Hög shitability-faktor 2

Det är inte bara Alex Thomson som har mycker att hålla reda på. Här har vi nya Estrella Damm. Kolla in när Guillermo Altadill visar sin nya båt (fräshaste målningen just nu?).

Det är inte bara Alex Thomson som har mycker att hålla reda på. Här har vi nya Estrella Damm. Kolla in när Guillermo Altadill visar sin nya båt (fräshaste målningen just nu?).



On a day when the boatyard guys weren’t around, the guy who owns this boat tried to launch it himself. Apparently the boat does have a deadeye in the keel for lifting, but the owner didn’t catch on and attached the lifting sling to the shaft, just above the deadeye. Ripping out the engine is messy business, and this incident is further evidence that despite the lifting sling and the engine shaft being adjacent to each other, close still only counts in horseshoes and hand grenades.
Tipstack till Scuttlebutt.

“Mascalzone Latino” toppar resultatlistan efter 8 Race. Foto: Rolex/Carlo Borlenghi
Batten down the hatches
August 31, 2007
The cold and rainy weather continued but with it, finally, some good breeze for the third day of racing in the Rolex Farr 40 World Championship off Copenhagen. With more than enough wind, the race committee was able to get off three races, though postponing a few starts to contend with the shifting breeze and squalls that came through the race area.
Eight races have been sailed to date and each one has had a different winner – the leader board changing race to race. Though at the end of day three, a clear leader has emerged in Vincenzo Onorato’s Mascalzone Latino (ITA) with 37 points (a race average of better than 5th/race). The Italian team is sailing strongly, and with a 3-5-3 today, appears almost untouchable.
Second overall to date is Jim Richardson’s Barking Mad (USA) with a 14-6-2 today and stands on 61 points, and third is Ernesto Bertarelli’s Alinghi (SUI), with 75 points. The Swiss team effectively lessened their chances for first place overall when they were over the starting line early in the last race of the day and had to return to restart. After that Alinghi went to the right side of the course and were never able to claw their way back to the front.
In the overall standings, the point totals climb steadily after fourth place into the 120s and 140s, and many of these from boats that have had top five finishes during the week – a clear indicator of the incredibly shifty breeze. As Adrian Stead, tactician on Mascalzone Latino quipped, ““This has been the three most difficult days of sailing, ever.”
In the first race of the day, the breeze at the start was WSW at 8-10 knots, shifting during the first downwind leg 15 degrees, which required a course change. Erik Maris’ Twins (FRA) had a good start at the pin end. Maris said, “We went left, a bit further left than the rest of the fleet and went around the top mark in 4th place, and at the bottom mark we climbed to 3rd. Up the beat Alinghi and Mascalzone Latino went right, then we got a lefty and took off.”
While it always sounds easy in the retelling, the pressure was up and down and shifty all day. Twins won that race, but in a series where winners seem to cycle through the standings they then went on to post a 15-23 in the next races. Said Maris, “It was an ugly day out there”.
Today’s second race was postponed twice as the race committee, ably led by Peter Reggio, worked quickly to reset the pin end with the shifting breeze that had increased to 15-20 knots. For the third restart, the Z-flag was flown (10% penalty if over course side 1 minute before the start) to ensure the fleet got away cleanly in the building breeze. Sputnik (AUS) and Alinghi were up near the committee boat end of the line and headed out to the right side of the course and made great gains on the right side in the shifty conditions. The Australian team led around the track and prevailed to finish first which put them in 4th place with 78 points.
Ivan Wheen, helmsman on Sputnik, recounted the racing to date, “It’s a little bit of a blur really. I didn’t quite expect to be where we are – Tom [King, tactician] might have expected this, but the crew is elated and the most important thing is keeping a cool head going into tomorrow. Dealing with every day has been a new set of problems. There’s a good chance of us being in the top ten tomorrow, and that is something that we would love to be and have to aim for.”
In the third race today, a windward/leeward course of five legs, finishing upwind, Helmut Jahn’s Flash Gordon (USA), was launched at the start and led at every mark, fighting off Barking Mad to finishing in front.
Jahn has been in the Farr 40 class for over seven years, and sails with his son Evan; Helmut steering on the upwind legs and Evan downwind, which today proved a winning combination. Jahn said, “We had the feeling we had a breakthrough this time because we’ve really been training a lot and the crew has been working together for a long time and it didn’t just click that well. You know how that is, you can try and try but if it doesn’t happen, you can only push yourself so much. Today, it probably came easier, it’s always easier when things go well.
