class vehicle and passenger ferries on their route from Lymington to Yarmouth on the Isle of Wight.
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HSC Our Lady Pamela was a high-speed catamaran ferry which operated between the Isle of Wight and mainland England. She had operated on the Wightlink Ryde Pier to Portsmouth route since 1986 under Sealink along with her now scrapped sister ship HSC Our Lady Patricia. Both ships were named after the daughters of Lord Mountbatten, who had been the Governor of the Isle of Wight.
HSC FastCat Ryde is a high speed catamaran ferry. The vessel was originally built in Singapore for service in the Philippines as Water Jet 1. She was bought by Wightlink in 2000 and following an extensive refit entered service on the Ryde Pier to Portsmouth route in August of that year along with her sister ship HSC FastCat Shanklin.
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MV Cuthred was an Isle of Wight ro-ro ferry built in 1969. From 1990 until 2009, she operated as Mira Praia in Portugal.
MV Victoria of Wight is a ship sailing on the Portsmouth to Fishbourne route operated by Wightlink. She entered service on 26 August 2018. Built by the Cemre Shipyard in Yalova for £30 million, she is the newest ship in the fleet and completed Wightlink's £45 million investment in the Portsmouth to Fishbourne route. In addition, upon introduction into service Victoria of Wight became the largest ship in the fleet and the new flagship.