Lycee Maritime Jacques Cassard Nantes becomes the 8th French regional maritime vocational school to order K-Sim Engine

Kongsberg Maritime and Lycée Maritime Jacques Cassard in Nantes have signed a contract for the delivery of an advanced Engine Room Simulator. The K-Sim® Engine delivery will consist of an instructor station and eight student stations, with two engine models: MAN B&W 5L90MC L11 (Very Large Crude Carrier) and K-Sim® Engine MaK 8M32C M11 (Trawler).

Credit - Lycée Maritime d'Ete

Lycée Maritime Jacques Cassard is the eighth of twelve French Regional Maritime Vocational School to use K-Sim® Engine for highly realistic maritime engine room training courses. K-Sim® Engine full mission simulators are already installed at LPM of Boulogne-sur-Mer, LPM Ciboure and LPMA Jaques-Faggianelli to Bastia (Corsica), while five other schools including Nantes have chosen K-Sim® Engine desktop systems.

"We will use the new K-Sim® Engine ERS to train for marine engine operation from 750kW to at least 3000kW Engineer level according to STCW," comments Mathieu Guillée , Instructor at Lycée Maritime Jacques Cassard in Nantes. "K-Sim® Engine is certified to STCW and IMO requirements. The fact that K-Sim® Engine allows us to train to a very high level and that several other French schools already use it helped to make Kongsberg Maritime's ERS the top choice for us."

In addition to highly detailed, physically accurate engine models, a key aspect of K-Sim® Engine is its sophisticated instructor system. The recently installed K-Sim® Engine at another French facility, LPMA d'Etel, allows students to virtually track faults and restore the engine to normal operations, as if they were in a real engine room on a 60 meter trawler, whilst giving a huge amount of control to the instructor.

"It's like being in the heart of a true engine room," comment Metayer Didier, Professor at the Marine Engineering Faculty of Lycée Maritime d'Etel. "As instructors, we can create our own engine failure scenarios based on real conditions, so the students must act accordingly by taking control and following the correct procedures. In this way, students will be drilled to handle emergencies with competence and precision in order to minimise the negative outcome of an incident."