|
|
shipshistories...
Main
The Fleet
Ships of the Fleet
HM2 - 001
History

This extraordinary craft – she was actually
registered as an aircraft – was acquired for the CSP in May 1970 and
operated for two seasons on the Upper Clyde, chiefly from Largs to Millport.
She was not in fact the first Clyde hovercraft – one company, Clyde Hover
Ferries Ltd, had run some Westland SR-N6 models on the Firth during the
1965-66 season – but she was the first and last to serve in CalMac
history.
The new Scottish Transport Group was, in its
first flush of enthusiasm, game for any innovation and made known that
“fast taxi-type hovercraft”, catering for Clyde commuter traffic, was
one of its wheezes to drag the CSP out of the Age of Steam. Car-carrying
hovercraft seem never to have figured in STG plans, but various officials
visited the Hovermarine plant at Southampton in the summer of 1969 and were
sufficiently taken by what they saw to book a Mark II sidewall hovercraft
for delivery in May 1970. There were anxious moments through the winter when
it seemed at one point that Hovermarine might close, but the venture
survived with the injection of some American capital. By the spring of 1970
a newly modified Mark II was ready for despatch to Scotland.
Costing £100,000, HM2-011 arrived at
Greenock's James Watt Dock, aboard the coaster ST ANGUS, on Friday 8th
May 1970. By Monday she was moored in Gourock Bay, ready for crew-training
and trials. The new craft was black, with a blue and white passenger cabin,
and the Caley crest was embossed on the after end of this saloon. Built
largely of plastic, HM2-011 had three propellers driven by three diesel
engines:two marine screws astern, which were encaged against driftwood and
granted forward power, and one – under the foredeck – which sustained
the vessel's “lift” - a design, Iain C. MacArthur records, “actually
pioneered by Denny of Dumbarton.” This air-cushion was contained between
two rigid sidewalls, which were always in contact with the water, and by
flexible skirts fore and aft.
She could attain a whopping 35 knots and there
was much local dispute as to whether HM2-011 was, in truth, air-borne or
water-borne. Legally, she was an aircraft, and it was the Air Registration
Board who finally issued her licence for 65 passengers; accordingly, her
trips were always referred to as “flights”, records Iain MacArthur,
“although under normal operating conditions she never left the water!”
Certainly the control panel in her wheelhouse
looked to most more like the fascia of a cockpit. The “ship”'s hull was
built of fibre-reinforced plastic and her passenger lounge was “panelled
in vinyl with PVC upholstery and nylon carpeting.” It all sounds terribly
late Sixties and, frankly, rather tacky.
Having bought this beast, the STG were
naturally keen to employ it. The trouble was that the CSOP management –
who had never pushed for such innovation in the first place – were never
enthusiastic about the hovercraft experiment and saw no obvious role for
her. Wisely, HM2-011 was based at Gourock, against the inevitable teething
difficulties. She first carried some passengers on Thursday 28th
May 1970 – CSP guests who had attended the commissioning of the new
CALEDONIA. Because of her rigid sidewall design it was always evident that
HM2-011 would operate between conventional jetties rather than loading and
unloading by beach.
So a base was made at Gourock; she lay
overnight in the Bay, just off the Admiralty Jetty, and used the old cattle
ramp at Berth B of Gourock Pier during the summer; here, too, she was
refuelled by road tanker. But the Largs-Millport run offered the best
prospects for business; a stairway was duly hacked out in the stonebuilt
Largs Pier and a stepway at Millport was renovated. HM2-011 duly made some
experimental public flights on Saturday and Sunday 6th and 7th
June, “leaving Gourock at 1100 hours for Largs and spending the rest of
the day operating between Largs and Millport and cruising round Cumbrae and
to Rothesay Bay. A regular daily service between Largs and Millport
commenced on Wednesday 10th June. Calls at Dunoon and Rothesay
were added finally to the schedule on Saturday 4th July.”
There was the inevitable argument over pier
facilities. Neither Bute or Argyll County Council were keen to spend money
on facilities for a service that was evidently but experimental, and they
resented spending their own cash when the STG was, after all, receiving a
“government investment grant” for the project. HM2-011 finally used the
steps behind Dunoon Pier and, at Rothesay, an adjustable stepway was built
at the main pier's west end; Bute wags soon christened this gantry 'the
gibbet'.
By now HM2-011 had a good Clyde nickname of
her own – the 'scooshin' cushin'”! And 26,000 passengers did brave the
joys of Clyde travel by hovercraft; though early talk by STG Chairman Sir
Patrick Thomas of charges comparable to steamer-fares – he was a great
enthusiast for the hovercraft adventure – was sensibly forgotten and a
premium rate was charged.
Yet HM2-011 was less than successful. For one,
she had mechanical problems; and on this ground quite a few trips were
cancelled. For another, the summer of 1970 was a dreich, wet affair and this
served to dampen the Clyde excursion trade in the first place. In any event,
HM2-011 was more restricted in certain weather conditions than most boats.
She was not allowed to operate in waves more than four and a half feet high.
“Those who travelled by hovercraft,” notes Mr MacArthur, “thought that
more soundproofing was required and that the craft was uncomfortable even in
moderately choppy seas.”
Despite the high fares, HM2-011 confounded STG
optimism and failed to make a profit that summer; between that and her
ongoing difficulties, plans for a promised winter service were tacitly
abandoned., and the frail pioneer was taken ashore at Cardwell Bay early in
November 1970 for a winter's hibernation.
Her service in the summer of 1971 was pretty
erratic; no regular schedule was maintained and at the beginning of
September HM2-011 was withdrawn. It became known that she was unlikely to be
recommissioned in 1972, and early that year HM2-011 was sold to the American
parent company of Hover Marine Ltd. It was the new Millennium before CalMac
would again operate any sort of fast-ferry service and HM2-011 was the last
the Company would own.
“The idea of a separate Scottish shipping
authority to control, co-ordinate, finance and develop the essential island
shipping services is worthy of serious consideration,” mused Iain C.
MacArthur, concluding his 1971 history of the CSP, “for it is felt that
the STG with all their bus bias have not lived up to the expectations placed
in them in the late 1960s. The control exercised by the new regime has been
so variable. The short-term exchange of ARRAN and IONA, the purchase of
Arran Piers Ltd. and the Bute Ferry Co. Ltd. and the conversion of the
Kyleakin and Brodick routes to drive-through operations have been clever and
decisive moves; but the hovercraft venture has been a waste of energy and
money, two commodities in short supply at Gourock.”
Text thanks to John MacLeod (C) |

All material on this site © Ships of
CalMac 2001 - 2013, unless otherwise stated.

This site is NOT connected to the Official Company Site -
www.calmac.co.uk
Contact Us ¦ Read our
Privacy Policy |