Skane Jet pictured as Fjord Cat in Hirtshals
History
Name
  • Cat-Link V (1997-1999)
  • Mad Mols (1999-2005)
  • Incat 049 (2005-2006)
  • Master Cat (2006-2008)
  • Fjordcat (2008-2020)
  • Skane Jet (2020-present)
Operator
  • Cat Link (1998-1999)
  • Mols-Linien (1999-2005)
  • Laid up (2005-2006)
  • Master Ferries (2006-2008)
  • Fjord Line (2008-2020)
  • FRS (2020-present)
BuilderIncat, Tasmania, Australia
Yard number049
Launched14 June 1998
Homeport
IdentificationIMO number: 9176060
StatusIn service
General characteristics
Tonnage5,619 GT
Length91.30 meters
Beam26.0 meters
Draught3.70 meters
Installed power4 × Ruston V20RK 270 (28800kW total)
Propulsion4 × KaMeWa 112F11 waterjets
Speed
  • 41 knots (76 km/h; 47 mph) service speed
  • 48 knots (89 km/h; 55 mph) maximum speed
Capacity
  • 900 passengers
  • 240 cars

HSC Skane Jet is an Incat-built, ocean-going catamaran. It is one of the world's fastest car carrying passenger vessels and, as Cat-Link V, set the eastbound record for the fastest transatlantic journey. In 1998/1999, the ship sailed as Cat-Link V on the Århus-Kalundborg route in Denmark—then operated by Scandlines. From 1999 to 2005 it sailed as Mads Mols for Mols-linien. From 2005 to 2006 it was renamed Incat 049 by T&T Ferries in Trinidad and Tobago. In 2006 it was renamed Master Cat and has since been operating on the route between Kristiansand in Norway and Hanstholm in Denmark, later changed to Hirtshals, in the service of "Master Ferries". This company was merged with Fjord Line on 1 January 2008[1] and the ferry was renamed Fjord Cat.

The ship has been renamed "Skane Jet" as part of its relocation for the Königslinie route between Sassnitz and Ystad for FRS. This route started service in late September 2020.[2][3]

Sister ships

References

  1. Boarding.no Archived 2008-04-08 at the Wayback Machine, 3 December 2007 visited 27 November 2008 (in Norwegian)
  2. Details of the new Ferry Route between Sassnitz and Ystad, taken from the FRS website
  3. Neue Schweden-Fähre geht auf Rügen in Betrieb, local news report for the service start September 2020 (in German)
  4. "BORNHOLMSLINJENs færger". BORNHOLMSLINJEN (in Danish). Retrieved 21 February 2021.
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