MV Caledonia

Caledonia with Claymore in Oban harbour, 1985
Career (UK)
Name:

1966 1970: Stena Baltica
1970 1987: Caledonia

Heidi
Namesake:

Roman name for Scotland;

1934 paddle steamer
Operator:

1966 1970: Stena Line

1970 1987: Caledonian MacBrayne
Port of registry: Glasgow
Route: Isle of Arran then Mull
Builder:

A/S Langesunds Mek Versted, Langesund, Norway

Engine Builders: Masch. Augsburg-Nurnberg, (M.A.N) Augsburg, West Germany[1]
Cost: £600,000
Yard number: 53
Completed: 1966
Acquired: 1970
Identification: IMO number: 6513451[2]
MMSI Number:
Callsign: IWUA (Heidi)
Fate: sunk 2005
General characteristics
Tonnage:1,157 GT
Length:58.22 m (191 ft 0 in)

61.78 m (202 ft 8 in) 12.58 m (41 ft 3 in)

3.16 m (10 ft 4 in)
Beam:12.22 m (40 ft 1 in)
Draught:3.47 m (11 ft 5 in)
Installed power:2x Oil 4SCSA 9 cyl. 300 x 450 mm
Speed:14 knots (service)
Capacity:650 passenger, 40 cars

MV Caledonia was a roll-on roll-off vehicle ferry operated by Caledonian MacBrayne in Scotland.

History

Built as Stena Baltica in 1966, she operated on various Scandinavian routes.[1]

In 1970, she was acquired by the Caledonian Steam Packet Company and rebuilt at Scott Lithgow in Greenock. Renamed Caledonia, she replaced MV Glen Sannox, on the Isle of Arran route, becoming the first roll-on roll-off ferry on this route.[3] She soon proved too small for the route and was moved to Oban, until April 1988, when she was replaced by the larger MV Isle of Mull.

Purchased for conversion to a floating restaurant, she was laid up in Dundee until December 1988, when she was sold for service in Italy, as Heidi.[3] In 2005, she sank at her moorings in Naples,[3] was re-floated and towed to Aliga, Turkey for scrapping.[4]

Footnotes

  1. 1.0 1.1 "MV Caledonia". Ships of Calmac. Retrieved 13 January 2011.
  2. "Caledonia - IMO 6513451". Shipspotting.com. Retrieved 13 January 2011.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 "Caledonian MacBrayne - Former Vessels". Iain Murray. Retrieved 13 January 2011.
  4. "M / S Stena Baltica" (in Swedish). Fakta om Fartyg (Facts about Ships). Retrieved 13 January 2011.