quinta-feira, 29 de novembro de 2012
Nine Extreme 40s in final Rio showdown as Brazilian sailing legend Torben Grael announces Team Brasil
- Rio de Janeiro prepares to welcome the Extreme 40s for the first time for the final Act of 2012
- 179 races down and up to 32 more to come over four days of competition, 6-9th December 2012
- Four-way fight for podium
- A family affair for Team Brasil with three members from one of the most respected families in the world of sailing joining forces
- Live TV for the fourth Act this year with national Brazilian broadcaster SporTV-Globosat
Volvo 65 one design
Photos; Mark Somerville / Persico
Fonte: The Daily Sail
A couple of significant milestones have been passed in the build process for the Volvo Ocean 65 at boatyards in Italy and France.
At Persico in Italy, lamination of the outer skin of the first hull being produced has now begun, while at Multiplast in France the first carbon layer for the first deck has been completed.
"We have about 20 guys working on this," said Mark Sommerville, Operations Manager for the work going on at Persico. "The final layer of the outer skin went down on Wednesday and we also have a team thermoforming the foam core."
The mould has been produced with an infusion system so that the laminate is less porous, takes in less air and is more stable over a long period of time. The steel structure that supports and strengthens the mould has also been calculated and tested to remain solid throughout the curing process.
The 12.5mm thick mould, for which around 1,400kgs of resin have been used, is cut longitudinally to facilitate the unplugging and includes removable flanges at the top sides that create the structure where the deck will be joined to the hull and the special recess for the keel ram.
“It will take eight weeks to produce a hull, fitted with the bulkheads provided by Decision SA that will make the structure stiffer and ready to be shipped to Green Marine,” said Marcello Persico, Managing Director of Persico's marine division. “For the time being we have only built one mould but we would be able to make a second one, using the existing model, should the Volvo Ocean Race need to increase production as more teams order a boat. Also, we are committed for two editions of the race and that makes it vital to be able to use the mould on a long term span.”
The huge structure will be carefully cured with the help of several powerful burners that will take the inside temperature to 80-90°.
“The curing process has to be dealt with with extreme care,” says Sommerville, an expert from New Zealand who has been working with the international staff at Persico for several years. “The temperature inside the oven needs to increase and later decrease at a very steady and accurate pace, 12° per hour, because any sharp variation could compromise the process, the resin could go soft and not catalyse properly. It takes approximately six to seven hours to get to the right temperature and back. During this phase we work on shifts in order to ensure the process is monitored constantly.”
Meanwhile at Multiplast in Vannes, France the Volvo Ocean 65 deck’s first carbon layer has just been finished. The first deck should be completed by mid-February and delivered to Green Marine to be assembled.
“We just finished cooking the first carbon skin of the first deck. Every deck will be cooked four times: the outer skin is cooked first to be painted (this doesn’t make sense), then a second time for the honeycomb and foam core and a third and fourth time for the inner skin,” confirmed director Yann Penfornis, whose enthusiasm for the project is obvious.
“We are therefore four weeks away from taking the first deck out of the mould. Then we will have six to seven weeks of pre-piercing the deck fittings for grinders, organisers and deck stiffeners. The first deck will be delivered mid-February to Green Marine and we will be working on the second deck by then. From then on a new deck will be produced every seven weeks.”
Multiplast is tackling this technical challenge with a 30-person dedicated team. Their 200°C oven also allows the carbon and core components of the deck to cook more efficiently.
“Making sure it’s a one-design product is a challenge,” explained Sommerville. “Here at Multiplast we know how to build 20m boats. But building eight identical boats with only a few kilos of difference does require a good traceability with processes and plans. Each piece of foam has to be weighed. The sailors won’t have any excuse; they need to race on equal terms. We don’t want to hear them saying the boat three is faster than boat five.
“The second challenge is delivering a deck every seven weeks. Such big pieces need good organisation and very detailed planning. We are working on it, but we cannot allow ourselves to fall asleep. We have to make eight boats in two years and that’s the power of the consortium: the four boatyards are strong ones and trust each other. We will get there, but we cannot afford to be late. We need
the first one to be on time if we want to deliver the eighth one on time.”
The first boat off the production line is expected during late June 2013. After that the plan is to have each new boat sailing within three to four days of leaving the boatyard, but before passing this even bigger milestone, there are still a lot more deadlines to meet.
quarta-feira, 28 de novembro de 2012
WSSRC Ratified Outright World and World "B" Division Sailing Speed Record
Fonte: ISAF
Vestas SailRocket 2 In Namibia
©Vestas SailRocket 2
World Speed Sailing Record Council
Walvis Bay, Namibia
The World Sailing Speed Record Council has announced the ratification of a new world record for Paul Larsen (AUS).
Record: Outright World and World "B" Division Sailing Speed Record
Venue: Walvis Bay. Namibia.
Name: Paul Larsen. AUS.
Equipment: Vestas SailRocket 2. Inclined rig Hydrofoil Proa.
Date: 16th November 2012. 17.02 hrs
Course length: 500 metres
Current: Nil
Elapsed time: 16.41 secs
Speed: 59.23 kts
Comments: Current Outright Record: 2010. Kite Board. Rob Douglas USA. Luderitz, NAM. 55.65 kts.
Current "B" category record: 2012. Vestas SailRocket. Paul Larsen AUS. Walvis Bay, NAM. 54.08 kts
A further claim for a speed in excess of the above is currently being assessed
World Sailing Speed Record Council - www.sailspeedrecords.com
Garmin Hamble Winter Series
Paul Wyeth / www.pwpictures.com
Fonte: TheDailySail.com
If last week's lack of wind was anything to go by, this year's Garmin Hamble Winter Series looked set to be one of the lightest in memory. And then this Sunday came along. In a brief gap between two lows that came screaming up the Channel in quick succession, all classes fitted in a race on a windy, wet and cold day.
Crews faced some logistical nightmares in making the start via a flooded and storm-battered country, which was reflected in slightly lower entries this week.
Fresset 32 - Primeira vez que navega
© M boats
© M boats
© M boats
© M boats
© M boats
Fuente info M-Boats
Fresett 32: Daysailer diseño de German Frers sobre las ideas de Jack Setton, es por eso el nombre del modelo. Como veras es un barco pensado por el Sr. Setton para una sola persona, con mástil de carbono autoportante, motor de 13 hp, y dos molinetes Harken con reversa.
Calado mínimo 0.90m, y max 1.60m, por medio de una orza. Desplazamiento total 2,400 kg, y laminado por infusión con vidrio E, resina epoxy, y corecell. La idea del Sr. Setton fue un barco para tener a bordo del crucero, y poder estar navegando en 10 minutos. El barco es muy ágil a pesar de tener solo una mayor, esta es 3DI hecha por North Sails ARG, el mástil de Southern Spars en dos tramos, y todo el barco entra en un contenedor de 40’. En la foto de cubierta, se puede ver que esta es plana sin voleo, y el cockpit tiene dos bancos en voladizo, y la caña que mueve dos timones, todo el sistema de bujes, sectores, y barras es de Jefa.