Our problem has been the starts, in five races we were over (the line) three times and we fought our way back, (gaining back) thirteen boats total in both races. In the one race we lost about 8 boats at the finish because we tried to cover both sides and we should have covered one side. But today we got out in front and stayed in front. You can call your own race, your race is not dictated by someone else.”
With the final races tomorrow and no throw-outs, this fleet has proven time and time again that it’s not over until it’s over. Racing concludes tomorrow, Saturday 1 September with a first race start at 1100; two races are planned with no start later than 1530.
The Rolex Farr 40 World Championship celebrates its 10th anniversary in 2007 in Copenhagen with 36 teams from 13 countries: Australia, Brazil, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Italy, Norway, Switzerland, Sweden, UK, Ukraine and U.S.A. The World Championship has been sailed in North America, Europe or Australia every year since the class was established in 1997.
The Rolex Farr 40 World Championship joins other prestigious Rolex-sponsored 2007 events including the Rolex Fastnet Race, Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup, Rolex Big Boat Series and the Rolex Sydney Hobart Yacht Race.
Today’s post-race social events at the Farr 40 Lounge at the Royal Danish Yacht Club’s headquarters in Tuborg Harbour included the Roland Berger Strategy Consultants Race Day awards presentation.
1) Mascalzone Latino, ITA, Vincenzo Onorato, 2-2-7-12-1-3-5-5, 37
2) Barking Mad, USA, Jim Richardson, 7-16-5-1-10-14-6-2, 61
3) Alinghi, SUI, Ernesto Bertarelli, 18-5-4-2-5-5-2-34, 75
4) Sputnik, AUS, Ivan Wheen, 5-30-2-5-6-10-1-19, 78
5) Nerone, ITA, A. Sodo Migliori & M. Mezzaroma, 3-6-1-11-18-21-31-7, 98
6) Opus One, GER, Wolfgang Stolz, 4-3-6-16-28-32-7-3, 99
7) Warpath, USA, Steve Howe, 23-13-22-4-19-2-12-12,107
8) Twins, USA, Erik Maris, 33-4-15-7-17-1-15-23, 115
8) Calvi, ITA, Carlo Alberini, 1-9-14-30-14-34-8-10, 120
10) Norwegian Steam, NOR, 26-18-19-3-24-11-14-6, 120
Nu är det hög tid att anmäla sig till GKSS Septembersegling. Trevligaste racet på höstkanten. Så här ser anmälningslistan ut (mer än dubbelt så många jämfört med samma tid förra året):
4mR (0.93) Jens Hermansson
Albin Ballad (1.08) Johan Browaldh
Amigo 27 (0.94) Tommy Jonsson
Arcona 400 (1.31) Lars Bengtsson
Comfortina 35 (1.21) Mattias Mossberg
Dehler 29 (1,15) Dan Hammar
DS-37 (1.34) Erik Centerwall JR
DS-37 (1.34) Anna Haglund Persson
DS-37 (1.34) Patrik Hedenstedt
First 36,7 (1.29) Erik Hjälmström
H-båt (1.07) Fabian Bengtsson
H-båt (1.07) Jonas Gamborn
Hanse 370 (1.27) Bo Melin
Hanse 411 (1.29) Bo Bergqvist
HR-37 SD (1.19) Lisa Sohtell
IF (u spinn) (0.99) Robert Casselbrant
J/109 (1.31) Peter Gustafsson
Linjett 40 (1.32) Svante Berg
Maxi 1050 (1.21) Sture Christenson
Maxi 108 (1.16) Anders Andrén
Maxi 108 (1.16) Lars Unger
Maxi 77 (1.03) Jan Broberg
Maxi 999 (1.14) Ninna Klock
Mumm 36 (1.36) Roger Ahlkvist
Omega 42 (1.21) Lennart Gustafsson
Shark 24 (0.94) Anton Klock
Swan 40 () Stefan Holmgren
Swan 48 () Pelle Settergren
X-412 (1.34) Bengt-Olof Petersen
Så här såg det ut förra året. Dags för någon att se till att “Blur” inte får en tredje inteckning i det vrålsnygga vandringspriset (här är rapporterna från 2005 och 2006).
Bistert. Bara 9 båtar kom till start i ett gråmulet och regnigt Långedrag. Tydligen var betydligt fler anmälda men valde att avstå…
Skottet går. Var är alla?
Nån halvminut senare är det dock lite action vid startbojen. “Trindy” försöker sig på någon styrbordsrökare med gipp? De är nog min favorit till seger på justerad tid.
Roger Ahlqvist missade helt starten i sin “Aero”.
Varför inte en luffningsduell in bland öarna?
