Fastnet 07

Author
Discussion

Schmalex

Original Poster:

13,616 posts

213 months

Thursday 2nd August 2007
quotequote all
Best of British to Mahatma & any other who may be doing the Fastnet the week after next. I'll be thinking of you whilst I tuck into my 3rd or 4th beer on Tuesday night.....

Just think of all those lovely hours on rail ahead of you, followed by bitching land sickness when you get back to Plymouth.......

In all seriousness, sail fast & be safe (I am mighty jealous of you all!)

Alex



Edited by Schmalex on Thursday 2nd August 13:12

ol' dirty

9,074 posts

222 months

Thursday 2nd August 2007
quotequote all
the previous owner of our boat is doing it, sounds like fun!hurl

Mahatma Bag

27,428 posts

286 months

Saturday 4th August 2007
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Cheers thumbup

ALawson

7,854 posts

258 months

Monday 13th August 2007
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I see the start has been delayed, I think they are going to be in for a good downwind blast on the way back!

Schmalex

Original Poster:

13,616 posts

213 months

Monday 13th August 2007
quotequote all
ALawson said:
I see the start has been delayed, I think they are going to be in for a good downwind blast on the way back!
Lucky bastards!! I remember touching 18.5 kts in a Sigma 38 at 3.00am on the run back from the rock one year. Absolutely awesome sailing (bloody terrifying as well!!)

Guys - have a great race & give us a blow by blow account when you get back in

ALawson

7,854 posts

258 months

Monday 13th August 2007
quotequote all

Matt172

12,415 posts

251 months

Wednesday 15th August 2007
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if you watch the simulation from the start, one of the yachts obviously decided it was a bad idea and heads off to London hehe
Hope all those who took part made it back safely

Schmalex

Original Poster:

13,616 posts

213 months

Wednesday 15th August 2007
quotequote all
Matt172 said:
if you watch the simulation from the start, one of the yachts obviously decided it was a bad idea and heads off to London hehe
Hope all those who took part made it back safely
Either that or the navigator was dyslexic & told the helm to keep the land on the left...

Schmalex

Original Poster:

13,616 posts

213 months

Wednesday 15th August 2007
quotequote all
Matt172 said:
if you watch the simulation from the start, one of the yachts obviously decided it was a bad idea and heads off to London hehe
Hope all those who took part made it back safely
Either that or the navigator was dyslexic & told the helm to keep the land on the left...

toxic frog

3,171 posts

274 months

Wednesday 15th August 2007
quotequote all
two of my fellow colleagues entered this year.

one was on the Kerr 52 FAIR DO's... which retired due to numerous equipment failures.

the other is on the Swan 65 DESPERADO which is still going strong... they went round the rock early this morning in 3rd place, but the blast back will favour the planing yachts (open 60's, maxi's etc etc), so they will slowly get overhauled on the thrash back to plymouth.

kinda glad i stayed in the office really!

Schmalex

Original Poster:

13,616 posts

213 months

Wednesday 15th August 2007
quotequote all
toxic frog said:
two of my fellow colleagues entered this year.

one was on the Kerr 52 FAIR DO's... which retired due to numerous equipment failures.

the other is on the Swan 65 DESPERADO which is still going strong... they went round the rock early this morning in 3rd place, but the blast back will favour the planing yachts (open 60's, maxi's etc etc), so they will slowly get overhauled on the thrash back to plymouth.

kinda glad i stayed in the office really!
I used to share a flat with Jason Ker when I was at uni. His racing boats are fantastic to sail, particularly the 11.3's. Especially so, considering during his final year, he had to design & build a hull for tank testing which we accidentally left too close to a radiator whilst it was curing meaning that it was only hydrodynamically sound on Port tack....

Nic Jones

7,115 posts

227 months

Thursday 16th August 2007
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Was down in Plymouth on Tuesday and a lot of yachts were sheltering/retiring while we were there. The weather was god awful though really. frown

Glad i'm not out there at the moment, best of luck to those still racing. smile

Mahatma Bag

27,428 posts

286 months

Thursday 16th August 2007
quotequote all
It was horrendous. Weather was far worse than forecast. Our mainsail (carbon fibre and kevlar laminate) got shredded and so we had to retire. Bitterly disappointing. Still, nobody got hurt smile

ALawson

7,854 posts

258 months

Friday 17th August 2007
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M Bag I was talking to a chap from Norths yesterday, they are going to be busy wink.

To be honest I tracked the race on the web with the latest Ugrib files for weather and was surprised at the number of yachts pulling out. Obviously once you have major gear problems i.e. No Main it is understandable.

As you said the most important thing was that there were only minimal injuries across the fleet.


Mahatma Bag

27,428 posts

286 months

Friday 17th August 2007
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We were just south of Start Point when it happened. We didn't fancy the entrance to Salcombe or Dartmouth so we put into Brixham to see if we could make a repair, but it there was no way. We thought about continuing under trysail, but it would have been impractical (and way too slow). We were gutted. The weather itself didn't bother us that much and we had seen far worse in the build-up races.

ALawson

7,854 posts

258 months

Friday 17th August 2007
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GF parents have a place in Brixham, will be going there on the boat next summer.

How badly did your mainsail fail, vertically up the middle?

Schmalex

Original Poster:

13,616 posts

213 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
It must have been blowing pretty hard to shred a carbon main!

Glad to hear everyone is OK though. It was pretty amazing to watch the number of boats pulling out on Tuesday / Wednesday monring on the race tracker software.

Always next time.....

Mahatma Bag

27,428 posts

286 months

Friday 17th August 2007
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Vertically near the leech. It flogged as we were taking in the second reef and we think that's what did it.

Schmalex

Original Poster:

13,616 posts

213 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
Mahatma Bag said:
Vertically near the leech. It flogged as we were taking in the second reef and we think that's what did it.
Ah, exactly the same happened to me once about 10 years ago with a Genesis main. Major pisser, as the weave is just not designed to cope with the stress put on it through flogging (especially while reefing).

Bummer to be out through gear failure... frown

ALawson

7,854 posts

258 months

Friday 17th August 2007
quotequote all
I was once partially responsible for putting a 20ft verticle hole in the main of a whitbread 60, we had just put the 3rd reef in, with Paul Jeffes issuing instructions to give it "just one more turn on the winch" the reefing pennant was bar tight and we tighened it the last half turn there was the loudest teearing noise ever hehe

Having been going upwind for 14 hours we quickly turned around and headed back to Antigua, we were delivering the boat back to scotland in Jan 2000. When we got back to English Harbour we we told "you should never leave on a friday". Anyway the main had about 60m2 of sticky dacron put on it and we ended up going to Shirley Heights anyway.

I quite fancy doing in 2009, that will be another Volvo year won't it?