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Jules Verne Rekord 2003
zur Übersicht
Betreff: JV DAY 22: MEDIA UPDATE 1600GMT
Absender: "Team Kingfisher"
Empfänger:
Datum: 20. Feb 2003 16:49
SUMMARY: 1500 GMT 20.2.03 (position taken at 1500 GMT)
Position: 46 45'S 37 20'E (sailing south of Marion Island located approx 2185 miles SE of tip of South Africa)
Distance to WP6 46 00'S / 70 00'E 200 miles north of Kerguelen Islands : 1357 nm (theorectical shortest distance)
KINGFISHER2 PUTS DAMAGE BEHIND THEM AND headS SOUTH FOR WIND...
KINGFISHER2 heads south to find more wind - the last 2 days have been relatively easy in terms of Southern Ocean conditions: "Conditions right now are just magnificent - sun, nice breeze, blue skies," said MacArthur. "We are just sailing south passed Marion Island doing about 16 knots of boat speed - bit slower than earlier today - but we are sailing downwind in really beautiful conditions. We have no choice now but to go south perhaps as far as 51 south, but we may have to come back north a bit tomorrow night or the next day when the next low tracks in at 49S from the west. At the moment all the routing shows we should pass south of Kerguelen Islands but we are still too far away to say for sure."
As KINGFISHER2 plummets south so does the water temperature having dropped a couple of degrees to 7 degrees at the moment. Geronimo first saw ice in 9 degrees of water but further east than KINGFISHER2: "This is not a zone renowned for icebergs but you never know," said MacArthur. "Earlier today we had a thick mist and visibility was really poor so everyone is being really vigilant."
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Photos : Team Kingfisher

