| Race
Report First Blood Here
is the Lightspeed 32 report and video as
mentioned above. Enjoy. All the pieces came together for us. We got near-perfect conditions for our boat (breezy and bumpy), we had had enough time in boat to break things and fix them so the boat was race-ready, and most importantly, we had a team who could push her hard safely: Randy Smyth and Paul (Whirly) Van Dyke as helmsmen, with Jan Majer, Stan Schreyer, and me to pull strings and navigate. The course is a long right hand turn, and the trick is to stay out of the Gulf Stream on the left and off the reef on the right. We started off Ft Lauderdale on a tight port screacher reach in low-20s breeze, and finished sailing our VMG angle on Starboard in high- 20s/low-30s with the big masthead A-sail. We had our best sustained speeds on the first stretch when we were sailing from 20-24 all the time and topped out at 24.6. Its just amazing to blast along hour after hour. Once we started turning right and went into VMG mode we had to switch to depth on the Tactick display so we would know when to jibe (note to self: don't be so cheap - buy another display) -- so frankly we have no idea how fast we were going after that. But the big VMG kite with a 70% midgirth does not have the same top end as the smaller, flatter screacher, and we know we never beat our max of 24.6 after that. All in all, this was a great trial for the boat. We have sailed her a lot by now, but distance racing in these conditions is much tougher than going out for 3-4 hours testing in Newport. Overall we could not be happier. We did learn that our Gucci custom carbon hatches leak like a sieve (look good though!), but we had already made the decision to use stock hatches going forward so this just reinforced that decision. We also had to slow down for when an underspeced block blew out on the rudder downhaul, but we were back up to speed with the rudders lashed down after about 10 minutes of Stan hanging off the transoms with Randy and I holding on. Other than that, the boat was bulletproof! The guys at VPLP are brilliant. The long narrow bows have lots of reserve buoyancy forward, so when you stuff the bow into a wave (which we did all the time), the boat keeps going and the bows pop up. We didn't have to blow the A-sail to pop the bows up more than 3-4 times during the whole race. The other key is having the BIG rudders - so we could really push the boat and steer down whenever we needed to. Actually the biggest stuff of the whole race was when we rolled the big sail at the Key West seabuoy and got hit by a puff just as Whirly was trying to head up. Stan was on the forward netting lashing the sail down when we buried both bows to the main beam. He turned around with a look of "what the F are you guys doing back there?!" on his face. So it turns out its pretty difficult to gauge how hard its blowing when you are sailing these boats downwind at 20+ in the dark! Who knew? Once the puff went by we had no problem and ripped down the channel to the finish at 13-16 kts. Hunt
Stookey |