Please select your home edition
Edition
Crewsaver 2021 Safetyline LEADERBOARD

America's Cup: AC75 designs and campaigns critiqued by a competitor and independent designer

by Tip&Shaft/Sail-World.com/nz 2 Mar 2020 02:48 GMT 2 March 2020
American Magic - Pensacola - New York Yacht Club - America's Cup - February 2020 © Will Ricketson/NYYC

Two technical commentaries have appeared in the sailing media over the past few days taking a look at the AC75 designs, the campaigns and their nuances.

American Magic suppliers Helly Hansen took a very small media group behind the curtain in Pensacola, Florida to see the winter training base of American Magic. Tip & Shaft's Andi Robertson spoke with Skipper/CEO Terry Hutchinson,

First up Hutchinson was asked to evaluate their position against the other teams:

"It was interesting to see Luna Rossa is a very science driven boat with incredibly small foils. Team New Zealand is the exact opposite. Team New Zealand has very big foils. It was exciting from a competitor perspective to see Team New Zealand launch with asymmetric foils, a flat one on one side and a anhedral one on the other side, that tells you their science is not 100 percent sure. And it tells you the simulator is not so good and you also would not build a mule.

"Team New Zealand are the most polished, outside of us, on doing laps. But their foils were incredibly big. I am excited to see that fact in the second half of New Zealand's training they have been on smaller foils, they start coming towards us and it will be interesting to see what Luna Rossa do, but it is good to see people coming towards you."

On time on the water by INEOS Team UK:

"Since we have launched the boat, of 95 potential sailing days we have had 32 sailing days," Hutchinson told Tip & Shaft.

"INEOS have had roughly 135 days or 140 days available and have sailed 15 days. They have moved all their stuff down to Cagliari and then they go there to sail and then go back to England and take ten days off. And now they are at SailGP which I can get to, I understand, it is high speed racing it is race practice".

Hutchinson echoes the lines expressed previously by INEOS Team UK's Ben Ainslie, saying that Luna Rossa and Emirates Team NZ got a jump on the other teams by having the class rules for seven months longer than the rest of the Challengers. They both went in a different design direction with a skiff concept rather than the scow favoured by INEOS Team UK and American Magic with the first boat Defiant.

"Luna Rossa and Team New Zealand are the two teams on top as they really have had the rule for seven months longer because they wrote the rule, they knew what was going into it," Hutchinson told Tip & Shaft

"We basically got it [the class rule] in February 18 and by August we were delivering lines after the rule got locked in on June 30th. It is interesting to see the hulls and what six months of design can do for you. If I was to pick a boat out of the three, I love Defiant and she is going to do great work for us, but I can see Luna Rossa is pretty nice, aerodynamically it is very friendly and has very small foils.

"This competition is going to be won and lost in manoeuvrability and straight line performance. If we were to sail across Pensacola Bay in a straight line I probably would take the Luna Rossa boat but if we were to sail across Pensacola Bay and in 40 seconds have to do a manoeuvre then 100 per cent I would take Defiant every day of the week."

"Now the team which can shed all the drag and get rid of everything will be very hard to beat. But you have to be able to get up on the foil and you have to make sure you can manoeuvre and stay on the foil and remember the wind limit is 6.5kts at the bottom that is a big number (in terms of importance). " "Knowing that number and Luna Rossa I will bet my life that they're next set of foils are significantly bigger."

Hutchinson says American Magic have been clocking up some long hours on the water and are getting a high percentage of sailing days out of the calendar.

"If we get 50 per cent of sailing out of six hours on the water that is a good day," he explained when asked to quantify a good sailing day. "Our best day here is a 78 miles day inside six miles by two miles. That is a lot of foiling. We had two days in a row that we did over 140 miles, and days like these are incredibly valuable."

New Zealander Dean Barker was with Team New Zealand for four campaigns before making way before starting a new team, Softbank Team Japan in 2017. Barker and Hutchinson were skipper and tactician respectively for the 2007 America's Cup aboard Team New Zealand. How is the new relationship going onboard the foiling monohull, along with other crew Andrew Campbell (USA) and Paul Goodison (UK)?

"Where is hits me most with Dean is like last week were out sailing across the Bay ripping along on port tack and he says 'stand by to bear off' and I am standing by my pedestal and the windspeed is at 26 and a half knots and I look over and think 'this is going to be interesting...' I am thinking about my 'exit strategy off the boat, and Dean says 'bearing away in 3,2,1....' The bow comes down and we go careening off across the Bay at 55 miles an hour and he is laughing, Andrew (Campbell, flight controller) and Goody (Paul Goodison, main trimmer) is laughing. That is the component of experience, a level you know nothing is going to affect him on the day."

