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Paul Larsen & Vestas Sail Rocket 2 - Smashing the Sailing World Speed Record - An Inside Look

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  • čas přidán 30. 12. 2012
  • Paul Larsen breaking the World Speed Record with the Vestas Sailrocket 2!
    Record Breaking Speed: 65.45 knots
    Location: Walvis Bay Namibia
    Date: 16/11/12
    ---
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Komentáře • 136

  • @christopher-bj8de
    @christopher-bj8de Před 10 lety +6

    Brill ! The joy and enthusiasm of the whole team is inspirational. Well done

  • @soundbeings1
    @soundbeings1 Před 9 lety +3

    Unbelievable !! Fantastic achievement - well done - and huge cahones too !!! Be safe

  • @dangerdan2592
    @dangerdan2592 Před 3 lety +1

    Haha I thought this might be in Namibia. I went to Swakopmund a couple of years ago and had a blast, didn't go to Walvis Bay though. This looks intense! Great job to Paul and the team for breaking the record.

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    @TVNauticalChannel  Před 8 lety

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  • @Capt_Killingfield
    @Capt_Killingfield Před 7 lety +1

    "This is fast. This is fast. This is real fast. This is how you do it Chucky!" I love it!
    I can only think of the destruction caused by chasing this speed with petroleum..

  • @YourAubsome
    @YourAubsome Před 2 lety

    lol that sail boat is nuts!!

  • @donryanoceroesq
    @donryanoceroesq Před 7 lety

    drag racing. sweet. these seem like some friendly folks. well done paul and friends!

  • @kuladeeluxe
    @kuladeeluxe Před 7 lety

    Great there are people that do stuff like this.

  • @humblelongboards
    @humblelongboards Před 4 lety +3

    I wish I'd been out there with my Sunfish. I'd show these outbacks what's up.

  • @rbaleksandar
    @rbaleksandar Před 9 lety +5

    You know what? "This is real fast" LOL

  • @The_Revealer_7
    @The_Revealer_7 Před 2 lety

    That speed sailing world record of 65.45 knots, made in Walvis bay Namibia 24. November 2012, still holds today. Hydro foil is the fastest on water.

  • @kylewattssurfing3266
    @kylewattssurfing3266 Před 4 lety

    Thank you for sharing super cool super cool!!!

  • @deanxxi
    @deanxxi Před 9 lety +2

    Whoa! It's like you have to see it to believe it.

  • @PaulOrientedotcom
    @PaulOrientedotcom Před 9 lety +7

    That's smoking fast. Would love to sail it.

    • @rickc1975
      @rickc1975 Před 6 lety

      Not exactly sailing but the record is well deserved.

  • @victorvandyke9898
    @victorvandyke9898 Před 6 lety +1

    Fantastic! Huge!

  • @valvetrom
    @valvetrom Před 7 lety +1

    Looks very much like the Merrimac design.the 4o kn sailboat,I heard in the 80s

  • @rubennavegante3491
    @rubennavegante3491 Před 7 lety +1

    Very nice thanks

  • @mikecat23
    @mikecat23 Před 9 lety +17

    He does realize those cameras slowed him down ?

  • @chicho4743
    @chicho4743 Před 3 lety

    That was outstanding.

  • @asterixky
    @asterixky Před 8 lety

    Amazing ...... and great concept.

  • @marconius101
    @marconius101 Před 7 lety +3

    Creating a rooster tail behind a sailboat, that you don't see every day.. COOL>>>

  • @Stryke607
    @Stryke607 Před 7 lety +1

    65kn ... damn, that is fast. Most "normal" boats make around a tenth of that speed.

  • @monasalmina5202
    @monasalmina5202 Před 3 lety

    Hello there! Do you hold the rights for this video? Please let me know, thank you very much!

  • @johnhoogerbrug6622
    @johnhoogerbrug6622 Před 10 lety

    stunning

  • @DrChaos-xr5dd
    @DrChaos-xr5dd Před 3 lety

    Awesome

  • @rawnukles
    @rawnukles Před 8 lety +1

    At first I thought it really had a rocket motor supplementing the sail

  • @cheryl7634
    @cheryl7634 Před 9 lety

    Some really happy people here - !

