Hello! I have returned once again with Super Obscure Japanese Local Ferries, this time the Vessels of the Shikoku Ferry Consortium (operators of the Tamataka, Shodoshima, and a few other brands) which is now known as "Olive Line" in Japan
first ship I am doing is...very out of order in a way, it is the First "large" Shodoshima Vessel built by them, the Shodoshima Maru of 1972.
this vessel was essentially a modified version of the older Tamataka ferries of the 1960s (which I'm gonna be working on soon), but with improved interiors
It was built in 1972 as "Shodoshima Maru" and was operating alongside the SUBSTANTIALLY OLDER 1965 Shodoshima No.11 (which possibly suggests older Unknown ferries but...probably not since I've yet to find any other proof)
then in 1976 she was Renamed and refitted as "Shodoshima Maru No.1" (first gen) following the Introduction of the slightly larger improved version of her, also named Shodoshima Maru (working on it too)
Due to the introduction of Newer MUCH larger vessels it was decided to sell the Shodoshima Maru No.1 in 1985 to a Chinese Government operator, who we know little about, and renamed her "Zhou Du 2". plenty of photos exist of OTHER vessels they operated at the time, but none have surfaced of the "Zhou Du 2" So this is purely (an educated) guess for now.
in 2002 she was put up for sale and sold to several Filipino companies (retaining the name Zhou Du 2 during that time) but was eventually bought by the up and coming "Lite Shipping" Company and Rebuilt in 2003 as "San Ramon de Bohol"
in 2011 she was given ANOTHER major overhaul, this time chopping her old bow off and replacing it with an entirely new "conventional" type with no Doors (as well as increasing passenger capacity slightly)
but only a year later in 2012, she was renamed "Lite Ferry 7" to better fit in with the fleet which had largely been renamed, this is also how she would remain until 2019
in 2019 she was sold to the newly founded KHO Shipping Lines who renamed her "Kho Ferry 3" but during this time she would only be slowly worked on, and largely remained laid up
Finally last year in late 2021 she entered service under the name "Cataingan" and since then has been operating out of Masbate in the Philippines alongside several other old Japanese built Vessels
as for the class I would call it "Shodoshima Maru (1st Generation)" as there were many ships with the exact same name, and most Japanese People I've spoken with call them by their "Generation"