Please select your home edition
Edition
Rooster 2023 - LEADERBOARD

Volvo Ocean Race - Frostad on Boat Design and final changes (Part II)

by Rob Kothe & Jedda Murphy on 28 Sep 2014
Spanish Team training ahead of the Volvo Ocean Race start. Maria Muina
The seven One Design VOR 65s were built by a consortium led by Green Marine in the UK. The first of those for the Team SCA women wad delivered in October 2013, the last was supplied to Team Vestas Wind in August 2014.

Since the end of Race Zero, the boats have been out of the water, here in Alicante on the Spanish coast, with a team of Volvo Ocean Race Boatyard shipwrights making sure all the boats were strictly one design and that the number of modifications were applied identically on all the boats.

Yesterday we talked to Knut Frostad, the Volvo Ocean Race CEO about changes made to all the boats in the final upgrade and maintenance program just being competed.


Frostad explained ‘We were very pleased with the small number of overall changes we had to make to boats.

‘I had contemplated we would be forced to make a lot more because we wanted to build a full scale sailable prototype that we could test but we didn’t have the time to do it.


‘We made a prototype of the interior. We made a prototype of the deck that we could work on that in a one to one scale. Normally when you launch one of these offshore racing boats whether it is an America’s Cup boat or a Volvo Ocean Race boat they are always half finished when they launch and then they start sailing with them and they change and they rebuild and they move and they get everything right.

‘We just couldn’t do that because then it wouldn’t be a one design boat. Our ambition was to get it 90% correct in everything and then knowing that some things would probably not be perfect.


‘The great thing was the things that were not perfect were mostly just practical things. They were not really performance related, for example the galley. We made a mistake with the galley. It wasn’t really a user friendly galley. It was actually quite hopeless to cook from.

‘Probably they were mostly I the past as well but we had an opportunity to do a better galley and a better toilet and both were quite poorly done so we had to do some changes to the toilet because it was simply not working and the galley was not user friendly and it was too hard to cook from so we had to change a few things.

‘We changed in all the boats and they were happy with that and then we forgot one thing.


‘We forgot to have handles inside the boat to hold onto and you need to do that. If you don’t have that you will fall over everywhere. I don’t know how it left the whole program but for some reason it was forgotten in the program, of all the details we were studying. It was discovered when the first boat started sailing and then we had a big program of where are the handles going to be, how are they going to look like.

‘Yes, so we had to find a solution that worked for both women and men and now they all have that so now they are all happy.

‘Most of the changes we made have been practical. There have been a couple of sailing things but not very much.

‘Safety things, we went a big step this time on safety so we have increased it a lot.

‘One thing we pushed very hard is heavy items in the boat so for example they are not allowed to have so many stackable items any more. A lot more things have to be sealed in one location so if they were to capsize or flip sideways things are not tumbling round inside the boat.

‘The safety level and equipment is very similar to the last race. We always equip the boats with most of the safety equipment. We have done that in the last three races so all the life rafts and all those things are from us so we provide that as part of the entry fee. This time they have a few more fire extinguishers, more medical equipment, more escape hatches in the boat. I think they are pretty good on that. We have better personal EPIRBs, with AIS locator beacons on people.


‘We had some small issues with the keels which were mostly related to a chemical, it was the fact the inside paint was supplied from the milling manufacturer was not the right paint and salt water and the paint were not a good mix. So we had to sand blast all the keels here and repaint them from the bottom out. It was not a disastrous issue but it was work. Of course some boats had it more, some less but we did it on all the boats so none of them had the problem.

‘Sails are all the same. They all got the sails the same day here. They had their prerace sails at different times but their race sails were given on the same day and they have seven sails each and then the next lot of four sails they cannot start using before Abu Dhabi so we don’t have any more logistical cost on that.

‘The sails are given by lottery so they can’t go and pick their own mainsail, if they have a friend who works in that loft, you know.

‘You have to think about everything because these guys are crazy, absolutely crazy.’

In Part III Frostad talks about lessons learned by race organisers and sailors in Leg Zero.

Cyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTER2024 fill-in (bottom)SCIBS 2024 FOOTER

Related Articles

Finns and French finish Ocean Globe Race
Galiana WithSecure and Evrika excape the windhole 40nm from the finish line It was a long, painfully slow final two days to complete their circumnavigation. But, finally, Galiana WithSecure FI (06) and Evrika FR (07) crossed the Royal Yacht Squadron finish line in a moody windless, moonlight Cowes arrival.
Posted today at 9:52 pm
No major fears for Sunday's Transat CIC start
There will be no initial gales to contend with, rather a relatively light winds start As all of the Transat CIC skippers convened this morning at Lorient's La Base for the main briefing before Sunday's start of the 3,500 miles solo race across the North Atlantic to New York, ideas about the weather are the main topic of discussion.
Posted today at 7:57 pm
Sister act seals Olympic spot in windsurfing
Czech Republic's Katerina and Barbora Svikova take gold and silver Czech sisters Katerina and Barbora Svikova took gold and silver in the three-rider final of the women's windsurfing competition on day five of the Last Chance Regatta in the south of France.
Posted today at 7:25 pm
PlanetSail Episode 8: Human Power
It's a simple question - How do you power an AC75? It's a simple question - How do you power an AC75? This time around for the third generation Cup boats the answer is different depending on whether you're talking about above or below the waterline. And this time around cycling looks set to be the answer.
Posted today at 7:09 pm
The must-do Rolex Middle Sea Race
The start of 45th edition is six months away Starting from Grand Harbour, Valletta, the Mediterranean's premier 600-mile classic promises much and always over delivers for participants and spectators alike.
Posted today at 5:12 pm
American Magic's AC75 Race Boat Uncloaked
Commissioning of B3 continues in Barcelona New York Yacht Club American Magic, Challenger for the 37th America's Cup, uncloaked its AC75 race boat, "B3," as commissioning continues in Barcelona.
Posted today at 4:49 pm
RS Tera Worlds 2024 already breaking records
Selling out more than 3 months in advance of the event In a record-breaking first for the International RS Tera Class, the RS Tera World Championship 2024 registration has reached maximum capacity - selling out more than 3 months in advance of the event.
Posted today at 2:06 pm
Lunven and Soudée on the dockside in Lorient
Preparing for a classic north Atlantic passage in the Transat CIC Once again La Base marina in Lorient, Brittany – the main home of the IMOCA fleet – is a hive of activity as 33 boats and their skippers prepare for the daunting challenge of the North Atlantic alone.
Posted today at 1:38 pm
Antigua Sailing Week 2024 Preview
All set to deliver sensational racing and amazing parties in a beautiful setting Antigua Sailing Week is back for the 55th edition with 13 racing classes filled to the brim with sailors from all over the world. Teams from over 20 different nations are set for the Caribbean's famous regatta.
Posted today at 10:15 am
The Transat CIC: Who are the favourites?
Charlie Dalin (MACIF Santé Prévoyance) makes his comeback The start gun of the 15th edition of The Transat CIC will sound on Sunday sending a fleet of 48 skippers - 33 IMOCAs, 13 Class 40s and two vintage yachts - off on the complex, cold and mainly upwind passage across the Atlantic.
Posted today at 7:44 am