Jourdain will assess damage in Azores but still making eight to ten knots
News
January 29. 2009 at 18:40As Les Sables d’Olonne prepares, expecting to welcome the winner home this weekend, if there was anything resembling a false sense of security descending on the Vendée Globe then there was sharp reminder that the race is not over until the finish line is crossed today.
With less than 2000 miles to go Roland Jourdain called his shore team at around 0400hrs this morning to say that he had a problem with the keel of Veolia Environnement.
After a long night he had heard an unexpected noise which he duly investigated, stopping the boat and checking as much as he could. Indeed it was only when he sheeted back on and Veolia Environnement heeled again that he was immediately aware that his problem was with his keel.
Jourdain has been making between eight and 10 knots towards
Until now Jourdain has had a remarkable race, the only skipper to have been able to pace race leader Michel Desjoyeaux since the pair assumed first and second positions respectively on 16th December.
Michel Desjoyeaux is now less than 1000 miles from Les Sables d’Olonne and was recovering this morning from a tough, squally night during which he saw 53 knots of wind – equal to the highest wind speed that he had seen so far this race. And another reminder that it is not over until the finish gun sounds. Desjoyeaux is now expected to finish in Les Sables d’Olonne Sunday morning.
Sam Davies emerged into the Northern Hemisphere in fourth place on Roxy at 1430hrs this afternoon, holding a small 90 miles advantage over Marc Guillemot (Safran) who has been finding the Doldrums going painful with his reduced sail area, but he anticpates that his position to the west of his British rival will give him first bite at the westerly winds when they come to him. Meantime Davies was not giving any thought to anything other than getting her Roxy back to Les Sables d’Olonne as safely and as fast as possible.
It is Thursday and Brian Thompson’s week has been filled with more work below decks than in the cockpit of Bahrain Team Pindar. Sunday and Monday were given to protracted alternator repairs, but since then it is has been continuous with repairs to his watermaker, and attempts to fix his Fleet 77 and Sat C systems, but culminating yesterday in a problem with one of the two starboard rams which cant and support his keel. A complex fix is required and so meantime it would appear that the
Michel Desjoyeaux, Foncia: “I had a really s***y night Worse than in the Southern Ocean. The wind was all over the place, from the south south west to
Marc Guillemot, (Safran): “I’m 80 miles away from the magic line! I entered the Doldrums yesterday evening and even if there are still bright skies, I’m more or less in the middle. It is not very violent and there aren’t many squalls, but the speeds are closer to five than ten knots. I have the impression that we’re near the way out now. I can see a line of squalls off to my east, but once I’ve got by them, I should be picking up the
Michel Desjouyeaux (Foncia) in English: “Actually we should have to gybe in the north of
My sails are common. The pilot I use are the same ones that some of the other competitors have. The only thing special I have and I use it most of the time is the last version of MaxSea Time Zero which is a software for routing, a routing process which now in this version is able to compute with sail sets (crossovers) and waves increasing or decreasing performances of the boat. In the next version, this is just the Beta version, we will have loss of performance due to sail change and also we have a confidence value to appreciate if the routing process is confident or not in fact with a level of 100% which is a good help to be able to decide in bad conditions and changing conditions.”
Brian Thompson, GBR, (Bahrain Team Pindar): “It is quite squally here. I am very near to
“The squalls here are very slow moving. So when you get caught you are in there for a while. I also had a very busy night. A busy few days and a busy night.
One day was alternator all day. The next day was alternator all day. Third day was watermaker. And yesterday was the Fleet suddenly went down and the Standard C. So I had four days on the go with the tool box out all the time. Then last night around 11 or 12 I noticed that the keel had let itself down. And the oil had disappeared from the reservoir and the Starboard ram had just started leaking, not in a place which is really repairable. It was actually leaking from a sensor wire that tells where the ram is canted, rather than from a pipe that you could do up. So what I had to do was disconnect the pipe and empty all of the oil into a container. And now I am just using the forward ram and so I am going from a two ram set up to a one ram set up. And the ram makers are looking into whether I can repair it, but I think it is one of those jobs which is very complicated and best left to the workshop. So that took a few hours. I had to completely stop the boat for a few hours. Fortunately we were in the back side of a squall with no wind in it.
It is not something you can now push the boat to 100% with, so you’d have to be really careful with in the NE’ly trades to not load the boat. There is a pressure release valve which should unload it if it gets over 250 psi.”
Infos précédentes :
- 29/01/09 at 18:40 : Jourdain will assess damage in Azores but still making eight to ten knots
- 29/01/09 at 14:19 : Jourdain heading to Azores with keel problem, Desjoyeaux under 1000 miles from finishing
- 29/01/09 at 13:18 : Veolia Environnement has keel problem
- 29/01/09 at 08:21 : The last thousand miles
- 28/01/09 at 21:28 : On fire, and warming up for the party
- 28/01/09 at 18:45 : 80 Days and the Beat Goes On
- 28/01/09 at 13:27 : A steal for Foncia
- 28/01/09 at 08:05 : Sticking points again for Jourdain, Great American respects Antarctic to starboard
- 27/01/09 at 21:00 : Slowed and trapped, the low points in the highs.
- 27/01/09 at 19:20 : Enjoy it while you can
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