Léon Thévenin (ship)

The Léon Thévenin is a French cable-laying vessel named in honor of French engineer Léon Charles Thévenin.

History
Mauritius
Name: Léon Thévenin
Owner: Orange Marine
Completed: 1983
Identification:
General characteristics
Class and type: Cable Layer
Tonnage: 5,887 GT[1]
Length: 107.82 m (353 ft 9 in)
Beam: 17.8 m (58 ft 5 in)
Draught: 5.7 m (18 ft 8 in) [2]


The Léon Thévenin was famously used in conjunction with a robot submarine named Scarab 1 for recovering the flight data recorder (FDR) and cockpit voice recorder (CVR) boxes from Air India Flight 182 that was destroyed in mid-air by a bomb as it was crossing Irish airspace, on 23 June 1985.

By 4 July, the sonar of the British ship Guardline Locater had detected signals on the seabed and on 9 July the CVR was pin-pointed and raised to the surface by the Scarab 1. The next day the FDR was located and recovered.

It is currently owned and operated by Orange Marine, operating out of the Port of Cape Town, and replacing the function of the CS Chamarel, which was previously stationed there to service African undersea fiber cables.

References

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