  • @stevesteward5417
    @stevesteward5417 Před 7 lety

    amazing vid. lovely people too

  • @trondwell13
    @trondwell13 Před 7 lety

    well done

  • @kylewattssurfing3266
    @kylewattssurfing3266 Před 4 lety

    Very awesome very cool...

  • @perryquinn8401
    @perryquinn8401 Před rokem

    On whose authority

  • @rogermelaniecornelius3847

    If it capsized, how would you get it back up?

  • @ferncat1397
    @ferncat1397 Před 8 lety

    How would this boat sail on the other tack?

  • @LovelyMauiHomes
    @LovelyMauiHomes Před 8 lety

    Just Awesome!!!!!

  • @ImNotADeeJay
    @ImNotADeeJay Před 7 lety +2

    How do you steer that thing?

    • @Hesselaer
      @Hesselaer Před 7 lety

      Hal you do not steer it, it can only sail at a certain angle from the wind

  • @purser01
    @purser01 Před 8 lety

    What a boat. Now to get it racing.

  • @Antipodean33
    @Antipodean33 Před 10 lety

    I can't figure out the dynamics here. I always thought the wind on a reach is the best for speed, but he seems to be sailing directly into the wind. What am i getting wrong here?

    • @javatar1900
      @javatar1900 Před 10 lety +1

      Pretty darn close. You begin by trimming your sail(s) to the true wind. As your speed increases, your apparent wind shifts forward. Your apparent wind, the wind that actually drives your sails, is the resultant vector of the true wind and the wind created by your forward motion. With low friction ( foiling, ice ) sailcraft, this wind is stronger than the true wind. for the ultimate in low friction sailcraft, read about ice boats.

  • @rickitickidicki
    @rickitickidicki Před 10 lety

    Got the right name on the boat...Rocket! Ahdamn.

  • @ianedmonds9191
    @ianedmonds9191 Před 7 lety

    Foils are chasing your record but I think you add foils to both the steering hull and the sail hull with control between and you can stay ahead.
    Foiling is a new frontier.
    I'm sure you'll embrace it.
    Luv and Peace.

    • @georgedowning1803
      @georgedowning1803 Před 6 lety +2

      Ian Edmonds this is one up from foils... If you look carefully you can see that the sail gets lifted out of the water by a wing. The boat makes use of ground effect to essentially fly. Crazy really but its more a plane that a boat.

  • @tracytorbarina9865
    @tracytorbarina9865 Před 7 lety

    amazing

  • @666zerowolf
    @666zerowolf Před 8 lety

    that sail in the rear and parallel to the hull....why not on more sailboats...seems to provide maximum thrust.

  • @TheSailingChannel
    @TheSailingChannel Před 11 lety

    Please post your videos in HD.

  • @irateyourvideo2
    @irateyourvideo2 Před 9 lety

    wow, incredible!

  • @paullangford8179
    @paullangford8179 Před 6 lety

    Was that a two-way run?

  • @uniteentierly2773
    @uniteentierly2773 Před 6 lety

    Crazy fast

  • @charlesraymond9161
    @charlesraymond9161 Před 7 lety

    a ces américains ils mesurent en quoi? en milles marin , en milles américains ou en unités internationale qui est le km

    • @hans2406
      @hans2406 Před 7 lety

      charles raymond
      Well, there is the kilometer, then there is the mile, and there is the knot.
      All three are international, aknowledged, and used.
      There is no such thing, nowadays as an American mile.
      But, being French speaking, of course you want to show off the kilometer.

  • @carlsails58
    @carlsails58 Před 8 lety

    Wow! All I can say!

  • @marielitob
    @marielitob Před 4 lety

    Scary fast

  • @jeanlucncoelho
    @jeanlucncoelho Před 9 lety

    I want to ride on that boat so very much

  • @dellam04
    @dellam04 Před 10 lety

    i love it!

