Banque Populaire V

Banque Populaire V is an offshore-racing trimaran and Team Banque Populaire's[1] fifth boat designed to set oceanic records. She was launched on 4 October 2008 in Nantes, France.

Banque Populaire V
Banque Populaire V in Brest in December 2009
Other namesMaxi Spindrift 2
Designer(s)VPLP
BuilderCDK & JMV
LaunchedAugust 2008
Owner(s)Dona Bertarelli Spindrift Racing
Racing career
SkippersPascal Bidégorry
Loïck Peyron (2011–2013)
Yann Guichard (2013–)
Specifications
Displacement23 t (23 long tons; 25 short tons)
Length40 m (130 ft) (LOA)
Beam23 m (75 ft)
Draft5.80 m (19.0 ft)
Sail area720 m2 (7,800 sq ft)
Banque Populaire V

With her 40 m (130 ft) length, she is currently the largest racing trimaran in the world. Her current skipper is Yann Guichard. Her previous skippers are Loick Peyron and Pascal Bidégorry. Her original sponsor was the French bank Banque Populaire. Currently she is owned by Dona Bertarelli & Spindrift Racing and sponsored by Mirabaud Group, Zenith and Genes-X.

Design

The architectural project for Banque Populaire V started in 2006. The naval architects VPLP[2] (Van Peteghem / Lauriot-Prévost) designed this G-Class maxi multihull. The trimaran was built by the shipyard CDK Technologies[3] in Lorient.

Career

She was launched at the end of August 2008 in Lorient.

In 2009 she made her first attempt across the northern Atlantic from west to east. On Sunday 2 August 2009, she established the new record in 3 days, 15 hours, 25 minutes and 48 seconds (an average speed of 32.94 knots), beating the previous record, held by Franck Cammas on Groupama 3, by more than 12 hours. During the attempt she also broke the 24-hour distance twice, first with 880, then, several hours later, with 907 nautical miles (1,680 km).

In 2010 the boat was stationed in Brest, awaiting a weather opening to beat the Jules Verne Trophy record (circumnavigation of the world), held since 2010 by Franck Cammas and the multihull Groupama 3. The first such attempt started on January 22, 2011, but she hit some debris in the Southern Atlantic and was forced to retire on February 4.

Loïck Peyron took over as skipper from Pascal Bidégorry in June 2011.[4] A second, successful attempt began on 22 November 2011 and set a new record in 45 days, 13 hours, and 43 minutes.[5]

In January 2013, the boat was acquired by Dona Bertarelli's racing team Spindrift Racing, and renamed "Spindrift 2".[6] The original 47m mast was shortened by 6m for Yann Guichard to manage the boat single-handedly in the 2014 Route du Rhum, in which he achieved a second place in line honours. In 2015 a new 42m mast was procured in view of a new attempt to break the Jules Verne record with a full crew. On 22 November 2015 it started in a direct race with IDEC Sport and finished just 2 days slower than the current JVT record.[7]

The first 2019 JVT attempt started well under Yann Guichard when they broke the record between Ushant and the Equator (4d 19h 57') but they had to retire in Australia with a broken rudder stock.[8] On 3 December 2019 the next attempt started but had to be terminated the next day due to more rudder problems at high speed.[9]


Records

  • Northern Atlantic (New York City-Lizard Point), 2,921 nautical miles (5,410 km) in 3 days 15 hours 25 minutes 48 seconds, 2 August 2009, with an average speed of 33.41 knots (61.88 km/h).[10] Skippered by Pascal Bidegorry. This is just two knots slower than the fastest Blue Riband Ocean Liner SS United States (1952, powered by 180.000 kW) and still two knots faster than second ranking RMS Queen Mary of 1938.
  • 24 hours distance, 908.2 nautical miles (1682 km), an average speed of 37.84 knots[11] with a maximum speed of 47.16 knots[12] during the record breaking Northern Atlantic passage of August 2009. Skippered by Pascal Bidegorry
  • Trans-Mediterranean record, between Marseille (France) and Carthage (Tunisia), 16 May 2010, in 14 hours 20 minutes and 34 seconds at an actual average speed of 33.24 knots.[13] Skippered by Pascal Bidegorry
  • Around the British Isles record, in 3 days, 3 hours and 49 minutes, 8 July 2010.[14] Skippered by Loick Peyron
  • Fastnet Race, in 1 day, 8 hours and 48 minutes, 15 August 2011, averaging 18.5 knots.[15] Skippered by Loick Peyron
  • Jules Verne Trophy (fastest circumnavigation around the world) in 45 days, 13 hours, 42 minutes and 53 seconds, arrival 6 January 2012, averaging 19.75 knots. Skippered by Loick Peyron

See also

References

  1. Team Banque Populaire
  2. VPLP official site Archived 4 February 2010 at the Wayback Machine
  3. CDK Techn. official site
  4. Franck Dubray (7 June 2011). "Le Baulois Loïck Peyron nouveau skipper du Maxi Banque Populaire". Ouest-France. Retrieved 7 June 2011.
  5. "Sail-World.com : Jules Verne Trophy taken by Maxi Banque Populaire V". Sail World. Retrieved 7 January 2012.
  6. "Dona Bertarelli acquires Maxi Banque Populaire V, legendary trimaran and winner of the Trophée Jules Verne". Archived from the original on 5 February 2013. Retrieved 31 January 2013.
  7. Bunting, Elaine (18 March 2016). "The story of Spindrift 2's Jules Verne round the world record attempt". Yachting World. Retrieved 2 February 2020.
  8. Spindrift racing (7 February 2019). "Australian finish for Spindrift 2 in Jules Verne Trophy record attempt". Sail-World. Retrieved 2 February 2020.
  9. "Yann Guichard explains Spindrift 2 stopping its attempt on the Jules Verne Trophy". Sail-World. 5 December 2019. Retrieved 2 February 2020.
  10. Banque Populaire V across the atlantic on the WSSRC site Archived 15 October 2011 at the Wayback Machine>
  11. Banque Populaire V 24h record on the WSSRC site>
  12. Le Figaro of 6 November 2009
  13. TransMed record
  14. British Isles record Archived 12 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  15. "Fastnet Minisite". RORC. 15 August 2011. Archived from the original on 16 August 2011. Retrieved 16 August 2011.
Records
Preceded by
Groupama 3 with Franck Cammas
Jules Verne Trophy
2012–2017
Succeeded by
IDEC Sport
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