Portugal

MAYAR

/ RORO, IMO 9226360

MAYAR is currently in the Tyrrhenian Sea, last seen less than 1h ago

The vessel was built in 2000, and is sailing under the flag of Portugal. Her length overall (LOA) is 174 meters, and her width (beam) is 24 meters. Her summer deadweight capacity is 9,090 tonnes.

Track the live position of MAYAR with AIS data from satellites, terrestrial and dynamic AIS sources. Get global coverage and live positions for all ships by registering a free account in ShipAtlas by Maritime Optima.

Register a free account

Current voyage information

Radès
Gioia Tauro
Radès, Gioia Tauro, Italy
Thursday 1st May ETA

Register for free to view current speed, draft, course and navigational status.

Last port calls

Port name Arrival time Departure time
Radès (tn) Monday 28th April Thursday 1st May
Gioia Tauro (it) Friday 25th April Saturday 26th April
Radès (tn) Tuesday 22nd April Thursday 24th April
Register to see more

Frequently asked questions

Where is MAYAR right now?

The current position of MAYAR in the the Tyrrhenian Sea, last seen less than 1h ago.

What type of ship is MAYAR?

MAYAR is a classified as a RORO.

How big is MAYAR?

MAYAR is 174 meters long (LOA) and 24 meters wide (beam).

MAYAR
Portugal

MAYAR

/ RORO, IMO 9226360

MAYAR is currently in the Tyrrhenian Sea, last seen less than 1h ago

View live position

The vessel was built in 2000, and is sailing under the flag of Portugal. Her length overall (LOA) is 174 meters, and her width (beam) is 24 meters. Her summer deadweight capacity is 9,090 tonnes.

Track the live position of MAYAR with AIS data from satellites, terrestrial and dynamic AIS sources. Get global coverage and live positions for all ships by registering a free account in ShipAtlas by Maritime Optima.

Register a free account

Vessel details

Name MAYAR
Vessel type / RORO
IMO 9226360
MMSI 255806427
Callsign CQEM8
Flag Portugal
Year built 2000
Draft (summer) 6.75 meters
Length overall (LOA) 174 meters
Width (beam) 24 meters
Deadweight (DWT) 9,090 tonnes

Read from our blog