Cascais Classic Race, Troféu São Martinho 2012
Fonte: FPVela
Foto: Ricardo Pinto
O Persephone, de Loic Blanken, foi o vencedor da Cascais Classic Race, disputada este fim-de-semana, em águas cascalenses. No Troféu São Martinho, triunfo do Bigamist, de Pedro Mendonça, em Handicap CNC e do Cristina A, de Francisco Brito e Abreu, em ANC. A prova teve a organização do Clube Naval de Cascais e o apoio do Atlantic Yacht Club, da Câmara Municipal de Cascais, da Marina de Cascais e Lindley Marinas e Sinalização.
Foto: Ricardo Pinto
O Persephone, de Loic Blanken, foi o vencedor da Cascais Classic Race, disputada este fim-de-semana, em águas cascalenses. No Troféu São Martinho, triunfo do Bigamist, de Pedro Mendonça, em Handicap CNC e do Cristina A, de Francisco Brito e Abreu, em ANC. A prova teve a organização do Clube Naval de Cascais e o apoio do Atlantic Yacht Club, da Câmara Municipal de Cascais, da Marina de Cascais e Lindley Marinas e Sinalização.
terça-feira, 27 de novembro de 2012
Ben Ainslie fora dos Jogos 2016
Fonte: http://www.telegraph.co.uk
Ben Ainslie: It's painful to say, but my Olympic odyssey is over - I won't be sailing at Rio 2016
Ben Ainslie: It fills me with both relief and sadness to write these words but I can now officially confirm that I have donned my Team GB tracksuit for the last time.
High water mark: Ben Ainslie celebrates winning gold at his home Olympics Photo: GETTY IMAGES
No more Olympic villages. No more opening or closing ceremonies. After almost 20 years entirely dedicated to the pursuit of gold, taking in five Olympic campaigns, I have decided I will not attempt a sixth at Rio de Janeiro in 2016.
Those of you who saw me cross the finish line in the Finn medal race in Weymouth and Portland earlier this year may not be overly surprised to hear that. I said a few things in the heat of the moment to the lurking BBC media boat to the effect that the toll on my body was becoming too great. In my defence I was flooded with emotion and exhausted from the toughest week of my entire career.
It was a bit of a Steve ‘if you ever see me anywhere near a boat again, you have my permission to shoot me’ Redgrave moment.
In my mind I certainly hadn’t ruled out another crack at the Olympics. When you have spent your whole life focused so intently on something it is not that easy to let it go.
The reason I waited before making this decision is down to a couple of factors. Firstly, I wanted to see what came out of the International Sailing Federation (ISAF) conference in Dublin a few weeks ago. In particular I was interested to know which classes would be on the Olympic programme at Rio. Because of the wear and tear of a lifetime spent sailing, particularly on my back, which was a real issue this summer, it was always going to be an uphill struggle to do the Finn again in Brazil. However, if the Star two-handed dinghy had been reinstated I might just have considered giving that a go. It would not have been easy dislodging Iain Percy and Andrew Simpson, should they have decided to do another campaign, but there might have been a chance.
Ben Ainslie: It's painful to say, but my Olympic odyssey is over - I won't be sailing at Rio 2016
Ben Ainslie: It fills me with both relief and sadness to write these words but I can now officially confirm that I have donned my Team GB tracksuit for the last time.
High water mark: Ben Ainslie celebrates winning gold at his home Olympics Photo: GETTY IMAGES
No more Olympic villages. No more opening or closing ceremonies. After almost 20 years entirely dedicated to the pursuit of gold, taking in five Olympic campaigns, I have decided I will not attempt a sixth at Rio de Janeiro in 2016.
Those of you who saw me cross the finish line in the Finn medal race in Weymouth and Portland earlier this year may not be overly surprised to hear that. I said a few things in the heat of the moment to the lurking BBC media boat to the effect that the toll on my body was becoming too great. In my defence I was flooded with emotion and exhausted from the toughest week of my entire career.
It was a bit of a Steve ‘if you ever see me anywhere near a boat again, you have my permission to shoot me’ Redgrave moment.
In my mind I certainly hadn’t ruled out another crack at the Olympics. When you have spent your whole life focused so intently on something it is not that easy to let it go.
The reason I waited before making this decision is down to a couple of factors. Firstly, I wanted to see what came out of the International Sailing Federation (ISAF) conference in Dublin a few weeks ago. In particular I was interested to know which classes would be on the Olympic programme at Rio. Because of the wear and tear of a lifetime spent sailing, particularly on my back, which was a real issue this summer, it was always going to be an uphill struggle to do the Finn again in Brazil. However, if the Star two-handed dinghy had been reinstated I might just have considered giving that a go. It would not have been easy dislodging Iain Percy and Andrew Simpson, should they have decided to do another campaign, but there might have been a chance.
Etiquetas:
2016,
BAR,
Ben Ainslie,
Ben Ainslie Racing,
Brasil 2016,
Finn,
JO,
JO 2016,
Jogos Olimpicos,
star
segunda-feira, 26 de novembro de 2012
Memorial Augusto Guimarães 2012
Com uma frota de 21 Snipes, o que é de salientar, com os timoneiros com pelo menos 45 anos e a idade da tripulação a somar 80 ou mais anos, fez regressar a uma linha de largada grandes nomes da classe e da modalidade.
As condições meteorológicas não foram as melhores, o que condicionou o desenrolar das regatas. No primeiro dia, a ondulação, após a passagem de um temporal, não permitiu a saída para o mar mas uma autorização especial do Porto de Leixões permitiu a realização de divertidas e emocionantes regatas dentro da bacia. No segundo dia o vento fraco apenas permitiu a realização de uma regata.
Com os cinco primeiros apenas com dois pontos de diferença na classificação e com cinco potenciais vencedores à entrada para a última regata manteve a emoção até o final. A dupla da casa Tonas Pires de Lima/Joaquim Moreira venceu a geral, com Tiago Roquette/Rui Castilho em segundo lugar e Gonçalo Guerra/Tiago Guerra na última pódio do pódio reeditando grandes disputas desta geração de grandes velejadores. Miguel Pessanha/Tiago Talone e Pedro Pires de Lima/Luís Maia, ambos do Clube de Vela Atlântico, foram os pretendentes que discutiram os primeiros lugares até ao final ficando no quarto e quinto posto, respectivamente.
A componente social esteve também presente e o ambiente no Clube foi sempre espectacular. Nada melhor para terminar o evento com um almoço que juntou no salão do Clube os velejadores e muitos amigos de Guto Guimarães. Um agradecimento especial à família que proporcionou ao Clube e aos Snipe este importante acontecimento.
Quadro de Honra – Memorial Augusto Guimarães 2012
1º Tonas Pires de Lima/Joaquim Moreira – Clube de Vela Atlântico
2º Tiago Roquette/Rui Castilho - Sport Clube do Porto
3º Gonçalo Guerra/Tiago Guerra - Clube de Vela Atlântico
Classificação final
IOM europeu 2012 para Brad Gibson
© Dean Miculinić
Fuente info Icarus Sailing Media
Brad Gibson is the new IOM European Champion for 2012
The International One Meter Europeans came to an end today. A wonderful, race full and with all kinds of weather conditions week just flew away, leaving to everybody here some memorable times.
