In the spring of this year, the 82-m Avemar Dos high-speed ferry underwent a major operation: the propulsion system, the heart of the ferry, was replaced. It also received a new brain with mtu ship
automation in the latest version and the mtu Go digital remote platform as a new kind of nerve center. Rejuvenated by its new organs, the ferry is well and truly fit for the future.
The intervention, however, was by no means straightforward: In Navantia's shipyard in Cadiz, the shipbuilders had to make a breach on both sides of the hull, through each of which twin engines, over 5m long and 3m in height, had to be moved. “We had to open both sides of the hull because the ferry has two engine rooms,” explained Justo Galán Díaz from Rolls-Royce Solutions Iberica, the Spanish subsidiary of Rolls-Royce Power Systems based on the Iberian peninsula. The mechanics unplugged all engine lines and connections and placed the engines on rails in the engine rooms. The 24-ton 1163 units were pulled along the rails and out of the vessel and positioned crosswise on a provisional platform arranged at the side of the hull. They were then craned one-by-one onto land and their successors moved in and installed. No other way was possible for the Rolls-Royce engineers to replace the mtu 20V 1163 TB73L engines with new 20V 1163 M84 units.