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RS Sailing 2021 - LEADERBOARD

Vendee Globe - Colman has serious fire and near-capsize + Video

by Conrad Colman, Foresight Natural Energy on 5 Dec 2016
Conrad Colman - Electrical repairs completed - " Hibernation is over.I unrolled the J1 reacher, closed the door, and slept without an alarm all night long. Feeling fresher even if physically I still feel trashed. Nice to have the pilot up and running full strength again." - Conrad Colman Racing - Southern Ocean Conrad Colman / Foresight Energy / Vendée Globe
New Zealand/US sailor, Conrad Colman has had to deal with a nightmare scenario, when fire broke out aboard Foresight Natural Energy off the Cape of Good Hope, South Africa, followed by a near-capsize after the auto-pilot lost power and crash gybed the 60fter.

He is currently lying 16th in the 29 entry fleet, in the Vendee Globe non-stop solo around the world race, which began in early November from the west coast of France.

The incident, which is a sailor's worst fear, is now behind him and the New Zealander is back on track, but it was certainly a scary incident. In his message sent Sunday night, he told race control more about this incident…

I saw Arnaud (Boissieres) on the horizon and was happy to gybe away from him in nearly 30 knots on a shift to improve my guage to the east. Then inside I started to smell a faint plastic smell. Thinking maybe that the batteries were having a problem I ran my hands over all the electrical system and ran diagnostics on the computer.

Everything was fine... maybe it was just a figment of my imagination!

I went outside to take a reef and when I came back inside I saw black smoke and yellow flames leaping from behind the chart table. One of the solar charge controllers was burning and was in the process of taking down the entire electrical system as several important cables pass close by. I took the fire blanket and smothered the flames, ignoring electrical shocks and the burning heat in my desperation to save my boat. When the flames were gone I heard one beep from the autopilot and my world turned upside down.

The burnt cables next to the charge controller had short circuited the auto pilot and the boat bore away from the wind and did a crash gybe with me still inside, hands full of molten plastic.

Extreme Heel

Following an electric mishap Foresight Natural Energy experienced an extreme situation, nothing Conrad Colman couldn't tackle and fix, check it out ????

Après un problème électrique important, Foresight Natural Energy s'est retrouvé dans une situation bien compliquée... Conrad a réussi à réparer et repartir dans le bon sens mais que d'émotions !!

#crazykiwi #foresightnaturalenergy #imoca60 #vg2016
#Foresightgroup #Oceanvolt #SuperBLithiumbatteries
#FuturaSciences #TheOwnery #Gill #thegreatcircle #Spinlock #FrogsinNZ #Nautix #Cobot #Backpackerspantry #AETHIC #Biocooples7epis
#0emission #zeroemission #greensailing #electricsailing #imocaoceanmasters #solosailing #offshoreracing #vendeeglobe

Posted by Conrad Colman Ocean Racing on Sunday, December 4, 2016


The copious ballast tanks and canting keels that make these boats some of the fastest in the world also contribute to them being very unstable when things go wrong because all of their weight is on one side and after my crash gybe the boat was actively trying to capsize itself. When I poked my head out from the door the boat lying heeled over at 80 degrees, the tip of the mast only a couple of meters way from the water. As you have seen in the video I shot, I stood on the side of the cockpit to furl the gennaker and arrange the mainsail and stays so I could right the boat.

With the boat righted, I was still in a tight spot. The wind was increasing, I had a poorly furled gennaker that could flap itself to pieces and no instruments or autopilot. I had to drop the gennaker before I could secure the boat so I could start to repair the electronics.

Unfortunately, the bad furling job I had done when the boat was on its side, combined with the strengthening wind, meant that it started unfurling backwards and thrashing around so that I was afraid it would take the mast down. It took me a long time to try to furl it again while sailing downwind with the helm between my knees so I could use the pedestal to control the winches but eventually I had to resign myself to dropping the twisted mess.



I managed to tangle the sail around the other forestays and stop it from falling in the water. However with the sail down it still took me two hours of solid effort to control the writhing inflated mess as the wind gusted 40 knots, spray blew horizontally off the tops of the mountains heaving under, and over, boat as I danced on the foredeck with sail ties and pocket knives.

With the boat finally secure I came back inside to find everything swimming. Because the boat had spent so much time on its side the keel box had leaked hundreds of litres and I found my food bags, carefully packed spares clothes bags dripping wet or actively floating. My team and I had vacuum packed most of the equipment on the boat in thick plastic so the damage was minimal but some cold weather clothes, spare boots and sleeping bag were soaked.

I was eventually able to dig through the ashes of the fire and splice important cables back together and get the autopilot back online.

I screamed with joy when the little lights danced across their screens again because the alternative was to hand steer to Cape Town and abandon the race.

Now, as I write this we're back in action, surfing at 25 knots down the thundering wave crests that looked so foreboding when the boat was suffering a blackout.

38 South / Jeanneau AUS SF30 OD - FOOTERX-Yachts X4.3J Composites J/45

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