- MS Viking Valiant
-
For other ships of the same name, see Pride of Le Havre and Pride of Cherbourg.
Career Name: Viking Valiant (1974 - 1989)
Pride of Le Havre (1989 - 1994)
Pride of Cherbourg2 (1994 - 2002)
Pride of Cherbourg A (2002)
Pride of Al Salam 1 (2002 - 2004)
Nador (2004 - 2005)
Mogador (2005 - 2010)[1]Owner: European Ferries (1974 - 1987)
P&O Ferries (1987 - 2002)
Seven Seas Marine (2002 - 2010)Port of registry: Panama Builder: Aalborg Værft AS [2][3] Yard number: 204 Launched: 1974 Out of service: 2010 Identification: IMO number: 7358298 [3] Fate: Sold for Scrap, Early 2010 [3] General characteristics (Original) Tonnage: 6,387 Length: 128.71 m Beam: 19.81 m Draught: 4.53 m Propulsion: Två Werkspoor 8TM410, En 9TM410 diesel Speed: 18 knots Capacity: 1,200 passengers
275 carsGeneral characteristics (Extended) Tonnage: 14,760 Length: 143.66 m Beam: 23.47 m Draught: 5.05 m Propulsion: Två Werkspoor 8TM410, En 9TM410 diesel Speed: 18 knots Capacity: 1,316 passengers
380 carsPride of Le Havre was the name of ferry for P&O Ferries that sailed between Portsmouth and Le Havre from 1989 to 1994. From launch until 1994, she was known as the Viking Valiant for Townsend Thoresen and P&O. In 1994 she was renamed Pride of Cherbourg2 for P&O and continued under this name until she was sold to El Salam Maritime in 2002. El Salam Maritime renamed her Pride of Al Salam 1 for El Salam Maritime. In 2004 she was renamed Nador and chartered to COMNAV, she was again renamed 'Mogador for COMANAV in 2005, sailing under this name until being scrapped in 2010.[1][3]
History
Pride of Le Havre was built in 1975 at Aalborgs Værft A/S, Ålborg, Denmark [1] as Viking Valiant for Townsend Thoresen to operate between Southampton and Le Havre or Cherbourg. She also saw service between Felixstowe and Zeebrugge. In 1984 Townsend Thoresen moved its western channel passenger services from Southampton to Portsmouth. After two years sailing from Portsmouth Viking Valiant was sent to Bremerhaven in 1986 to be enlarged in a process known as jumboisation. This involved removing the superstructure of the vessel from its original hull, adding an upper vehicle deck and reattaching the superstructure to mostly new hull, the stern section of the hull was retained for use as part of the new hull. The enlarged vessel re-entered service later that same year and sailed between Portsmouth and Le Havre.
With the takeover of Townsend Thoresen by P&O and the sinking of the Herald of Free Enterprise in 1987, P&O wanted to drop the Townsend Thoresen name and the ship names associated with the company. Later in 1987 Townsend Thoresen became P&O European Ferries and in 1989 Viking Valiant became Pride of Le Havre 1. She continued to sail under that name until 1994 when she was transferred to the Portsmouth-Cherbourg route as a result of the larger Pride of Le Havre 2 and MS Pride of Portsmouth being chartered for the Le Havre route. She was renamed Pride of Cherbourg 2, the second vessel to carry that name, and sailed to Cherbourg with the odd period of refit cover on the Le Havre route until 2002 when she was replaced and sold by what was now P&O Ferries. Prior to her replacement she briefly carried the name Pride of Cherbourg A to free the original name for her replacement.
After her service with P&O she was sold to El Salam Maritime as the Pride of Al Salam 1. She was later chartered to COMANAV and was then named Mogador with a Pananma flag.[1]
She was sold for demolition in India early 2010 for $352 per ton.[3]
Sister Ships
Viking Valiant was one of four sister ships ordered by Townsend Thoresen.[1]
The other three were:
- Viking Venturer - later the Pride of Hampshire, ended up Oudja & was scrapped May 2010
- Viking Voyager - later Pride of Cherbourg (I), now Samothraki
- Viking Viscount - later Pride of Winchester, now Vitsentzos Kornaros
References
- ^ a b c d e Ferry-Site.de 7358298
- ^ Shipphotos.co.uk Pride of Cherbourg
- ^ a b c d e Ship-breaking.com Issue 19, Page 16
- ^ "Faktaomfartyg.com - M/S Viking Valiant" (in Swedish). http://www.faktaomfartyg.nu/viking_valiant_1975.htm. Retrieved 18 June 2010.
Ships of the Peninsular and Oriental Steam Navigation Company (P&O) Current fleet English Channel Irish Sea European Causeway • European Highlander 2 • Categories:
- P&O ships
- Ferries of the United Kingdom
- Ferries of France
- 1974 ships
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.
Look at other dictionaries:
Viking runestones — Runestones that mention expeditions outside of Scandinavia Viking runestones England runestones Hakon Jarl runestones Varangian runestones Baltic area runestones Greece runestones Italy runestones Ingvar runestones … Wikipedia
Viking Runestones — The Viking Runestones are runestones that mention Scandinavians who participated in Viking expeditions. This article treats the runestone that refer to people who took part in voyages abroad, in western Europe, and stones that mention men who… … Wikipedia
Vickers Valiant — Valiant «Вэлиент» в полёте Т … Википедия
The Legend of Prince Valiant — infobox television show name = The Legend of Prince Valiant caption = format = Animated Adventure Family Fantasy Medieval runtime = approx. 22 min per episode, 30 min with commercials creator = David J. Corbett starring = Robby Benson Michael… … Wikipedia
Vickers Valiant — B.1 … Wikipédia en Français
Operation Valiant Guardian — Date 5 April 2007 5 May 2007 Location Al Anbar province, Iraq Result Uncovered over 250 caches, arrested over 250 suspected insurgents and discovered over 100 IED s … Wikipedia
Vickers VC.1 Viking — Vue de l avion Rôle Avion de ligne Constructeur … Wikipédia en Français
Vickers Valiant — Vickers 667 Valiant … Deutsch Wikipedia
Vickers Viking (Flugboot) — Vickers Viking … Deutsch Wikipedia
Prince Valiant — Infobox comic strip title= caption= Prince Valiant author= Hal Foster url= rss= atom= status= Running/Weekly syndicate= King Features Syndicate publisher= first= 1937 02 13 last= genre= Epic historical adventure rating= preceded by= followed by=… … Wikipedia