The last day of the championship was the warmest but that affected the wind as well and the sailors had to wait for couple of hours before start racing. Finally around 11 Heat A was in the water to finish race 13 that was not completed yesterday. Brad Gibson was once again among the first to round the weather mark in a race that was truly marginal as far as it concerns the weather conditions. At the end it was Gibson with another bullet, securing with that the 2012 title. Croatia’s Jelacic sailed a safe race and after finishing 6th he managed to extend his lead from the second Briton of the podium, Elliott.
After that the wind died completely but race committee did not abandon its efforts so easy. They pushed for some more racing and after an hour of waiting they had Heat E back in the water for the 14th race.
Winners celebrated their victory at the award ceremony that followed later in a joyful and festive atmosphere with everyone being there, either to receive a trophy or congratulate the winners and renewed their appointment for next year.
domingo, 25 de novembro de 2012
Memorial Augusto Guimarães
Fonte CVA
O Clube de Vela Atlântico anuncia a realização do Memorial Augusto Guimarães – Open Master de Snipe nos dias 24 e 25 de Novembro de 2012.
Classificações MAG 1ºdia
ENTRY LIST MAG 18 Novembro
Anuncio de Regata MAG2012
Boletim de Inscrição MAG2012
O Clube de Vela Atlântico anuncia a realização do Memorial Augusto Guimarães – Open Master de Snipe nos dias 24 e 25 de Novembro de 2012.
Classificações MAG 1ºdia
ENTRY LIST MAG 18 Novembro
Anuncio de Regata MAG2012
Boletim de Inscrição MAG2012
2ª PAR Norte
Hoje foi o primeiro de dois dias de regatas em Aveiro, onde tem lugar a 2ª Prova de Apuramento Nacional da região Norte.
Se no início o vento não ajudou, obrigando a CR a deferir a 1ª regata, os cerca de 10 nós de vento que surgiram perto das 13h20 permitiram a realização de duas regatas. Lamentavelmente, a terceira regata não se pôde realizar graças ao assoreamento que atormenta dia após dia os praticantes desta modalidade.
Deixo-vos com a classificação após 2 regatas.
Amanhã, a primeira regata do dia está prevista para as 12h00, se o vento ajudar.
Participam 86 velejadores nesta regata. As classificações provisórias são apresentadas a seguir:
Se no início o vento não ajudou, obrigando a CR a deferir a 1ª regata, os cerca de 10 nós de vento que surgiram perto das 13h20 permitiram a realização de duas regatas. Lamentavelmente, a terceira regata não se pôde realizar graças ao assoreamento que atormenta dia após dia os praticantes desta modalidade.
Deixo-vos com a classificação após 2 regatas.
Amanhã, a primeira regata do dia está prevista para as 12h00, se o vento ajudar.
Participam 86 velejadores nesta regata. As classificações provisórias são apresentadas a seguir:
Click na imagem para ver grande
sábado, 24 de novembro de 2012
Vendée Globe: PRB Suffers Damage after Collision with Floating Object
Fonte: Valencia Sailing
At 0700hrs (French time) on Saturday morning, Vincent Riou (PRB) warned his shore team that he had collided with a floating object. The skipper was at his navigation station at the time was able to get on the deck immediately after the impact and see that the object that had struck PRB was a harbour buoy (a large metal buoy). Following the collision, Riou found that the hull of his boat was torn and delaminated for about one metre. The impact was on the starboard side of the boat and the torn area is three metres from the bow. Riou was not injured in the collision. He will wait until daybreak to assess the damage and the possibility of repair. Conditions in the area are good and the wind between 12 and 15 knots. At the moment of impact, Riou immediately called the race office in order to report the position of the buoy to other competitors.
Vincent Riou joins the club of skipper of the 2012-13 Vendée Globe to suffer from collision
At 0700hrs (French time) on Saturday morning, Vincent Riou (PRB) warned his shore team that he had collided with a floating object. The skipper was at his navigation station at the time was able to get on the deck immediately after the impact and see that the object that had struck PRB was a harbour buoy (a large metal buoy). Following the collision, Riou found that the hull of his boat was torn and delaminated for about one metre. The impact was on the starboard side of the boat and the torn area is three metres from the bow. Riou was not injured in the collision. He will wait until daybreak to assess the damage and the possibility of repair. Conditions in the area are good and the wind between 12 and 15 knots. At the moment of impact, Riou immediately called the race office in order to report the position of the buoy to other competitors.
Vincent Riou joins the club of skipper of the 2012-13 Vendée Globe to suffer from collision
Vendée Globe: Gutek retires from the race
Fonte: Valencia Sailing
Here’s the message Zbigniew “Gutek” Gutkowski sent earlier today:
“Today I need to officially announce what I’ve been thinking about for days. Being brave is not only about fighting, it is also about knowing where to stop.
I know I did everything I could, working on my electronics issues for many days.
I know my team and friends did their best as well. And I am extremely grateful for the huge support I got.
But I can’t carry on like that. Having no autopilot means I can’t race, and if I can’t race, I have to retire.
That’s a tough decision, one of toughest in my life. But that’s Vendee Globe, that’s the power of the ocean and you can’t fight it.
It’s like driving at night on a road you don’t know, a road with many turns, surrounded with trees. Suddenly your lights go off and you can’t slow down. How many chances do you have to survive?
That’s what is happening with my autopilot, if you replace the road and the trees with the ocean and the waves…”
Zbigniew “Gutek” Gutkowski, Energa Sailing Team
It’s over for Gutek…
Here’s the message Zbigniew “Gutek” Gutkowski sent earlier today:
“Today I need to officially announce what I’ve been thinking about for days. Being brave is not only about fighting, it is also about knowing where to stop.
I know I did everything I could, working on my electronics issues for many days.
I know my team and friends did their best as well. And I am extremely grateful for the huge support I got.
But I can’t carry on like that. Having no autopilot means I can’t race, and if I can’t race, I have to retire.
That’s a tough decision, one of toughest in my life. But that’s Vendee Globe, that’s the power of the ocean and you can’t fight it.
It’s like driving at night on a road you don’t know, a road with many turns, surrounded with trees. Suddenly your lights go off and you can’t slow down. How many chances do you have to survive?
That’s what is happening with my autopilot, if you replace the road and the trees with the ocean and the waves…”
Zbigniew “Gutek” Gutkowski, Energa Sailing Team
It’s over for Gutek…
Team SCA trains with Puma’s Mar Mostro
Fonte: TheDailySail
[Source: Team SCA] Team SCA will participate in the Volvo Ocean Race 2014-2015 with an all-female crew. While we wait for the delivery of our race boat, scheduled to be delivered in autumn of 2013, we have acquired a top-notch training boat to begin our team preparations
- We have bought the VO70 boat Puma which came third in the Volvo Ocean Race 2011-2012, says Richard Brisius, Managing Director of Team SCA.
The boat is now in the United Kingdom undergoing a graphic makeover and being adjusted to become the ideal training boat. Richard Brisius expects to start sailing with candidates in February.
- Right now we are putting together a group of crew candidates. It is a very exciting work and we have been in contact with many interesting, experienced and qualified female sailors from around the world. We hope to have a first group of sailors ready for our team towards the end of the first quarter of 2013. From there, we will continue to build and our plan is to have most of the crew ready to go during the summer of 2013.
