MV St Catherine

MV St Catherine is a Roll-on/roll-off car and passenger ferry. She served the Wightlink crossing from Portsmouth to Fishbourne, Isle of Wight from 1983 to 2009. In 2010, she was sold to Delcomar and renamed GB Conte.

St Catherine at Gunwharf Quays
History
Name:

19832010: St Catherine

2010present: GB Conte
Operator:

19832010: Wightlink

2010present Delcomar
Port of registry:

19832010: London

2010present: Cagliari[1]
Builder: Robb Caledon Shipbuilders, Leith
Cost: £5 million
Yard number: 534[2]
In service: 3 July 1983
Identification:
Status: In Service with Delcomar.
General characteristics
Class and type: Roll-on/roll-off car ferry
Tonnage:
Length: 77.05 m (252.8 ft)
Beam: 17.22 m (56.5 ft)
Draught: 2.48 m
Installed power: 3x 850bhp Harland & Wolff-MAN 6ASL25 diesel engines driving Voith Schneider cycloidal propellers
Speed: 12.5 knots (23.2 km/h; 14.4 mph)
Capacity:
  • 771 passengers
  • 142 cars

History

St Catherine was built by Robb Caledon Shipbuilders of Leith at a cost of £5 million. When she entered service on 3 July 1983, she was the biggest ferry ever in the Sealink Isle of Wight fleet, and the first able to carry more than 100 cars. Local papers reported that she made the other Isle of Wight ferries looked like toys in comparison.[4] St Catherine remained the largest ship in the fleet only until her sister, St Helen entered service later in 1983.

St Catherine was present at the International Fleet Review in 2005, representing Wightlink with a number of her sisters. She was later laid up at Hythe in Hampshire.

In 2010 St Catherine was sold to Delcomar and sailed from Hythe to Sardinia as GB Conte on 31 July 2010, with a crew of 11 on board. In March 2015, it was announced that sisters 'St Catherine' and 'St Helen' were being reunited, after spending five years apart, as St Helen had also been sold to Delcomar. She was renamed Anna Mur.

Layout

St Catherine was the first of the Isle of Wight ferries to use a Voith Schneider asymmetric three-propeller layout with a bridge mounted forward. Two decks of passenger accommodation are provided above the car deck, with two bar areas and seating space. One of the fastest car ferries in the company at the time, she allowed Wightlink to provide a 35-minute crossing of the Solent. Two older ferries on the route were withdrawn from service, while another, Caedmon was transferred to join her sisters on the Lymington to Yarmouth route.

Service

St Catherine entered service with Sealink in 1983; the company becoming Wightlink in 1991. She sailed between Portsmouth, on the English mainland and Fishbourne, Isle of Wight until 2009. GB Conte and Anna Mur currently sail between the Isola di San Pietro and Portovesme; an approximately 40-minute service with a frequency of 17 ferries a day in each direction during the summer season.[5]

gollark: In any case, I am not a linguist, but I think it's technically possible to produce an AST from English, or something like that, but really impractical. There is no regular grammar, words can't be cleanly mapped to concepts because they carry connotations pulled in from common discourse and the context surrounding them, many of them mean multiple things, you have to be able to resolve pronouns and references to past text, etc.
gollark: I am not aware of there being 22 base units of words or whatever.
gollark: What?
gollark: Try parsing, say, English grammar with a set of unambiguous rules.
gollark: To wildly speculate about why, it's probably that real-world problems are generally too complicated and nuanced for a practical amount of handcoded rules to work.

References

  1. "GB Conte". Ships Nostalgia. Retrieved 24 July 2010.
  2. "Leith Built Ships". Robbs Built Ships. Retrieved 27 June 2010.
  3. "St Catherine". Marine Traffic. Retrieved 22 July 2010.
  4. "History". Wightlink. Archived from the original on 22 March 2009. Retrieved 22 July 2010.
  5. "Carloforte - Portovesme". Delcomar (in Italian). Retrieved 14 August 2017.
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