  • @douglasadams703
    @douglasadams703 Před 6 lety

    Wow !

  • @666zerowolf
    @666zerowolf Před 8 lety +1

    what a cleaver design...just one outrigger sail generates 65 knots....they need to rethink all the sailing ship designs...wonder how much speed could be attained with multiple sails set parallel to the hull!

    • @BobArmstrong_CoSy
      @BobArmstrong_CoSy Před 7 lety

      One other person mentioned it's actually of one of the most memorable books I read half a century ago : Bernard Smith , www.amazon.com/40-knot-Sailboat-B-Smith/dp/B0000EGOZD , 1963 .
      But they have beaten Smith's dream by 15 [ make that 25 ] knots -- probably partly due to today's materials .
      Smith was influenced by Pacific islanders who sailed cross-wind with asymmetric 1 outrigger canoes . It's a good question whether the Vesta boat can be reversed for the opposite tack .

  • @alexandrebaciu2829
    @alexandrebaciu2829 Před 10 lety

    Awsome

  • @milesbeam2713
    @milesbeam2713 Před 5 lety

    water and land craft will not likely ever be faster than ice craft. Nontheless, this is amazing ad is far more likely to have an impact on useful wind transportation, IMHO. from google search on 8/21
    The record for a purely sail-powered vehicle on land stands at 116mph - almost twice as fast as the quickest sailing-craft on water. The highest reliable recorded sailing speed on ice, a vastly different technical challenge, is 84mph.

  • @savagemako17
    @savagemako17 Před 11 lety

    Can't believe he doesn't have a cockpick cowl of some clear material. Might even cut down on the drag as well as blocking spray.

  • @cwalke32477
    @cwalke32477 Před 8 lety

    What was the wind speed?

    • @BrendanHills
      @BrendanHills Před 8 lety

      +Christopher Walker at the beginning of the clip they say it's averaging 25 knots, gusting to 29, and lows of 22.

  • @bushido2899
    @bushido2899 Před 7 lety

    He was dragging an anchor behind him during these runs.

  • @ralphcramden468
    @ralphcramden468 Před 5 lety

    Eating up the horizon...

  • @zaphodbeblebrox9
    @zaphodbeblebrox9 Před 9 lety

    WOW!!!

  • @BandiGetOffTheRoof
    @BandiGetOffTheRoof Před 7 lety

    Daaaaamn!

  • @sauber459
    @sauber459 Před 10 lety +3

    let me get this straight... the wind is blowing 29 mph.... you are traveling in a wind driven vehicle..... and you are going 68.01 mph !!! Whaaa Whaaaat ? : ) Awesome !!! Truly incredible...... But I don't get it ; how DOES that happen ?

    • @Soundcomplex
      @Soundcomplex Před 10 lety +3

      These are the joys of physics and aerodynamics.
      These boats, like all sailing stuff (kites etc) dont go downwind, but perpendicular to the wind.
      Like kitesurfing, you are way faster than the wind itself (would you surf WITH the wind), the kite would fall down. Same principle.
      There are nice graphics if you google, they explain it much better than me with my shitty english^^

    • @javatar1900
      @javatar1900 Před 10 lety +1

      Soundcomplex Your apparent wind, the wind that actually drives your sails, is a vector of the true wind and the wind created by your forward motion. for the ultimate in low friction sailcraft, read about ice boats.

    • @SportSoulLife
      @SportSoulLife Před 10 lety +1

      Since he has a wingsail it basicaly just gets more and more force in the sail the faster he goes. At the fastest speeds the wind he gets comes basically striaght ahead of him because of his forward motion. Works a little like a airplane. The faster the wind goes in the wing (the more speed) the more power the wing generates. The true problem why he doesnt go faster is because og the wind resistence (is that the right word?), the waves and the fact that contact with water brakes you like a bitch :)

    • @johntomczyk7734
      @johntomczyk7734 Před 9 lety +4

      No, not MPH. 68 knots! That's around 80 MPH!!!!!