Within Team SCA, there is a small group that works with the selection of candidates. The group includes, besides Richard Brisius, among others Magnus Olsson with experience from seven Volvo Ocean Race projects as well as Joao “Joca” Signorini who won the competition in 2009 with Ericsson 4 and who also sailed on the Telefónica boat in the latest Volvo Ocean Race.
[Source: Team SCA] Team SCA will participate in the Volvo Ocean Race 2014-2015 with an all-female crew. While we wait for the delivery of our race boat, scheduled to be delivered in autumn of 2013, we have acquired a top-notch training boat to begin our team preparations
- We have bought the VO70 boat Puma which came third in the Volvo Ocean Race 2011-2012, says Richard Brisius, Managing Director of Team SCA.
The boat is now in the United Kingdom undergoing a graphic makeover and being adjusted to become the ideal training boat. Richard Brisius expects to start sailing with candidates in February.
- Right now we are putting together a group of crew candidates. It is a very exciting work and we have been in contact with many interesting, experienced and qualified female sailors from around the world. We hope to have a first group of sailors ready for our team towards the end of the first quarter of 2013. From there, we will continue to build and our plan is to have most of the crew ready to go during the summer of 2013.
Within Team SCA, there is a small group that works with the selection of candidates. The group includes, besides Richard Brisius, among others Magnus Olsson with experience from seven Volvo Ocean Race projects as well as Joao “Joca” Signorini who won the competition in 2009 with Ericsson 4 and who also sailed on the Telefónica boat in the latest Volvo Ocean Race.
O Novo GC32 navega no Dubai
Fonte: JuanpaNews
© Christophe Launay
© Christophe Launay
© Christophe Launay
© Christophe Launay
© Christophe Launay
© Christophe Launay
Fuente info Great Cup
Dubai – GC32 Launch Day
You can feel as prepared humanly possible, but launching a new boat is never an easy job, but finally we made it!
After 11 months of hard work with a fantastic design, engineering and build team, the GC32 sailed its first miles on the warm waters of Dubai.
Surrounded by super sailors F18 World Champion Thijs Visser, F18 vice World Champion Karel Begemann, F18 legend Bastian Tentij, Olympic Sailor/Coach & X40 Sailor Hugh Styles, Moth World Champion Josh McKnight, F18 Sailors Olivier Witteveen, Tim Shuwalow & Jason Waterhouse, we worked hard days and nights at the Dubai International Marina in front of the amazing landscape assembling, splicing ropes, and generally playing boats and winding the structure up to load test everything.
Right from the first day sailing, the GC32 demonstrated its personality, with a very stiff platform giving amazing acceleration. We were all astonished at how quick the boat was out of the box. Many of the complex areas such as foil control systems worked perfectly well from day 1 and the boat has already demonstrated that it will be a great class racing boat that rewards tidy crew work and focused helming. She is so quick, safe with great sailing behavior remaining well on top of the water with bear aways easily accomplished. The double S foils and L Rudders give an amazing new turbo button adding more righting moment (horse power) or more lift.
The boat has excelled our expectations. With only a few optimizations needed to make the boat perfect. We discussed those changes with our build partners and we should be back on the water within 3 weeks for the final signoff for this new one design class.
It has been an honor to work with such a team. I would like to thank the entire sailing team for their dedication to make this happen. The whole team at Premier Composites that have been supporting us in many many ways during the entire launch. We could have not made it happen without them. Southern Spars, North Sails, Heol composites and OnDeck have all gone the extra mile as well in order to ensure the success of this exciting new class.
Lastly I want to thank Andrew Macpherson, he has been coordinating all the operations to deliver the boat on the water. Well done!
Words: Laurent Lenne CEO The Great Cup
© Christophe Launay
© Christophe Launay
© Christophe Launay
© Christophe Launay
© Christophe Launay
© Christophe Launay
Fuente info Great Cup
Dubai – GC32 Launch Day
You can feel as prepared humanly possible, but launching a new boat is never an easy job, but finally we made it!
After 11 months of hard work with a fantastic design, engineering and build team, the GC32 sailed its first miles on the warm waters of Dubai.
Surrounded by super sailors F18 World Champion Thijs Visser, F18 vice World Champion Karel Begemann, F18 legend Bastian Tentij, Olympic Sailor/Coach & X40 Sailor Hugh Styles, Moth World Champion Josh McKnight, F18 Sailors Olivier Witteveen, Tim Shuwalow & Jason Waterhouse, we worked hard days and nights at the Dubai International Marina in front of the amazing landscape assembling, splicing ropes, and generally playing boats and winding the structure up to load test everything.
Right from the first day sailing, the GC32 demonstrated its personality, with a very stiff platform giving amazing acceleration. We were all astonished at how quick the boat was out of the box. Many of the complex areas such as foil control systems worked perfectly well from day 1 and the boat has already demonstrated that it will be a great class racing boat that rewards tidy crew work and focused helming. She is so quick, safe with great sailing behavior remaining well on top of the water with bear aways easily accomplished. The double S foils and L Rudders give an amazing new turbo button adding more righting moment (horse power) or more lift.
The boat has excelled our expectations. With only a few optimizations needed to make the boat perfect. We discussed those changes with our build partners and we should be back on the water within 3 weeks for the final signoff for this new one design class.
It has been an honor to work with such a team. I would like to thank the entire sailing team for their dedication to make this happen. The whole team at Premier Composites that have been supporting us in many many ways during the entire launch. We could have not made it happen without them. Southern Spars, North Sails, Heol composites and OnDeck have all gone the extra mile as well in order to ensure the success of this exciting new class.
Lastly I want to thank Andrew Macpherson, he has been coordinating all the operations to deliver the boat on the water. Well done!
Words: Laurent Lenne CEO The Great Cup
quinta-feira, 22 de novembro de 2012
America's Cup boat's capsizing sparks questions, fears
Fonte: mercurynews.com
1 of 10
Oracle Team USA capsizes boat
In this photo taken Tuesday Oct. 16, 2012 and provided by Oracle Team USA, crew members hang from the mesh netting after the Oracle Team USA AC72 boat capsized on San Francisco Bay in San Francisco. The America's Cup champion syndicate is assessing the damage to its 72-foot (22-meter) catamaran, after it capsized and was swept by a strong current more than four miles (six kilometers) past the Golden Gate Bridge before rescue boats could control it.(AP Photo/Oracle Team USA, Guilain Grenier)
SAN FRANCISCO -- When Larry Ellison's new 72-foot America's Cup boat capsized on a practice run and was sucked through the Golden Gate in a crippled mess, the second-guessing and doubts among the sailing community began: Has Ellison's plan to turn the world's most famous yacht race into a high-tech white-knuckle NASCAR of the sea gone too far for speed?
"Everyone wants the fastest boat," said Richard Spindler, founder and publisher of Latitude 38, a sailing magazine based in Mill Valley. "But you can't win the race unless you finish."
Now, a month after Oracle Racing's new, custom-made USA 17 cartwheeled into San Francisco Bay, hurled its hotshot crew into the cold waters and crumpled the main sail structure, Ellison's pride is on the line as the sailing syndicate races against the clock to perform repairs and be ready to compete by September's America's Cup finals.
After winning the last Cup, Ellison was allowed to dictate the size and basic design of the boats for all the entries in this year's race. But some doubters are wondering whether the towering catamarans are too unwieldy and expensive and should follow the lead of Howard Hughes' giant flying boat, the "Spruce Goose" -- which was shelved for good after one flight.
