LeoV
Super Anarchist
The Verdier designers talking about the RDR to Tip&Shaft;
LinkedOut wins ahead of Apivia which is most often described as a versatile boat, in the end, isn't it Thomas Ruyant's most versatile boat?
R. N.: Its great strength, precisely, is that it is not too specified to one area; and it's obvious in certain conditions, especially downwind, it has a small advantage because of its rig and its foils. I also want to underline the fact that you have to be a hell of a good to put in the commitment shown by Thomas, he really put his foot down and obviously had enough confidence in his machine to push it to this point. He is clearly one of the skippers capable of going above and beyond at times, and if it doesn't break, it works!
When you see the dominance of these two boats, you wonder why build new ones, right?
R. N.: There are certain developments which are difficult to implement on existing boats, in particular the foils which require re-evaluating the entire structural area, the configuration of the foil wells... The hulls are also part of the development, it is always more efficient to redo a hull that concentrates all the optimizations you have in mind than to modify one. And on this Route du Rhum, certainly the new Imocas do not end up in the lead, but the margin for development is enormous between a boat at the start of its life and what it becomes, made reliable, optimised, tuned and refined, when it has a number of Transatlantics. Charlie and Thomas' boats, barring heavy modifications, are today at the top of their performance, they are ultra-reliable, with sailors who know them by heart, and they are well above what they were three years ago. So if the new boats, which are already close, they experience the same evolution, they will be much more efficient in two or three years.
What will Apivia 2 look like?
H. P.: It will, of course, be an evolution of the current boat. Charlie has a good base, the idea is not to throw everything in the bin and start from scratch, so the objective was rather to take the good elements and improve those which were maybe a little weaker.
R. N.: The most visible difference will mainly be around the ‘living’ area and the management of that space, the idea is that the skipper is less and less the weak link.
LinkedOut wins ahead of Apivia which is most often described as a versatile boat, in the end, isn't it Thomas Ruyant's most versatile boat?
R. N.: Its great strength, precisely, is that it is not too specified to one area; and it's obvious in certain conditions, especially downwind, it has a small advantage because of its rig and its foils. I also want to underline the fact that you have to be a hell of a good to put in the commitment shown by Thomas, he really put his foot down and obviously had enough confidence in his machine to push it to this point. He is clearly one of the skippers capable of going above and beyond at times, and if it doesn't break, it works!
When you see the dominance of these two boats, you wonder why build new ones, right?
R. N.: There are certain developments which are difficult to implement on existing boats, in particular the foils which require re-evaluating the entire structural area, the configuration of the foil wells... The hulls are also part of the development, it is always more efficient to redo a hull that concentrates all the optimizations you have in mind than to modify one. And on this Route du Rhum, certainly the new Imocas do not end up in the lead, but the margin for development is enormous between a boat at the start of its life and what it becomes, made reliable, optimised, tuned and refined, when it has a number of Transatlantics. Charlie and Thomas' boats, barring heavy modifications, are today at the top of their performance, they are ultra-reliable, with sailors who know them by heart, and they are well above what they were three years ago. So if the new boats, which are already close, they experience the same evolution, they will be much more efficient in two or three years.
What will Apivia 2 look like?
H. P.: It will, of course, be an evolution of the current boat. Charlie has a good base, the idea is not to throw everything in the bin and start from scratch, so the objective was rather to take the good elements and improve those which were maybe a little weaker.
R. N.: The most visible difference will mainly be around the ‘living’ area and the management of that space, the idea is that the skipper is less and less the weak link.