Kurs südlich von GERONIMO spart Meilen

Das beschädigte daggerboard wird verholt

Schadensbesprechung
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At 1500 UT this afternoon Geronimo were 79 miles away from Cape Horn on day 40 of their record bid. It could be almost 3 weeks till KINGFISHER2 sees the final Cape of the Southern Ocean.
LATEST EXCERPTS FROM CREW NEWS (see http://www.teamkingfisher.com for full crew news)
ANDREW PREECE: It seems like this is the dive south - we've had a few false dawns - and even Ellen admited to some nerves at heading towards the ice zone. "We've got a water temperature here of 10 degrees," she said. "In the Vendee I saw my first iceberg in five degrees. It's about five where we're going so yes, I do feel nervous but we've always got the safety valve, we can always gybe back up." But we need to get down there to find more wind. We have had three days of pussy-footing around - which has been sunny, pleasant and allowed us to dry out a little. But it is not record-breaking stuff....
JV DAY 22: CREW DISCOVER DAMAGE TO DAGGERBOARD CAUSED BY YESTERDAY'S COLLISION
Absender: "Team Kingfisher"
Datum: 20. Feb 2003 10:21
SUMMARY: 0700 GMT 20.2.03 (position taken at 0716 GMT)
Position: 45 33'S 34 25'E (321 miles W of Prince Edwards Islands)
Ahead/Behind the record: 3 hours 52 minutes behind Orange (using WP6)
Ahead/Behind Geronimo: 60 hours 35 minutes behind Geronimo (using WP6)
DAY 21 24 hour run (point to point) : Kingfisher2 300 nm, Orange 366 nm, Geronimo 490 nm
End DAY 21 distance to go (on theoretical course) : KF2 16809 nm, Orange 16747 nm, Geronimo 15840 nm
Boat speed: 8 knots
Course: 111
Distance to WP6 46 00'S / 70 00'E 200 miles north of Kerguelen Islands : 1478 nm (theorectical shortest distance)
IN BRIEF:
* A SLOW 24 HOURS, ONLY 300 MILES IN LAST 24HRS, BUT CREW SLOW BOAT TO WORK ON REPAIRING STARBOARD DAGGERBOARD through the night... It was discovered late yesterday that the daggerboard had been damaged in the collision - it probably saved the rudder in fact, as the broken piece of daggerboard deflected off the rudder and not the submerged object that KINGFISHER2 collided with on the previous night... "It became clear we had lost half the daggerboard and we were all pretty surprised to think we had not realised that it had gone..." said MacArthur.
* DAGGERBOARDS OPTIMISE UPWIND PERFORMANCE - NOT A BIG PROBLEM FOR NOW in the Southern Ocean but will make the upwind part of the course back up the Atlantic after rounding Cape Horn more difficult... "We have about 1 metre of repaired daggerboard underneath - it won't effect our downwind performance at all but not perfect for sailing upwind," said Ellen. It is possible to change the daggerboards over putting the full-length, undamaged daggerboard in the relevant hull depending on whether they are on port or starboard tack. It is not like racing round the bouys, tacking to make a mark - KINGFISHER2 will stay on one tack for long periods of time... Transferring daggerboards although hard is not impossible especially with 14 crew on board... ELLEN did this on her own in the Vendée Globe when she damaged her port daggerboard mid-Atlantic on the way back to the finish - then she had to remove a board that was 1.5 times her height and over 3 times her weight...
* ELLEN AND CREW SLOWED BOAT FOR 6 HOURS TO MAKE REPAIR to the 4-metre high daggerboard weighing 200 kilos, solving the problem there and then rather than risk the board getting jammed in the casing... The lighter winds actually helped the crew - trying to make these kind of repairs in 50 knots would have been a different story. It took 8 of the crew to lift the board out and cut away the damaged shards of carbon, filling holes and adding a pad eye to the damaged end before returning the board upside down to its casing. There was no other damage to the daggerboard casing or any other part of the boat...the repairs to the rudder fixings damaged yesterday have also been made. KINGFISHER2 is now back sailing at 100 per cent.
* SLOWER PACE HAS MEANT KINGFISHER2 HAVE NOT HOOKED into the north-westerlies forecast but instead are going to be effected by the next low pressure system. A stressful day yesterday between daggerboard problem and difficult weather decisions for Ellen...
* GERONIMO is close to rounding Cape Horn at 56 degrees south... Olivier de Kersauson and his crew will be happy to put the Pacific part of the Southern Ocean behind them...it was a difficult passage for the crew, violent seas and ice force them north sailing the longer distance and reducing their advantage over Orange's time...
http://www.grandsrecords.com
Listen to Ellen's latest audio this morning... http://www.thedailysail.com/ISM/articles.nsf/None/7F7EE5291089253580256CD30025EDA6?OpenDocument&Page=1
Kingfisher operating company of the day KOCKTAS: Koctas is Turkey's leading Home Improvement retail chain.
http://www.koctas.com.tr
ELLEN LATEST COMMUNICATION: communications by BT (broadband users check out video and other high speed content at http://kingfisher.sportal.com)
"..It became clear we had lost half the daggerboard and we were all pretty surprised to think we had not realised that it had gone. The board sheered straight off - a clean cut - just outside the waterline. We decided we had to solve the problem in case the board got jammed in the casing... The board is 4 metres in height and weighs 700 kilos and it took 8 of us to lift it out, we cut off the blocks, filled holes and added a pad eye. We were so lucky with weather - that it was not blowing 50 knots - so we could solve the problem. We have about 1 metre of daggerboard under the boat now - its not important for downwind sailing but not perfect for the upwind sailing we have ahead..."
LATEST EXCERPTS FROM CREW NEWS (see http://www.teamkingfisher.com for full news - click on crew icon to see today's news and all the news since the start...)
ANDREW PREECE: "...late this afternoon as he was trimming the starboard board, Hervé discovered that whatever we hit had hit the daggerboard before the rudder and we have lost about two metres or more of the starboard board. After discussion with the board's builders Multiplast and a meeting on board as to how to tackle the situation, we hoisted the board out of its casing and found that at least a couple of metres was missing..."
JARGON BUSTER : DAGGERBOARD
Daggerboards are used to improve upwind performance - like a centreboard on a dinghy, they help prevent the boat from being pushed sideways off their proposed course. When the boat is sailing upwind the daggerboard is lowered under the boat . There is a port and starboard daggerboard positioned approximately one-third back from the bow, and depending on which tack the boat is on ie port or starboard, the appropriate board is lowered into the water.
JULES VERNE USHANT (START) TO CAPE LEEUWIN TIMES:
2003 Geronimo (de Kersauson) 26 days 4 hours 53 minutes
2002 Orange (Peyron) 29 days 7 hours 22 minutes
1997 Sport Elec (de Kersauson) 30 days 16 hours 1 minutes
1994 ENZA (Blake/Knox-Johnston) 29 days 17 hours 53 minutes
1993 Commodore Explorer (Peyron) 33 days 7 hours 48 minutes
CAPE OF GOOD HOPE TO CAPE LEEUWIN TIMES:
2003 Geronimo (de Kersauson) 9 days 14 hours 17 minutes
2002 Orange (Peyron) 10 days 12 hours 42 minutes
Gate to gate record time still held by Sport Elec (de Kersauson) 1997 of 8 days, 23 hours, 17 minutes
OMEGA official timekeeper of KINGFISHER2'S Jules Verne record attempt
LINK TO THEIR SITE RE: VS...
PARTNER OF THE DAY - MUSTO have supported Ellen since she first sailed round Britain on her own and have been providing technical clothing to Team Kingfisher projects since 1998. MUSTO have provided the KINGFISHER2 crew with a range of technical gear to survive the extreme conditions including survival suit, offshore oilskins, mid layer and thermal gear (both heavy and light).
http://www.teamkingfisher.com/musto
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