Uppdaterat 070904 – resultat + 070907 rätt lista:
1. Reneth, Najad 361, Reine Eriksson, 1.1, 1+1=2
2. Trindy, First 31,7, Jonas Kjellberg, 1.19, 3+2=5
3. Olydia, Wasa 360, Percy Andersson 1.21, 2+3=5
4. Northy Lady, Bavaria Match 35, Ulrik North, 1,29, 5+4=9
5. Sirväs, Mamba 363, Mats Widing, 1.26, 4+5=9
6. PixelBlue, Andrieu 40, Carl Swensson, 1.31, 7+6=13
7. Bea Brus, Najad 400, Lasse Kristensson, 1.21, 6+8=14
8. Aero, Mumm 36 Roger Ahlkvist, 1.36, 8+7=15
9. C´yo, Finngulf 37, Jaqulin Fogius, 1.32, 9+9=18
Rohan Veal ligger inte på latsidan. Jag är benägen att hålla med Magnus Wheatley (Rule 69 blog) när han skriver:
I reckon Rohan Veal will become one of the most important development sailors in world yachting over the next ten years. His reach is going to be far and wide, encompassing every discipline of the Grand Prix yachting scene. What he brings is practical sailing ability and nous – designers can only go so far but it’s the sailors that really add the difference and Rohan is miles ahead on the foiling front. Personally I reckon he’s the single most important person right now in sailing and thoroughly deserves to be ISAF’s World Sailor of the Year… the first award of many I’ll bet…
Inte konstigt att dessa killar får mer spons/media än de som kör kryss/länsbana på havet i någon torr entypsklass? Här kan man kanske lära sig något?
Fox Technology har en 9.50 på gång. Man hoppas att det skall bli en klass mellan minis och Open 40. Kul också att det finns en svensk anknytning – det är Arctic Composite i Luleå som bygger (kända med Virus 20)!
Charles Bertrand säger:
I started working on that project last winter when I was able to take part in the creation of the actual Classe 9.50 rule with Jean Marie Vidal (Creator of the rule). I then was invited to present this new class to a UK audience during the Petit Bateau Solo Sailing Conference organized in Southampton in March. This is when I met Ulf. From there we started working together on that project with the aim of starting a series production. The rule was finalised late in the spring and from there we were able to finalise our design as well. The boat is now in construction at the yard and the first one should touch the water in January or February 2008, before being tested and then exposed at the Stockholm Boat Show in March 08. Production wise we could have several boats on the water by the end of 2008.
As far as the class is concerned we are still waiting for the French sailing federation official recognition, but this should happen fairly soon. It is now the time to get some boats on the water and see how the fleets develop, while a specific racing calendar is being set up accordingly.
LOA: 9.50 m
LwL: 9.40 m
BOA: 3.60 m
Draft: 2.40 m
Disp: 2700 kg (light) 3000 kg (loaded)
Sail Area: 80 m² + spinnakers: 90/110 m²
Water Ballasts: 2x 460 liter
Priset lär hamna runt 80.000€ plus moms med inombordare, Harken-hårdvara och aluminium-mast. Vill man ha kolfiber får man lägga på typ 15.000€.
The FoX 9.50 has been created to meet the growing demand for a fast and safe offshore racer of affordable size and technical refinement.
The creation of such a yacht has been tightly linked to the birth of the association Classe 9.50, which aims to bring more accessibility into offshore racing by creating yachts of sufficient size and internal volume to enable the dual use of both racing and cruising, without drifting into the budgets of 40 footers.
She features all the parameters of a true and fast offshore racer and has been optimised for optimum performances within the limits of the rule Classe 9.50. Although she hasn’t been designed to IRC but to maximum performances, she is bound to perform well in the traditional offshore events, while a class specific racing calendar should be implemented soon. Simplicity and efficiency have lead the design process to create an affordable and low weight craft with an ergonomically sound layout orientated towards short handed manoeuvrability and ease of use at sea and racing. The high aspect and well balanced sail plan, the fine and optimised appendages, the powerful but low wetted surface hull and the water ballast arrangement are all performance testimony. Inside, the layout featuring four berths and sitting room for up to 6 people is distributed around the navigation area.
To insure the reliability of our yachts, they are all built with a tight Swedish refinement to ISO structural standards out of e-glass and vinylester resin sandwich on a PVC foam core, while being fitted with the highest standard hardware.
Being Sailing Category A and OSR Category 1 compliant, she meets all the standards in term of safety and features two watertight bulkheads and buoyancy volumes distributed inside the craft.
Arctic Composite AB
Västra Varvsgatan 5
972 36 Luleå
Tel & Fax : +46 920 179 91
info@arcticcomposite.se