HSC Orange 1

HSC Rapid Link Jet is a high-speed ferry operated by Seajets and operated on Stena Line's Holyhead - Dún Laoghaire route and seasonally on the Fishguard - Rosslare service. She was marketed by Stena Line as the Stena Express.

HSC Sunflower 2 in Dublin, October 2008
History
Name:
  • 1996-1998: Stena Lynx III
  • 1998-1998: Elite
  • 1998-1998: P&O Stena Elite
  • 1998-2003: Stena Lynx III
  • 2003-2004: Elite
  • 2004-2011: Stena Lynx III
  • 2011-2012: Sunflower 2
  • 2012-2020: Orange 1
  • 2020-ownards: Rapid Link Jet
Port of registry: Cyprus,  Cyprus
Builder: Incat, Tasmania, Australia
Yard number: 040
Laid down: May 1995
Completed: May 1996
In service: April 1996
Identification: IMO number: 9129328
Status: In service
General characteristics
Class and type: Incat 81m WPC
Tonnage: 4,113 GT
Length: 80.6 m (264 ft 5 in)
Beam: 26.0 m (85 ft 4 in)
Draught: 3.1 m (10 ft 2 in)
Installed power: 4x Ruston 16RK270 MkII Diesel Engines
Capacity:
  • 660 passengers
  • 153 cars

In 2019 was sold for Seajets and now is laid-up in Perama, Greece.

Design and construction

Rapid Link Jet was built in 1996 by Incat in Australia,[1] and is one of a series of wave-piercing catamarans to be constructed by the company. Construction began in May 1995 and was completed in May 1996.

Career

She briefly served on the English Channel for P&O Stena Line as HSC Elite.

In 1998 she was transferred to Stena Line's Fishguard - Rosslare service and renamed Stena Lynx III. She has since operated this route on a seasonal basis, spending the winter laid-up, usually in Birkenhead.[2] Stena Line purchased the vessel in 2004. The same year, she developed some serious technical problems, and spent a large part of the summer season out of service.

She returned to her seasonal role the Southern Irish Sea on 14 May 2009,[3] for another summer operating alongside the MS Stena Europe.

She operated the Holyhead–Dún Laoghaire route running twice daily from 15 March 2010 until the end of May 2010, when the HSC Stena Explorer operated the route with one round trip per day.

She was then laid up in Dún Laoghaire until 29 June 2010 when the vessel moved to Rosslare. She operated her seasonal summer route from 10 July 2010 until September 2010.

On 15 September 2010, she once again returned to operate the Holyhead-Dún Laoghaire service, after the HSS Stena Explorer was withdrawn from the route for the winter season of 2010. She operated the route until Sunday, 9 January 2011, in which she then had her 2011 refit. She then returned to holyhead, before moving to Dún Laoghaire for lay up until June 2011.

At the end of June 2011, she left Dún Laoghaire to begin her summer seasonal service on the Rosslare - Fishguard route. She began her summer service on the Rosslare - Fishguard route on Friday 1 July, and ended on Sunday 4 September 2011, she then returned to Dún Laoghaire for lay up.

In October 2011 the Stena Lynx III was renamed Sunflower 2. While en route to Asia she suffered a major engine failure in the Bay of Biscay, after this incident she was repaired in La Coruna.

In 2016 she operated in Korea with the new name Orange 1.[4]

In 2019 renamed Rapid Link Jet was sold for Seajets and now is laid-up in Perama, Greece.

References

  1. "Sunflower2 (19009)". DNV GL Vessel Register. Det Norske Veritas. Retrieved 24 December 2009.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 25 April 2009. Retrieved 24 April 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  3. http://www.stenaline.co.uk/ferry/latest-sailing-information/fishguard-rosslare
  4. http://www.marinetraffic.com/ais/details/ships/9129328
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