Even America's Cup officials are talking about downsizing the catamaran for future races. But there's no time to turn back for this race.
"It's definitely a setback," Oracle Team USA skipper Jimmy Spithill
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said of the newly built boat's capsize Oct. 16. He was at the helm and blames his risky maneuvers in especially rough conditions, not the boat design, for the catastrophe. "But it's not one that will stop us from winning the Cup," he said.
The boat's wreck on only its eighth practice run has focused scrutiny on the fundamental design of the so-called AC72 -- a new class of America's Cup boat built for excitement and speed. All three challengers have launched their customized versions, and at least one competitor is already complaining that the rigid wing serving as a mast and sail is too big.
If Ellison's team loses, the event he won in Spain in 2010 and brought for the first time to San Francisco -- promising millions of dollars in economic development and a thrilling spectator experience -- would move to the winning boat's home port.
Stephen Barclay, CEO of the America's Cup Event Authority, said the 72-footers are not too dangerous for the bay, but they are being reconsidered for future races because they are so expensive and big, requiring upward of 30 people to get them in and out of the water by crane. Only three teams, New Zealand, Sweden and Italy, could afford to challenge Oracle for the trophy next
he Oracle Team USA AC72 catamaran is capsized Oct. 16, 2012, on San Francisco Bay. (Guilain Grenier/Oracle Team USA)summer, compared with roughly a dozen challengers in past years.
Still, the capsize exposed the fundamental dilemma of the America's Cup: How extreme can a boat design be when it is racing in the bay's already extreme conditions with the most competitive sailors on the planet intent on going as fast as possible?
Along with wearing crash helmets and sharp knives strapped to body suits, Spithill's crew will now tuck into their chest pockets mini oxygen canisters. If sailors end up trapped underwater, they'll have 10 to 15 breaths to cut their way out from beneath the netted trampoline that spans the twin hulls.
"We have to plan for the worst," Spithill said. Still, "I think the boat has to be a challenge. It needs to have all the horsepower and risk. If you can only race to the top of first gear, it's boring. You need to be pushed."
He was pushing the limits a month ago in 30-knot winds clashing with the strongest ebb tide of the year. No one was injured when the boat pitch-poled end over end. But the rigid wing became a battering ram on the helpless hulls as it was flushed through the rough waters of the Golden Gate and then collapsed. Pieces of the wing are still washing up at beaches.
Spithill received a call from Ellison, his billionaire boss who founded Oracle, the next morning. —‰'Champions get through this. I have no doubt you'll get through it,' " Spithill recalls Ellison saying. "It's what I needed," Spithill said, "that outlook and attitude."
But the capsize spooked competitors. So far, Team New Zealand has had little trouble navigating its AC72 in strong winds, but when it heard the news of the capsize while out sailing off the New Zealand coast, it immediately "buttoned back," said Richard Gladwell, who covers the team for Sail-World.com in Auckland.
When Sweden's Artemis Racing launched its 72-footer out of Alameda last week in similar tidal conditions, "we didn't go anywhere near that part of the bay," said CEO Paul Cayard.
There is no fatal flaw to the AC72, Barclay said. But he acknowledges that "decisions were made early to make these boats exciting," including choosing a larger, faster 38-meter wing sail over a slower 32-meter one.
Cayard is already questioning the wisdom of that decision: "We would have been better off with a small wing."
The America's Cup has always been as much a test of sailing skills as a design competition -- and the history of the Cup is littered with examples of teams pushing the limit. . In 1995, One Australia cracked like an egg during a challenger series and sank in seconds.
"If nobody takes risks there will be no progress. Howard Hughes did that. So did Boeing," said Dirk Kramers, Oracle's chief engineer who led the design of the AC72. "Whatever lessons are learned from one cycle will be applied to the other. That's what's kept this game alive for 100-and-some-odd years."
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Oracle Team USA capsizes boat
In this photo taken Tuesday Oct. 16, 2012 and provided by Oracle Team USA, crew members hang from the mesh netting after the Oracle Team USA AC72 boat capsized on San Francisco Bay in San Francisco. The America's Cup champion syndicate is assessing the damage to its 72-foot (22-meter) catamaran, after it capsized and was swept by a strong current more than four miles (six kilometers) past the Golden Gate Bridge before rescue boats could control it.(AP Photo/Oracle Team USA, Guilain Grenier)
SAN FRANCISCO -- When Larry Ellison's new 72-foot America's Cup boat capsized on a practice run and was sucked through the Golden Gate in a crippled mess, the second-guessing and doubts among the sailing community began: Has Ellison's plan to turn the world's most famous yacht race into a high-tech white-knuckle NASCAR of the sea gone too far for speed?
"Everyone wants the fastest boat," said Richard Spindler, founder and publisher of Latitude 38, a sailing magazine based in Mill Valley. "But you can't win the race unless you finish."
Now, a month after Oracle Racing's new, custom-made USA 17 cartwheeled into San Francisco Bay, hurled its hotshot crew into the cold waters and crumpled the main sail structure, Ellison's pride is on the line as the sailing syndicate races against the clock to perform repairs and be ready to compete by September's America's Cup finals.
After winning the last Cup, Ellison was allowed to dictate the size and basic design of the boats for all the entries in this year's race. But some doubters are wondering whether the towering catamarans are too unwieldy and expensive and should follow the lead of Howard Hughes' giant flying boat, the "Spruce Goose" -- which was shelved for good after one flight.
Even America's Cup officials are talking about downsizing the catamaran for future races. But there's no time to turn back for this race.
"It's definitely a setback," Oracle Team USA skipper Jimmy Spithill
Advertisement
said of the newly built boat's capsize Oct. 16. He was at the helm and blames his risky maneuvers in especially rough conditions, not the boat design, for the catastrophe. "But it's not one that will stop us from winning the Cup," he said.
The boat's wreck on only its eighth practice run has focused scrutiny on the fundamental design of the so-called AC72 -- a new class of America's Cup boat built for excitement and speed. All three challengers have launched their customized versions, and at least one competitor is already complaining that the rigid wing serving as a mast and sail is too big.
If Ellison's team loses, the event he won in Spain in 2010 and brought for the first time to San Francisco -- promising millions of dollars in economic development and a thrilling spectator experience -- would move to the winning boat's home port.
Stephen Barclay, CEO of the America's Cup Event Authority, said the 72-footers are not too dangerous for the bay, but they are being reconsidered for future races because they are so expensive and big, requiring upward of 30 people to get them in and out of the water by crane. Only three teams, New Zealand, Sweden and Italy, could afford to challenge Oracle for the trophy next
he Oracle Team USA AC72 catamaran is capsized Oct. 16, 2012, on San Francisco Bay. (Guilain Grenier/Oracle Team USA)summer, compared with roughly a dozen challengers in past years.
Still, the capsize exposed the fundamental dilemma of the America's Cup: How extreme can a boat design be when it is racing in the bay's already extreme conditions with the most competitive sailors on the planet intent on going as fast as possible?
Along with wearing crash helmets and sharp knives strapped to body suits, Spithill's crew will now tuck into their chest pockets mini oxygen canisters. If sailors end up trapped underwater, they'll have 10 to 15 breaths to cut their way out from beneath the netted trampoline that spans the twin hulls.