  • @bruceruttan60
    @bruceruttan60 Před 7 lety

    So, build one with a 400 ft. waterline.

  • @99juxta
    @99juxta Před 11 lety

    YEH!!!!!!!!!

  • @NeonsStyleHD
    @NeonsStyleHD Před 9 lety +4

    Aside from the obvious entry into record books and history and possible fame, what other benefits comes from breaking a speed record?

    • @TVNauticalChannel
      @TVNauticalChannel  Před 9 lety +18

      NeonsStyle hi NeonsStyle, and thanks for the great question. Aside from the sheer thirst for speed much like in the automotive industry this sort of record helps to push the tech development curve upwards. Design, Materials, construction methods,and then sailing these powerful machines are part of the entire R&D process. The progress made on these smaller vessels at lower costs paves the way for both the bigger pro sailing projects as well as for the industry as a whole. Take for example foiling. The tech is actually ancient (1907 on powerboats!), and in sailing it was developed well before America's Cup 35 where it received worldwide attention. This has now become a true revolution and speed is not the only objective, another by-product is reduced consumption/emissions, and simply because sailing can become more efficient than turning the engine on. Resarchers and designers are already working on sailing cargo ships, so it's 'back to the future', and it can become a much more sustainable one. Fair winds from Nautical Channel!

    • @NeonsStyleHD
      @NeonsStyleHD Před 9 lety

      Nautical Channel
      Thanks for the reply. I was more thinking in monetary terms, ie patents etc. As the tech advances are clearly obvious, just as it is in aviation and space tech. However thanks for the reply.

    • @NeonsStyleHD
      @NeonsStyleHD Před 8 lety +1

      That's not another benefit, that's a primary benefit, not secondary and it's the secondary that I'm interested in.

    • @nautiven1
      @nautiven1 Před 8 lety

      +NeonsStyle Aside from winning a new world record title, it helps develop new technologies to use beter the clean and endless energies provided for free (for now) from earth

    • @veroman007
      @veroman007 Před 8 lety +1

      +NeonsStyle the question is irrelevant perhaps. why ask it? does there have to be some meaning in it that you approve of? why do men climbmountains? why do the go the the poles? why do fathers kiss their baby each night?

  • @timlim6477
    @timlim6477 Před 7 lety +1

    This is the Formula 1 of sail.

    • @TVNauticalChannel
      @TVNauticalChannel  Před 7 lety +1

      I would say more the Dragster ;)

    • @timlim6477
      @timlim6477 Před 7 lety

      Agreed. I don't understand the physics of it though. The craft is sailing faster than the wind multiple times over.

    • @TVNauticalChannel
      @TVNauticalChannel  Před 7 lety

      look up 'apparent wind' Tim , that get's added ;)

    • @timlim6477
      @timlim6477 Před 7 lety

      Ah I see. It is kind of like the Theory of Relativity.

    • @TVNauticalChannel
      @TVNauticalChannel  Před 7 lety

      We're not experts on that for sure. ;) But we're glad you found the answer! Fair winds!

  • @mariusanghel8347
    @mariusanghel8347 Před 7 lety +1

    records++++++++++

  • @mileshy
    @mileshy Před 8 lety

    We should meet somewhere . . . where you all can run . . . and where The Lady Pink With Her Sea Legs ON (Vessel #2) can stretch out say 2% of power . . . my 5 pilots and I would like to show you speed . . . 2% at more that 800 miles per hour . . . . if we turn up the %% . . . to 17 % of available power . . . she can go 7,200 . . . but 2% just to be friends

    • @ZeroneAngel
      @ZeroneAngel Před 5 lety

      That comment doesn't make any...ANY... sense at all...like...what have you've been smoking?

  • @TomTomTom87
    @TomTomTom87 Před 6 lety

    wait....this was really fast

  • @BenDover-wm7wf
    @BenDover-wm7wf Před 3 lety

    What is the helmet going to protect him from? Flying fish?

