Please select your home edition
Edition
RS Sailing 2021 - LEADERBOARD
Product Feature
Allen Aerovane
Allen Aerovane

MACIF trimaran sets sail for the Mediterranean

by Trimaran MACIF 9 Sep 2016 11:07 BST 9 September 2016
François Gabart on the trimaran MACIF © Macif

François Gabart will leave at the end of the week for a delivery with crew to La Ciotat, where he will attempt the Mediterranean record single-handed in early October.

This summer, the trimaran remained moored to its berth, where it was dismasted, to repair the masthead. For the technical team, this was also an opportunity to check all the rigging. They also worked hard to finalise the installation of optical fibres on the appendages (rudders, foils, and centreboard). These will provide valuable information about their behaviour: "The optical fibres will provide us with data on the distortions and strain on the appendages. This will be sent directly to the multihull's computer", explains Antoine Gautier, the engineering office manager. This real-time data will now enable the skipper to preserve the appendages if needed. At the same time they will be studied onshore for the purpose of optimisation.

At the end of the week, François Gabart will leave Port-la-Forêt together with a few of his team members, Pascal Bidégorry, Guillaume Combescure and Fred Bérat, for a week's delivery to La Ciotat, near Marseille. This ocean sailing will enable the skipper to take his bearings. "Sailing with a crew is an opportunity to test new things and to work on the boat's performance. This delivery will serve as training for the Mediterranean record. Once in Marseille, I will have less opportunity to sail, since we have scheduled a few days of public relations, so that Macif Group's employees and the general public can get to see the trimaran.

The "Sailing Truck" operation, seen last July, in Brest, at the International Maritime Festival, will be brought into operation again on Marseille's Vieux Port (on the City Hall Plaza). From 23 to 25 September, the people of Marseille will be able to enjoy a virtual reality experience on board the MACIF trimaran, alongside François Gabart. Visitors will be able to see all the aspects of this 30-metre multihull, from the cabin to manoeuvres on deck. They will also be able to take part in the "Big Macif wheel game1", in which they can win several lots, including tours of the MACIF trimaran.

MACIF will go into stand by, ready to make the best use of a weather window to attempt the Mediterranean single-handed crossing record. This has been held, since 1 October 2013, by Armel Le Cléac'h, on Banque Populaire VI, on a 458-mile route between Marseille and Carthage. He sailed it in 18 hours, 58 minutes, and 13 seconds (at a theoretical average of 24 knots). In so doing he improved the earlier time by Thomas Coville (Sodebo) by 6 hours, 40 minutes, and 23 seconds.

This was followed closely by his win in May on the Transat Bakerly, and then the 24-hour record, which he raised to 784 miles, at an average of nearly 33 knots. François Gabart is determined to establish a new reference time on what can be considered a real sprint across the Mediterranean, in surroundings he looks forward to seeing again. "I really love the Mediterranean. I sailed there a lot when I was preparing the Olympics and I always enjoyed the Figaro races I competed in, particularly the last, the Istanbul Europa in 2010 (Ed. winner and crowned French champion of single-handed ocean racing). It is a tricky sea with very changeable weather conditions and you need to be an opportunist. I can't wait to attempt this record."

What are the ideal weather conditions for beating Armel Le Cléac'h's record? "A Mistral wind will need to have just got up, to avoid waves, and if possible more westerly than northerly, so as not to need to jibe on the trajectory. More importantly, this mistral will need to blow us all the way to Africa, which is a fairly rare occurrence, since it usually drops just south of Sardinia."

Similar to when he was on standby in New York for the North Atlantic Record, François Gabart will need to remain patient to take advantage of the best possible window and add a second record to his performances on board the MACIF trimaran, with which he says he is "more than satisfied", a little more than one year after it was launched: "We won the first two races of the programme (Transat Jacques Vabre and the Transat Bakerly). We have a very high performing boat, which has had no major technical hitch and which offers huge potential for progress. This is all very positive for things to come."

www.macifcourseaularge.com

Related Articles

Gabart hands over the helm to Bidégorry
Changes for the driver of the MACIF trimaran Following a tough Brest Atlantique race, François Gabart has momentarily decided to give racing a break this season, despite having learnt a lot from this event. Posted on 25 Feb 2020
Trimaran MACIF takes option to spice things up
Currently lying third in the Brest Atlantiques After 23 days of racing, the MACIF trimaran is third in the Brest Atlantiques and the finish should be in just over a week, in Brest. François Gabart and Gwenolé Gahinet are laying everything on the line by trying to sail up the Atlantic by the west Posted on 28 Nov 2019
MACIF crew heads to Brest Atlantiques' 2nd course
Trimaran's skipper talks about what the trio have been through since Rio On Tuesday, François Gabart, Gwénolé Gahinet and Jérémie Eloy were making headway at nearly 30 knots on a course leading to the Cape, the southernmost headland on the African continent, where the Brest Atlantiques' second course marker is located. Posted on 20 Nov 2019
Soon time to share life on board MACIF Trimaran
How has the trio prepared for this long stretch of cohabitation? The search for performance is a key phase in offshore racing, because it is both the goal and the guideline. For the Brest Atlantiques, knowing how to live together will be essential. Posted on 19 Oct 2019
Full speed ahead for the MACIF Trimaran
Five crew members will try to win the Rolex Fastnet Race Five crew members will help François Gabart try to win the legendary Rolex Fastnet Race, which will start on Saturday 3 August at Cowes (England). The goal of the MACIF trimaran crew is to push her as hard as they can! Posted on 31 Jul 2019
Gahinet to co-skipper MACIF with Gabart
A dynamic duo enter the Brest Atlantiques in November The MACIF trimaran will be skippered by the round the world single-handed record holder and co-skippered by the co-holder of the Jules Verne Trophy, in the race that sets off in a loop from Brest. Posted on 21 Jul 2019
MACIF Trimaran back at sea
Better performance and more reliable Just a few days after the MACIF trimaran left the cargo ship that brought it back from Pointe-à-Pitre, in mid-January, it was sent to the yard for a refit, where it has spent nearly four months in the expert hands of the MACIF technical team. Posted on 23 May 2019
François Gabart on subject of Brest Atlantiques
We have emerged much stronger! As far as the MACIF trimaran skipper is concerned, the new Brest Atlantiques race, in which the Ultim' fleet sets off from Brest to Rio and then to the Cape of Good Hope, before returning to Finistère, is a sign of the vitality of the Ultim 32/23 class Posted on 3 Apr 2019
MACIF Trimaran to sprint across the Atlantic
The trimarans of the Ultime class will take off from St Malo The trimarans of the Ultime class will take off from St Malo in the direction of Point-à-Pitre, at fabulous speeds probably never achieved before, this Sunday at 2 pm. Posted on 3 Nov 2018
MACIF set for St Malo
Countdown to the start of the Route du Rhum - Destination Guadeloupe It's time! Time to deliver the MACIF trimaran from the south of Brittany to the north of Brittany. Time to set sail for the magnificent surroundings of a route du Rhum that looks as though it will be epic and exciting. Posted on 25 Oct 2018