Tomahawk
Well-Known Member
He is lying 23rd!!!!
https://www.transatjacquesvabre.org/en/map-and-ranking
https://www.transatjacquesvabre.org/en/map-and-ranking
Today and tomorrow do not look good..
Then going light when it turns behind him.. ?
These days it is all about weather forecasting..
Any pics of HB on foils in the race?
This morning (Sunday 3rd November 2019) at around 9:37am UK time, while Alex Thomson and Neal McDonald were sailing at around 25 knots onboard HUGO BOSS, they hit something in the water. At this stage, it is not clear what they hit.
Following the incident, Alex and Neal stopped the boat and carried out an inspection to assess the damage sustained. It became apparent that the keel is now only attached by the hydraulic ram.
Due to the damage sustained to the boat, the decision has been made that Alex and Neal will not continue on in the race. The Alex Thomson Racing team is now working to assist the skippers to bring the boat to the nearest port.
Both Alex and Neal are currently safe inside the boat and did not sustain any major injuries.
A further update will follow.
Would it be viable or practical to have a forward looking sonar to try and pick up floating objects (or whales even) before the boat hits them?
What sort of range typically will a forward looking sonar have?
If the boat is doing 25 or 30 knots, I guess there would not be much time to change course before you clobber the UFO ahead.
Would it be viable or practical to have a forward looking sonar to try and pick up floating objects (or whales even) before the boat hits them?
What sort of range typically will a forward looking sonar have?
If the boat is doing 25 or 30 knots, I guess there would not be much time to change course before you clobber the UFO ahead.
Alex seems fated sithnhitting stuff. He lost the last Vendee on account of hitting something and loosing one of his foils. But IIRC nearly 1/3 of the fleet was retired after hitting things. How dangerous is it becomnig on account of floating stuff?
It wouldn't help with whales or trees, but I've long been of the opinion that shipping companies should be responsible for lost containers, with daily fines until they're accounted for. I can't believe that it would be that difficult to design a container that would flood if immersed and require anything carried to have, at worst, neutral buoyancy.
Yes, it would add to costs, but that may not be such a bad thing if it means that containers stop being practically throwaway items, and it may reduce the amount of junk being shipped around the world.