    • @viarnay
      @viarnay Před 3 lety

      No, it is to protect for head injurie.

  • @joecruiser
    @joecruiser Před 5 měsíci

    Dragster of the sea....

  • @the10thleper
    @the10thleper Před 6 lety

    65 knots equals 74mph mates.

  • @sumbo8452
    @sumbo8452 Před 4 lety

    At this point, it's basically a plane...

  • @danamiller5593
    @danamiller5593 Před 7 lety

    I tool a pill in abiza

  • @darticulate8751
    @darticulate8751 Před 9 lety

    ones ego gets a boosted I suppose to answer the previous question !

  • @Androidaholic
    @Androidaholic Před 10 lety

    It is cool but how many people care about the sailing speed world record besides maybe sailors ? That thing fly"s so why not make it to where you can lift up off of the water at will and come back down !

  • @marinasantorelli7224
    @marinasantorelli7224 Před 7 lety +4

    Kind of unfair compared to L'HYDROPTERE who sailed on open sea whereas Vestas sailed in some kind of "artificial" conditions.

    • @bidlymovies987
      @bidlymovies987 Před 7 lety +3

      They were in the ocean off the coast of Africa. How is that "Artificial"?

    • @marinasantorelli7224
      @marinasantorelli7224 Před 7 lety

      h

    • @marinasantorelli7224
      @marinasantorelli7224 Před 7 lety

      Of course it's artificial: Luderitz is a particularly well sheltered spot. No waves at all, strong and consistent wind, shallow water

    • @sbkenn1
      @sbkenn1 Před 7 lety +1

      no waves, on one tack, and with vertical lift from the sail

    • @thomashanson6607
      @thomashanson6607 Před 7 lety +5

      So why didn't L"Hydroptere sail in the same place? Couldn't take that long to get there in that boat.

  • @user-bh2rl9wi9h
    @user-bh2rl9wi9h Před 4 lety

    观光组😄

  • @xaviercluamiquel3765
    @xaviercluamiquel3765 Před 9 lety

    New tecnologie, watch TERMOLIC.

  • @freddiewm1502
    @freddiewm1502 Před 8 lety

    It was fast but the boat looks so ungainly

  • @tlyung
    @tlyung Před 8 lety

    no disc break wasn't enough... you had to do it on water ... that's Wright brothers shit you had

  • @CuongLe-yl9fl
    @CuongLe-yl9fl Před 7 lety

    Á đù! Chạy bằng động cơ hay bằng sức gió vây? Chạy như điên

  • @fixento
    @fixento Před 8 lety +3

    Glad he made it but it was set a one way boat, not what I would consider a speed record for a real sailboat. To put it into perspective in 1930 a Flying Dutchman ice boat went 143 MPH . On smooth ice an ice boat can go 6 times faster then true wind speed

    • @kca8179
      @kca8179 Před 8 lety +2

      Put that iceboat in the water.

    • @fixento
      @fixento Před 8 lety +2

      It is on water in a solid form

    • @pridgway
      @pridgway Před 7 lety +1

      Water is the liquid form. Water in solid form is called ice.

    • @fixento
      @fixento Před 7 lety +1

      The point was then and now, a one way boat does not return does it?

    • @sbkenn1
      @sbkenn1 Před 7 lety

      Water seems damn solid if you hit it at 70MPH !

  • @KatiaDebus1
    @KatiaDebus1 Před 9 lety

    #partiu

  • @grantbratrud4949
    @grantbratrud4949 Před 5 lety

    Quite vaporous, and that, really is the problem. Why we don't teach the physics and chemistry of water, Our Living Water, Day One, start-to-finish, seems like enemy action to me. Kill the enemy.

  • @RandomHelicopter
    @RandomHelicopter Před 9 lety

    Not really a sailing boat. Some orange potato.

  • @Capt_Killingfield
    @Capt_Killingfield Před 7 lety

    "This is fast. This is fast. This is real fast. This is how you do it Chucky!" I love it!
    I can only think of the destruction caused by chasing this speed with petroleum..