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Revealing the Secrets of the 'Impossible' XR 41

by Mark Jardine 27 Mar 14:30 GMT

The XR 41 from X-Yachts was quite a departure from what they'd been doing for the last 15 years: concentrating on high-end Performance Racing Cruisers. This is an out and out race yacht, but it's also a sporty cruiser, thanks to its modular interior.

With the design of the keel having a hollow in the centre you (or more likely X-Yachts or a yard) can change the amount of ballast in the boat as well, so it's not just suitable for fully-crewed racing, it can also be configured for double-handed racing and for cruising with more stability.

There are so many little features on this boat that we had to talk to the designers and the team at X-Yachts and get out on the water to find out more. The aim for the XR 41 is to win the 2025 ORC World Championship, so to also be a sporty cruiser seems like trying to achieve the impossible, but they may have cracked the formula for just that.

Looking at the bow, the first thing you notice is the long and aggressive bowsprit, which can be shorter in sport mode, leading into the aero guard rails on deck.

The volume comes in very quickly on the bow once you've gone below the waterline, coming to full width quite quickly, giving lift in the front downwind and also increasing balance upwind. The fin keel is where the ballast can be modified, adding extra lead to the centre cavity if necessary, with the bulb remaining unchanged in either configuration. This is secured to the hull through the legendary steel frame which has been a hallmark of X-Yachts designs almost since the very beginning in 1979.

The decent sized rudder is significantly further forward than you might expect, with the rocker rising steeply either side of the V-shaped stern. This ensures the rudder won't ventilate easily, while also making for reduced wetted surface when heeled upwind, and a nice, flat planing surface downwind.

On deck there are some smart innovations, such as the hydraulic sail controls. This literally gives you fingertip fine-tuning, from both the windward and leeward side. These are especially useful when you're sailing shorthanded as you don't have to leave the windward rail to make a trim adjustment. In the first XR41 these controls were fitted to both the genoa and mainsheet systems with two sets of controllers, and the mainsheet buttons can also control the running backstays.

It was a great time to visit the X-Yachts yard as the team had just taken the interior out of hull number 2. This is a 30-minute process for two people, with simple joining bolts on each of the modular units. The idea of changing a full-on racing machine into a comfortable cruiser in less than an hour seems outrageous, but on the XR 41 this has been turned into practice. The units are built to the high standards that X-Yachts customers have come to expect, and are lightweight, tough and easy enough to store in a container, shed or trailer.

This two-in-one nature is, for me, the truly revolutionary aspect of the XR 41, and means the yacht can be used for so much more than regattas.

So how does the XR 41 sail? The word I kept using while out on the water in Denmark on a cold spring day was: gliding. No point of sail felt pushed, and the yacht maintained speed at relatively deep angles downwind, while I was also able to push her up on to a reach to test the idea of the rudder not losing grip when heeled and sailing a far tighter angle than the spinnaker was comfortable with.

With the wide cockpit (the XR 41 is 4.18 metres or 13' 9" at its widest point) there is plenty of room, and the coachroof and bow were easy to walk around despite the inverse bow profile.

I got the sense that there was far more performance to be gained during my brief sail, and this was backed up by Dan Pedersen, X-Yachts' champion sailor who has spent a few days sailing the XR 41. I tried various trim settings and angles upwind, but stepped off the boat thinking about trim and knowing I had only unlocked a small amount of what the yacht could do.

The teams sailing the yacht will be using the latest analytics to find out exactly what makes the XR 41 tick as they build up to the ORC World Championship, and I'm going to be paying close attention to the photos and videos coming out to see what they settle on. I had my interest piqued and won't be satisfied until I know the best setup.

There's no doubt the XR 41 is different. The hull lines are a departure from the norm, but the thousands of hours spent modelling different shapes have undoubtedly paid dividends. Only time will tell if she's the world-beater she was designed to be, but confidence is high amongst the twenty owners who have already ordered one.

X-Yachts may well have achieved the impossible with the XR 41. A chameleon of a yacht which can change her purpose in hours. Racer one day, sporty cruiser the next, with keel ballast options for short-handed racing or cruising.

The yard has designed some legendary race yachts, going all the way back to the X-79, but recent years had been all about comfort, although I know first hand that yachts like the X43 are no slouch on the racecourse. The XR 41 puts X-Yachts firmly back into the grand prix racing scene, where they earned their pedigree, and the belief is clearly strong that they've delivered just what prospective owners want.

Find out more at www.x-yachts.com/en/yachts/xracing/xr

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