"We have to plan for the worst," Spithill said. Still, "I think the boat has to be a challenge. It needs to have all the horsepower and risk. If you can only race to the top of first gear, it's boring. You need to be pushed."
He was pushing the limits a month ago in 30-knot winds clashing with the strongest ebb tide of the year. No one was injured when the boat pitch-poled end over end. But the rigid wing became a battering ram on the helpless hulls as it was flushed through the rough waters of the Golden Gate and then collapsed. Pieces of the wing are still washing up at beaches.
Spithill received a call from Ellison, his billionaire boss who founded Oracle, the next morning. —‰'Champions get through this. I have no doubt you'll get through it,' " Spithill recalls Ellison saying. "It's what I needed," Spithill said, "that outlook and attitude."
But the capsize spooked competitors. So far, Team New Zealand has had little trouble navigating its AC72 in strong winds, but when it heard the news of the capsize while out sailing off the New Zealand coast, it immediately "buttoned back," said Richard Gladwell, who covers the team for Sail-World.com in Auckland.
When Sweden's Artemis Racing launched its 72-footer out of Alameda last week in similar tidal conditions, "we didn't go anywhere near that part of the bay," said CEO Paul Cayard.
There is no fatal flaw to the AC72, Barclay said. But he acknowledges that "decisions were made early to make these boats exciting," including choosing a larger, faster 38-meter wing sail over a slower 32-meter one.
Cayard is already questioning the wisdom of that decision: "We would have been better off with a small wing."
The America's Cup has always been as much a test of sailing skills as a design competition -- and the history of the Cup is littered with examples of teams pushing the limit. . In 1995, One Australia cracked like an egg during a challenger series and sank in seconds.
"If nobody takes risks there will be no progress. Howard Hughes did that. So did Boeing," said Dirk Kramers, Oracle's chief engineer who led the design of the AC72. "Whatever lessons are learned from one cycle will be applied to the other. That's what's kept this game alive for 100-and-some-odd years."
quarta-feira, 21 de novembro de 2012
RC44 com equipas femininas
Fuente info RC44
New RC44 rule opens the door for all female team
Interest from an all-women’s team in joining the RC44 Championship Tour has meant a rule change on crew weights to allow competitive all women teams to join the class for the 2013 season.
At the final event of the season in Croatia the RC44 owners agreed that an all women crew can have an increased all up crew weight of 740kg, 60kg more than a mixed or all male crew.
There is no crew number limit in the class, but any all-women’s team will need to sail with a minimum of three amateur sailors, including the boat owner.
The change in rule was an important step for the Women’s Only Sailing Team campaign led by Danish sailor Caroline Heerema and Russian marketer Ekaterina Zhilina. Caroline is an experienced sailor having competed on a number of dinghy and keelboat campaigns, and is no stranger to the RC44 class having guest helmed her father’s RC44 No Way Back on various occasions throughout the 2012 season.
The Women Only Sailing Team plan to train and undertake a series of team selections throughout the winter months in Puerto Calero, Lanzarote, with Team Manager Ekaterina Zhilina is currently working hard to secure funding with the aim of joining the 2013 Championship Tour at the second event of the season in Sicily.
With the prospect of leading the first ever all female crew to compete in the RC44 Championship Tour, Caroline is looking forward to the challenge ahead. “I love the action and excitement of sailing. I really like challenging projects and doing something out of the ordinary, this project definitely fits that description.”
The 2013 RC44 Championship Tour will visit a new venue for its first event of the 2013 season. The Wave, Muscat in the Sultanate of Oman will host the season’s opener starting on the 30th January 2013. The racing format remaining the same; one day of match racing when the professionals or owners can take the wheel followed by four days of fleet racing with only the owners or an amateur allowed at the helm.
To keep up to date with all the latest news visit www.rc44.com
For more information on the Women’s Only Sailing Team http://www.w-only.com/
Richard Branson is not happy with ISAF
Fonte: Vsail.info
Given his passion for that sport and his personal clout, it shouldn’t come as a surprise either to read a report in the Spanish press that he was also the key person behind the push to make kitesurf an Olympic sport. What is a surprise though, always according to the report, is that he had chosen Venezuela’s Teresa Lara and Spain’s Gerardo Seeliger as his lobbyists, most probably in order to convince the Latin American countries to vote in favor of kitesurf.
Up to last week Lara was one of ISAF’s seven vice-presidents and according to the report she was promoting the creation of an international kitesurf training center in the Spanish city of Santander, home city of both Seeliger and Gerardo Pombo, president of the Spanish Sailing Federation. Seeliger was destined to head that training center, according to the report.
Lara didn’t vote in representation of Venezuela but as Vice President while Seeliger voted in representation of Spain, Portugal and Andorra. After the votes were made public the Venezuela Sailing Federation sent ISAF a letter, vigorously opposing Lara’s vote while the Spanish Sailing Federation issued a press release, claiming that Seeliger’s vote was erroneous. He was meant to vote in favor of windsurf but got confused and voted instead in favor of kitesurf…
In fact, three “Hispanic” votes, Lara’s, Seeliger’s and Hector Duval’s from the Dominican Republic were crucial and swung the balance in favor of kitesurf by 19 to 17. The rest is well known, windsurfers fought a tough battle in the six months following the May 2012 vote and managed to reclaim the place in the Olympics at kitesurfing’s expense.
The report doesn’t cite any credible source to substantiate its claims but if it is indeed correct it’s puzzling how a business genius such as Branson wasn’t able to find better lobbyists… He should have called Ernesto Bertarrelli to learn what happens when one gets involved with the Spanish Sailing Federation…
In my opinion though, the real question we should ask isn’t whether one discipline or the other should be in the Olympics. The real question should be about the decision process on such fundamental issues and why should sailing be changing disciplines so often. Ask the three Spanish girls that won the first and last Olympic gold medal in women’s match racing or the Brazilian Sailing Federation that bought six Elliot 6 yachts and doesn’t know what to do with them…
Richard Branson enters the Guinness book of records by becoming, at 61, the oldest person to cross the English Channel on a kitesurf
This is what Richard Branson wrote on his blog the day ISAF reinstated windsurf as an Olympic discipline:
A sad day for one of the best entertainment sports in the world today as kitesurfing has been removed from the Olympic programme for Rio 2016.
Windsurfing has reclaimed its place in the Olympics at kitesurfing’s expense, after the International Sailing Federation (ISAF) voted to reinstate it.
It is a huge disappointment for all the kitesurfers worldwide who have been training hard since it was announced in May that kitesurfing was going to be in the Rio Olympics. What a shame too for all the windsurfers who spent the last year training to become kitesurfers.
The ISAF have misled everybody and been very short-sighted in making this knee-jerk decision. Their original decision was the right one and a brave one, although my own feeling is that there is room for both sports in the Olympics. If they had to drop anything it should have been one of the less exciting sailing races, which really don’t capture the public’s imagination.
Kitesurfing is one of the greatest spectator sports around, pitting man against the elements. After a magnificent summer, it leaves the Olympics the poorer for this decision.
