Corona Seaways

Last updated

Corona Seaways
Tor Corona (IMO 9357597).jpg
As Tor Corona in Klaipėda, 2008
History
Name
  • Corona Sea (2018-Present)
  • Corona Seaways (2012–2018)
  • Tor Corona (2008–2012)
Owner
Operator
  • Transfennica (2018–present)
  • DFDS house flag.svg DFDS Seaways (2010–2018)
  • DFDS house flag.svg DFDS Tor Line (2008–2010)
Port of registry London, Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svg  United Kingdom
Route HankoLübeck
Builder Jinling Shipyard, Nanjing, China
Yard number402
Laid down20 October 2006
Launched25 April 2007
Completed18 January 2008
In service18 January 2008
Identification
StatusIn Service
General characteristics
Tonnage
Length187 m (613.52 ft)
Beam26.50 m (86.94 ft)
Draught6.40 m (21.00 ft)
Installed power
  • 2 × MAN 9L48/60B diesels
  • combined 19,200 kW
SpeedMax 24.6 knots
Crew19
NotesLane metres 3178m

Corona Seaways (formerly named Tor Corona) is a Roll-on/Roll-off Cargo ship that was built in 2008 for DFDS Seaways (Freight Division) to operate on the Tor Line. This continued until major restructuring within DFDS with the Tor Line brand being merged into DFDS Seaways. The ship was operated by DFDS Seaways until 2018 when it was moved to Transfennica and renamed Corona Sea. [1]

2013 onboard fire

Corona Seaways was chartered to operate an average 6-day circular freight hauling route between Fredericia, Copenhagen Denmark, Klaipėda, Lithuania and occasionally Kiel, Germany. At 2100 on 3 December 2013, a cargo that included 170 vehicles, 10 of which had drivers, was loaded. At 2110, Corona Seaways set sail for Klaipėda via Copenhagen. A fire was discovered at 0215 on 4 December 2013. The fire was declared out at 1325 and after dampening the hot spots, the ship was handed back to the crew at 2110. The vessel suffered structural damage to the upper deck and to the electrical system. There were two vehicles at the location of the fire. One was a Renault Premium 250.18 truck and the other was a Renault Mascott-Master can that it was carrying. Another Renault Premium 410 cab was also severely damage along its nearside along with the other vehicles surrounding. [2]

The main cause was put down to the primary vehicle involved being un-roadworthy with the fire being started by faulty wiring within the engine compartment, particularly the starter motor. Due to the way the electrical system works with the key left in the ignition, there would have been a continual current flow in the cable from the battery despite the key being in the stop/park position. Once the fire started, it quickly spread to the rest of the vehicle. Due to the response of the crew along with the fire extinguishing system, along with the emergency services back at port, minimum damage was caused to both cargo, and vessel and following repairs at Landskrona, she re-entered service on 29 December 2013. [2]

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References

  1. "The ferry site". www.ferry-site.dk. Retrieved 16 June 2019.
  2. 1 2 "Report on the investigation of the fire on the main deck of the ro-ro cargo ferry Corona Seaways in the Kattegat, Scandinavia on 4 December 2013" (PDF). Marine Accident Investigation Branch. 2014. Retrieved 17 June 2019.