"Dean was a known, Goody and Andrew were the unknowns and they are both in respective roles – Goody is three times Moth World Champion, Gold Medallist and an incredibly talented sailor but what you see developing in his skill set here is way beyond what you ever expected. And Andrew is the same. He is the quiet Saxon, he stands up day in day out flies the boat and is complete flat line. He has such responsibility but takes it on to the nth degree. That side is incredibly exciting."

For the full interview from the Tip & Shaft newsletter click here

To subscribe to the weekly English language newsletter from Tip and Shaft (a reference to the two parts of a foiling dagger board) click here

For a further analysis of the four AC75 designs, published in Sailing World by designer Scott Fergusson, who was with Oracle Team USA for the last three America's Cup campaigns click here. The analysis is very good but needs to be read in its entirety.

Related Articles

American Magic's AC75 Race Boat Uncloaked
Commissioning of B3 continues in Barcelona New York Yacht Club American Magic, Challenger for the 37th America's Cup, uncloaked its AC75 race boat, "B3," as commissioning continues in Barcelona. Posted today at 4:49 pm
America's Cup: Revealing Reveals - the new AC75s
In the AC design stakes it's clear that different solutions have been found for similar questions As the Louis Vuitton 37th America's Cup nears, the intensity ramps up and with four teams revealing their box-fresh AC75s, it's abundantly clear that different solutions have been found for very similar questions. Posted on 24 Apr
America's Cup Defender christened "Taihoro"
Cup Defender named “To move swiftly as the sea between both sky and earth.” In a stirring ceremony, Iwi Ngati Whatua Orakei gifted and blessed the name ‘Taihoro' on the boat that Emirates Team NZ will sail in their defence of the 37th America's Cup. The launch event took place at the Team's base in Auckland's Wynyard Point. Posted on 18 Apr
America's Cup: Swiss launch a beauty of detail
Alinghi Red Bull Racing family came together to celebrate the first launch and another milestone Today was the official launch at the Swiss team's beautiful base in the heart of the Port Vell with Chiara Bertarelli, daughter of Ernesto, cracking the bottle on the foredeck and naming their new AC75 challenger. Posted on 17 Apr
America's Cup: Emirates Team NZ reveal AC75
Emirates Team New Zealand unexpectedly rolled their new AC75 out of the shed, on Friday Emirates Team New Zealand unexpectedly rolled their new AC75 out of the shed, on Friday, during a break in the gales which have been lashing Auckland. Posted on 12 Apr
America's Cup simulator game has first race
Eight top sailors sail first race ahead of upcoming America's Cup e-sports regatta The official simulation videogame of the 2024 America's Cup and upcoming e-sports championship was launched on Tuesday in Barcelona, bringing together the sailing and virtual worlds. Posted on 10 Apr
America's Cup launches Official Game
AC Sailing built on simulation technology used by America's Cup teams, will be available for free AC Sailing, the ultimate regatta simulator built on actual simulation technology used by America's Cup teams, will be available for free download on Epic Store and Steam from today April 9th, 19:00 CET Posted on 9 Apr
Cup Spy Special: Swiss AC75 reveal
First look at the Backless Boat - Alinghi Red Bull Racing's new AC75 revealed in Barcelona The AC37 Joint Recon Team peered over the fence at the unveiling of the Backless Boat - the Swiss AC75 - the first of the Challengers for the 2024 America's Cup. Its most distinctive feature is the radical cutaway topsides at the back end of the hull. Posted on 5 Apr
Glittering, star-studded reveal of the Swiss ‘Boat
The magnificent Port Vell base of Alinghi Red Bull Racing was the hottest ticket in Barcelona The magnificent Port Vell base of Alinghi Red Bull Racing was tonight, the hottest ticket in Barcelona for friends, family, sponsors and dignitaries from Spain and around the world for the ‘reveal' and roll-out of the Swiss AC75. Posted on 5 Apr
America's Cup: The hidden world of Hydro explained
Emirates Team NZ explain the hydro systems which may be seen on their new AC75 race boat There are many hidden parts to an America's Cup campaign where innovation, performance and talent often remain unseen. Hydraulics is one such area, when Emirates Team NZ's new race boat is launched next month, the hydro components will be largely unseen. Posted on 19 Mar