On a personal note, I have been pulling together a British Virgin Islands kitesurfing team to participate in Rio 2016. Quite a few of those people had switched over from widnsurfing to kitesufing and actually ended up enjoying it more. There is also a great Brtitish kitesurfing team already hard at work too. A bitter blow for everybody involved.
terça-feira, 20 de novembro de 2012
segunda-feira, 19 de novembro de 2012
quarta-feira, 14 de novembro de 2012
AC72 Artemis - Sailing Session
The 34th America’s Cup Challenger of Record took their AC72 yachts out for her first sail on Tuesday on the San Francisco Bay. The Swedish team sailed their boat for three hours under a light breeze from 6 to 12 knots
segunda-feira, 12 de novembro de 2012
Taça Autosueco 2012
Fonte: FVela
Condições bastante difíceis com o vento a soprar de norte entre os 15 e os 22 nós em ambos os dias, com frentes de chuva no Sábado e muito mar com vagas com cerca de 4 metros no Domingo colocaram à prova a resistência e técnica dos velejadores. Estas condições afastaram da água alguns velejadores, que poderiam ter sido ainda em maior número em alguma Classes não fossem as previsões meteorológicas os ter desanimado.
Na Classe Optimist, e no Grupo A dos mais experientes, a vitória foi para a velejadora do Sport Clube do Porto Francisca Pinho com Mafalda Pires de Lima do Clube de Vela Atlântico em segundo e Henrique Frutuoso também do Sport em terceiro. No grupo B a vitória foi para Tomás Pires de Lima em Masculinos e para Matilde Pinheiro em femininos, ambos do Clube de Vela Atlântico. Também em Iniciados dupla vitória para os velejadores da casa em masculinos e femininos com Manuel Pimenta e Luísa Peres respectivamente.
A Classe Laser, a realizar a primeira prova pontuável para o ranking regional foi também muito concorrida. Na “olímpica” Laser Standard a vitória foi para Luís Manso, do Clube de Vela Atlântico. Na classe Laser Radial, triunfo de Nuno Duarte, do Clube do Mar de Coimbra, em masculinos e para Maria Costa do Vela Atlântico em Femininos. Nos Laser 4.7 a vitória foi para Afonso Lau, do Clube Náutico da Boca da Barra, em masculinos e para Inês Quadros do Vela Atlântico em femininos.
Na Classe Snipe, Luís Cadeco/Luís Maia, do CVA, foram os vencedores. Na Classe 420 a vitória sorriu à dupla do Sport Club do Porto, Gonçalo Pinho/Miguel Hipólito, seguida de João Pestana/Tomás Marques e de Diogo e Pedro Costa do CVA em masculino, com Joana Azevedo e Marta Paquete também do Clube de Vela Atlântico a vencerem em senhoras.
Fonte:Clube de Vela Atlântico
Condições bastante difíceis com o vento a soprar de norte entre os 15 e os 22 nós em ambos os dias, com frentes de chuva no Sábado e muito mar com vagas com cerca de 4 metros no Domingo colocaram à prova a resistência e técnica dos velejadores. Estas condições afastaram da água alguns velejadores, que poderiam ter sido ainda em maior número em alguma Classes não fossem as previsões meteorológicas os ter desanimado.
Na Classe Optimist, e no Grupo A dos mais experientes, a vitória foi para a velejadora do Sport Clube do Porto Francisca Pinho com Mafalda Pires de Lima do Clube de Vela Atlântico em segundo e Henrique Frutuoso também do Sport em terceiro. No grupo B a vitória foi para Tomás Pires de Lima em Masculinos e para Matilde Pinheiro em femininos, ambos do Clube de Vela Atlântico. Também em Iniciados dupla vitória para os velejadores da casa em masculinos e femininos com Manuel Pimenta e Luísa Peres respectivamente.
A Classe Laser, a realizar a primeira prova pontuável para o ranking regional foi também muito concorrida. Na “olímpica” Laser Standard a vitória foi para Luís Manso, do Clube de Vela Atlântico. Na classe Laser Radial, triunfo de Nuno Duarte, do Clube do Mar de Coimbra, em masculinos e para Maria Costa do Vela Atlântico em Femininos. Nos Laser 4.7 a vitória foi para Afonso Lau, do Clube Náutico da Boca da Barra, em masculinos e para Inês Quadros do Vela Atlântico em femininos.
Na Classe Snipe, Luís Cadeco/Luís Maia, do CVA, foram os vencedores. Na Classe 420 a vitória sorriu à dupla do Sport Club do Porto, Gonçalo Pinho/Miguel Hipólito, seguida de João Pestana/Tomás Marques e de Diogo e Pedro Costa do CVA em masculino, com Joana Azevedo e Marta Paquete também do Clube de Vela Atlântico a vencerem em senhoras.
Fonte:Clube de Vela Atlântico
segunda-feira, 5 de novembro de 2012
EUROSAF Champions Sailing Cup
Fonte: The Daily Sail
Jean-Marie Liot / DPPI
EUROSAF Champions Sailing Cup
New Olympic class series to set sail in Europe next year
Thursday November 1st 2012, Author: James Boyd, Location: none selected
A new series of championship regattas will be organised in Europe next year, under the name EUROSAF Champions Sailing Cup.
The new series, which incorporates all Olympic disciplines, had previously been announced in May of this year. Its aim is to provide the best possible competition for Olympic and Paralympic Classes. The series is based on established regattas within Europe, in order to guarantee the highest level of event and race management.
These regattas will incorporate new innovations in race formats that will make sailing easier to follow and more attractive for sailors, media and spectators alike, including:
- Shorter, but more races each day (12-15 over four days for ‘conventional’ classes and up to 20 for high performance disciplines).
- The boat winning the final race will win the gold medal.
- The ‘theatre’ style of racing, as used by the 49er class in their recent World Championships.
- Spectator boats on the course.
The EUROSAF Champions Sailing Cup will be staged over five professionally organised events, starting in May 2013 at the Fraglia Vela Riva, Lake Garda, Italy. The Dutch Delta Lloyd Regatta in Medemblik is next, followed by Sail for Gold at the 2012 Olympic venue of Weymouth & Portland in the UK. Kieler Woche in Germany will be the fourth event in the series, which will conclude later in the year with the Semaine Olympique Française, at La Rochelle, France.
The first four events take place in the ISAF defined ‘European Window’ and all five events qualify for ISAF ranking points.
The EUROSAF Champions Sailing Cup will accept entries from sailors from all over the world and will be a great opportunity to sail against competitors in an inspiring way. Teams coming from Europe and around the world, will be able to compete in four high quality Olympic classes regattas within two months starting at the beginning of May and concluding at the end of June, with a grand finale in France later in the year. Two months of extraordinary Olympic classes competition, all in one continent.
