We can do everything”
“Whatever the boat, whatever the material, we can do everything,” says Oscar at the end of our foray, piloting the boat back into the shipyard harbor. Whether a patrol boat or a passenger ferry: with characteristic calmness, Oscar takes every vessel out onto the Atlantic and safely home to port – including a patrol boat he recently tested for the Moroccan coast guard: eight hours at full throttle, from north to south and back again – all of it along the Spanish coast. It is important to Oscar to be there when the vessels are launched. “I want to see how the boat moves, and the things we've spent months working on.” Sea trials, he says, are an important part of understanding what Rodman builds. “A lot of customers have special requirements we have to incorporate,” says Oscar. “We also owe our success to the ideas and requirements of our customers. Indeed, nothing drives us more than turning demanding requirements into reality,” adds his father, Manuel.
Specialization in fast patrol boats
The family business led by Oscar's father, Executive Director Manuel Rodríguez, has specialized in building fast patrol boats. “Irrespective of which government agency in Europe you ask: when the discussion comes round to patrol boats, the name Rodman Polyships will be mentioned,” says Pablo Vivancos, Head of Sales at MTU Iberica. He is on site regularly at Rodman Polyships. Five new Rodman 111 patrol-and-intercept boats will be handed over to the Royal Oman Police for coast guard duties: the 35-m high-speed vessels are each powered by two 16V Series 2000 engines. The Rodman workforce put 7,000 hours of work into each vessel. “Someone from MTU Iberica is there each time a boat with our engines is launched,” says Vivancos. “The demands made of the boats destined for Oman are especially high: the water can be up to 40°C and air temperatures even higher – not somewhere you want the engine cooling to fail. And that's why we choose to bank on mtu,” says Oscar Rodríguez. The Royal Oman Police is to deploy the 35-m long boats on coast guard duties and search-and-rescue work. The vessels are due to go into service in the first half of 2017 – they are the largest patrol boats Rodman has ever built.