Please select your home edition
Edition
North Sails Performance 2023 - LEADERBOARD

Vendee Globe: On board the new IMOCA60 Hugo Boss

by Daily Telegraph/Sail-World.com/nz 4 Aug 2019 18:21 PDT 5 August 2019
Latest images from the radical new Hugo Boss aimed at the singlehanded Vendee Globe round the world race © Lloyd Images

Latest images and previously published video of the new Hugo Boss, designed by VPLP and Alex Thomson Racing as she was wheeled out of builder Jason Carrington's facility.

She is aimed at winning the Vendée Globe in 2020-21 - an event in which Alex Thomson set two single handed distance sailing records, before breaking a foil in the approaches to the Southern Ocean.

Hugo Boss will carry Doyle Sails - continuing the partnership into a third Vendee Globe Race.

Alex Thomson Racing team, led by Design Manager Pete Hobson worked with esteemed French naval architects VPLP. The new Hugo Boss IMOCA60 represents a different approach in the world of short-handed high performance trans-oceanic sailing. The team says the boat is the product of more than two years of painstaking design and build work, undertaken by more than 100 naval architects, designers, engineers and boat builders. Most of the entries in the 2020/21 Vendee Globe Race will be of French origin.

The Telegraph's sailing correspondent Tom Carey was given a look at the latest statement in short-handed racing, which is designed to race without any fossil fuels.

Here's some out-takes from Carey's visit to the building facility near Gosport, UK:

- Built in an unassuming boatyard near to the team’s base in Gosport, it has taken a team of designers, boatbuilders and architects 26 months, 50,000 man hours and the small matter of the aforementioned £5.5 million to get to this point (although as Thomson notes: “£5.5 million and it still doesn’t have a toilet!”).

- They were happy for their rivals to see the 60 black, grippy solar panels across the deck and coach roof, for instance (Thomson is aiming to complete the Vendee Globe without the use of fossil fuels and, in doing so, prove that being more sustainable can actually have performance advantages). Or even to the cockpit, which intriguingly has been moved further forward and appears to be, to some degree, enclosed, with multiple exit points or hatches. But they were coy about showing too much of their new foils, which they believe represent a significant development from the previous generation. The foils (short for hydrofoils) are basically arms which extend out of the side of the boat and lift its hull out of the water as it moves along, reducing drag.

- With new rules allowing the foils to move on two axes rather than on one axis, as was the case last time, the challenge for everyone has been to come up with a solution that allows sailors to change the boat’s “angle of attack” as efficiently as possible. This is what keeps the boat “flying” out of the water at the fastest speed.

- Thomson says the idea for his foils was fleshed out while sitting in a car with Pete Hobson, his design manager at Alex Thomson Racing, and Andy Claughton, who used to design for the America’s Cup. “We were waiting for the ferry, and I’m trying to explain to Andy what I mean and he’s drawing the foil in the condensation of the car windscreen,” Thomson recalls. “We then went home, Pete drew it up and we sent it over to [French architects] VPLP.”

For the full story click here

Related Articles

Vendée Globe Press Release
With reference to Clarisse Crémer's Rule 69.2 Hearing Hearing under Rule 69.2 of the Racing Rules of Sailing on Saturday 2nd March, starting at 11:00. Posted on 4 Mar
Conrad Colman updates on Vendee Globe entry
Conrad Colman's Vendee Globe race yacht will use electricity only - no fossil fuels French/New Zealand sailor Conrad Colman, who will always be remembered for his epic finish to the 2016/17 Vendee Globe, is going again. The latest attempt will again be aimed at sailing using electricity only - no fossil fuels - and an electric engine. Posted on 9 Feb
10 environmental commitments for the Vendée Globe
The approach is part of a long-term perspective, divided into four key pillars In the run-up to the 10th edition of the solo, non-stop, non-assisted round the world race, the Vendée Globe is affirming its environmental commitments. Posted on 7 Feb
New York Vendée - Les Sables d'Olonne preview
A record 31 skippers will be setting off across the Atlantic in May While the IMOCA are in winter refit, the organisers of the Vendée Globe are unveiling the details and line-up of their transatlantic race, the New York Vendée - Les Sables d'Olonne, which will start off the coast of the United States Posted on 24 Jan
D-366, the countdown is on - Vendée Globe 2024
On 10 November 2024, the Vendée Globe skippers will set off on the 10th edition On 10 November 2024, the Vendée Globe skippers will set off on the 10th edition of the non-stop, non-assisted, single-handed round-the-world race. Posted on 10 Nov 2023
Transat Jacques Vabre, what's the stake for the VG
The first Transat Jacques Vabre set off from Le Havre Four years after the very first edition of the Vendée Globe in 1989, the first Transat Jacques Vabre set off from Le Havre. Posted on 23 Oct 2023
44 candidates for the Vendée Globe 2024
The diversity of candidates makes the race so exciting! The Vendée Globe has never been so attractive. For the 10th edition of the non-stop, non-assisted, single-handed round the world race, 44 skippers have applied. A record. Posted on 12 Oct 2023
"I still think about Vendée Globe all the time"
British yachtsman Mike Golding is back on an IMOCA Ten years after he raced his last Vendée Globe, finishing sixth, British yachtsman Mike Golding is back on an IMOCA, making ready to compete on the upcoming Transat Jacques Vabre, and says he'd still love to do a fifth Vendée Globe. Posted on 23 Sep 2023
New York Vendée Les Sables d'Olonne 2024
The final confrontation before the Vendée Globe On Thursday 6 July, the organisers of the famous non-stop, non-assisted, single-handed round the world race revealed the Notice of Race for their transatlantic, the New York Vendée - Les Sables d'Olonne. Posted on 7 Jul 2023
You can't learn solo sailing on your own!
The future skippers of the Vendée Globe are starting their season in France While five IMOCA boats are currently competing in a crewed race, The Ocean Race, the season was launched in France with the double-handed Guyader Bermuda 1000 Race. Posted on 18 Jun 2023
Henri-Lloyd - For the ObsessedCyclops Marine 2023 November - FOOTERHyde Sails 2022 One Design FOOTER