2013
Event 1 - Fraglia Vela Riva, 8–12 May in Riva del Garda, Italy
Event 2 - Delta Lloyd Regatta, 21–25 May in Medemblik, The Netherlands
Event 3 - Sail for Gold, 8–12 June in Weymouth
Event 4 - Kieler Woche, 22–26 June in Kiel, Germany
Event 5 - Semaine Olympique Française, 9–13 October in La Rochelle, France
2014
Event 1 -Fraglia Vela Riva, 7–11 May in Riva del Garda, Italy
Event 2 - Delta Lloyd Regatta, 20–24 May in Medemblik, The Netherlands
Event 3 - Sail for Gold, 7–12 June in Weymouth, United Kingdom
Event 4 - Kieler Woche, 21–25 June in Kiel, Germany
Event 5 - Semaine Olympique Française, 22–25 September in La Rochelle, France
sexta-feira, 2 de novembro de 2012
RC44 - Calendário 2013 com Cascais à mistura
Fonte: RC44 Class
Three new cities and two old favourites have been announced as the host venues for the 2013 RC44 Championship Tour. Racing will kick off at The Wave, Muscat the capital city of the Sultanate of Oman, with the successful format remaining the same; one day of match racing followed by four days of fleet racing. The RC44 champion will be crowned in November, when the final event of the Tour is hosted at a brand new marina being built at the old commercial port of Arrecife, Lanzarote.
2013 RC44 Championship Tour Calendar:
30th January to 3rd February – The Wave, Muscat, Oman
1st to 5th May – Sicily, Italy
25th to 29th June – Marstrand, Sweden
2nd to 6th October – Cascais, Portugal
20th to 24th November RC44 World Championship – Puerto Calero Marinas, Lanzarote, Canary Islands
The 2013 Tour will start in Muscat, Oman hosted by The Wave, Muscat, the first time the fleet has visited the country which invests so much in reigniting their maritime history. Occupying the south-east corner of the Arabian Peninsula, Oman offers crystal clear water and a prevailing north-easterly wind providing great sailing conditions to kick of the season. The country boasts a rich maritime heritage, has played host to a number of successful international sailing competitions over the past few years.
The RC44 will once again hold its World Championship in Lanzarote. Photo copyright Pierre Orphanidis / VSail.info
Another new venue to be added for the 2013 season is a soon to be announced town in Sicily, Italy. The second event in May will be organized by Massimo and Francesco Barranco’s Vela del Sud.
June will see the Championship Tour return for the third consecutive year to the sailing mecca of Marstrand, Sweden, before heading south to Cascais, Portugal. The Class visited the venue for the first time in 2012 where some fresh conditions put the teams to the test. Set beside the Atlantic Ocean, the ancient fishing village of Cascais is world-famous for its spectacular and unpredictable sailing conditions.
The 2013 tour will draw to a close in Lanzarote. Returning to the Island for the sixth consecutive year the class will take in a new venue from Puerto Calero Marinas. The Calero family has created the new marina complex Marina Lanzarote, in the island’s bustling capital Arrecife. Perfectly placed for having the best racing conditions in the area, the RC44 World Championship event’s timing coincides beautifully with the traditional transat season, meaning sailors can take full advantage of the established Atlantic trade winds.
With the introduction of new host venues, the addition of Pelle P as official clothing partner and with 15 of teams confirmed to compete, the 2013 RC44 Championship promises to be another exceptional year and one RC44 Class founder Russell Coutts will be keeping a close eye on, ”I’m looking forward to getting back on the Tour events next year. The Tour will have some new and exciting venues, visiting Oman and Sicily for the first time. With some new teams expected to join the Tour in 2013, we are looking forward to another great year for the class.”
2013 RC44 Championship Tour Calendar:
30th January to 3rd February – The Wave, Muscat, Oman
1st to 5th May – Sicily, Italy
25th to 29th June – Marstrand, Sweden
2nd to 6th October – Cascais, Portugal
20th to 24th November RC44 World Championship – Puerto Calero Marinas, Lanzarote, Canary Islands
The 2013 Tour will start in Muscat, Oman hosted by The Wave, Muscat, the first time the fleet has visited the country which invests so much in reigniting their maritime history. Occupying the south-east corner of the Arabian Peninsula, Oman offers crystal clear water and a prevailing north-easterly wind providing great sailing conditions to kick of the season. The country boasts a rich maritime heritage, has played host to a number of successful international sailing competitions over the past few years.
The RC44 will once again hold its World Championship in Lanzarote. Photo copyright Pierre Orphanidis / VSail.info
Another new venue to be added for the 2013 season is a soon to be announced town in Sicily, Italy. The second event in May will be organized by Massimo and Francesco Barranco’s Vela del Sud.
June will see the Championship Tour return for the third consecutive year to the sailing mecca of Marstrand, Sweden, before heading south to Cascais, Portugal. The Class visited the venue for the first time in 2012 where some fresh conditions put the teams to the test. Set beside the Atlantic Ocean, the ancient fishing village of Cascais is world-famous for its spectacular and unpredictable sailing conditions.
The 2013 tour will draw to a close in Lanzarote. Returning to the Island for the sixth consecutive year the class will take in a new venue from Puerto Calero Marinas. The Calero family has created the new marina complex Marina Lanzarote, in the island’s bustling capital Arrecife. Perfectly placed for having the best racing conditions in the area, the RC44 World Championship event’s timing coincides beautifully with the traditional transat season, meaning sailors can take full advantage of the established Atlantic trade winds.
With the introduction of new host venues, the addition of Pelle P as official clothing partner and with 15 of teams confirmed to compete, the 2013 RC44 Championship promises to be another exceptional year and one RC44 Class founder Russell Coutts will be keeping a close eye on, ”I’m looking forward to getting back on the Tour events next year. The Tour will have some new and exciting venues, visiting Oman and Sicily for the first time. With some new teams expected to join the Tour in 2013, we are looking forward to another great year for the class.”
AC72 Luna Rossa
Fonte: vsail.info
The Luna Rossa yacht becomes the third AC72 to sail, following her first successful day on the water in Auckland on Friday. The team hasn’t issues any statement or given further information on the maiden sail of the Italian AC72 but team photographer Carlo Borlenghi sent this set of beautiful photos:
First sail of the Luna Rossa AC72. Auckland, 2 November 2012. Photo copyright Carlo Borlenghi / Luna Rossa
First sail of the Luna Rossa AC72. Auckland, 2 November 2012. Photo copyright Carlo Borlenghi / Luna Rossa
First sail of the Luna Rossa AC72. Auckland, 2 November 2012. Photo copyright Carlo Borlenghi / Luna Rossa
First sail of the Luna Rossa AC72. Auckland, 2 November 2012. Photo copyright Carlo Borlenghi / Luna Rossa
First sail of the Luna Rossa AC72. Auckland, 2 November 2012. Photo copyright Carlo Borlenghi / Luna Rossa
The Luna Rossa yacht becomes the third AC72 to sail, following her first successful day on the water in Auckland on Friday. The team hasn’t issues any statement or given further information on the maiden sail of the Italian AC72 but team photographer Carlo Borlenghi sent this set of beautiful photos:
First sail of the Luna Rossa AC72. Auckland, 2 November 2012. Photo copyright Carlo Borlenghi / Luna Rossa
First sail of the Luna Rossa AC72. Auckland, 2 November 2012. Photo copyright Carlo Borlenghi / Luna Rossa
First sail of the Luna Rossa AC72. Auckland, 2 November 2012. Photo copyright Carlo Borlenghi / Luna Rossa
First sail of the Luna Rossa AC72. Auckland, 2 November 2012. Photo copyright Carlo Borlenghi / Luna Rossa
First sail of the Luna Rossa AC72. Auckland, 2 November 2012. Photo copyright Carlo Borlenghi / Luna Rossa
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