MV Hjaltland

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History
Civil Ensign of the United Kingdom.svgUnited Kingdom
Name: MV Hjaltland
Namesake: Old Norse name for Shetland[1]
Owner: RBS
Operator: NorthLink Ferries
Port of registry: Lerwick, United Kingdom
Route: Aberdeen to Lerwick via Kirkwall
Builder: Aker Finnyards in Rauma, Finland
Cost: £35million
Yard number: NB438
Laid down: 4 October 2001
In service: 1 October 2002[1]
Identification:
Status: in service
General characteristics
Class & type: +100 A 1, Ro-Ro Cargo/Passenger Ferry + LMC, UMS, LI, NAV1[4]
Tonnage:
  • 11,720 GT;
  • 1,831 t DWT
Displacement: 7,434 tonnes
Length: 125 m (410 ft)[1]
Beam: 20 m (66 ft)
Draught: 5.4 m (18 ft)
Installed power: 4 x MAK 6M43 5400 KW each
Propulsion: 2 CP propellers and 2 bow thrusters
Speed: 24 knots
Capacity:
  • 600 passengers (117 cabins);
  • 140 cars (650m)[1]

MV Hjaltland is a NorthLink Ferries vehicle and passenger ferry based in Aberdeen. She operates daily ferry services between mainland Scotland and the northern archipelagos of Orkney and Shetland.

History

MV Hjaltland and her sister ship, MV Hrossey, were constructed in 2002 at Aker Finnyards in Finland.[1]

Layout

MV Hjaltland carries passengers, cars, freight and livestock. There are a choice of restaurants, bars and lounges, children's play area and a cinema. The restaurants and lounges have a total seating capacity of 600. The original 100 cabins had a total of 300 beds.[5] All cabins are en-suite, most being two berth, with a number of four-berth cabins for families.[6] In April 2007, an additional accommodation module was fitted in Birkenhead, increasing her capacity to 356 berths.[7] The ship is fitted with lifts and was built to accommodate disabled passengers throughout. There are 10 officer and 27 crew cabins.[4]

Each pair of diesel engines drives a controllable-pitch propeller through a gearbox. There are two rudders, two 900 kW bow thrusters and Mitsubishi stabilisers.[1][4]

Service

MV Hjaltland operates between Lerwick and Aberdeen, with a call at Kirkwall on some days. A walkway, built specifically for the current vessels, can take both foot and car passengers. She is also able to relieve on the Stromness to Scrabster crossing.

Incidents and accidents

In August 2012, a man died after falling overboard into the North Sea approximately 20 miles north of Fraserburgh.[8]

On 9 September 2013, Search for passenger, 22, overboard from Hjaltland stood down http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-scotland-north-east-orkney-shetland-24014383

On 23 August 2013, MV Hjaltland was diverted from its normal route to assist with search and rescue efforts following the crash of a Super Puma helicopter two miles off the Shetland coast close to Sumburgh.[9] The ferry was later used to transport the bodies of three of the crash victims to Aberdeen.[10]

Footnotes

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External links