Making a living  from small boat plans is not easy, and so like all of the designers of small  boats I know, I do all sorts of other things to bring in the bacon.  A bit of commercial fishing boat work doing  incline tests, stability calculations, and horsepower calcs.  I teach yacht design at a college, do some  supervision of other designers building on customers behalf, some preliminary  and feasibility work for other proposals and so on.  I even work in sawmills and wood processing  plants doing quality control and technical consultancy work. 
              But now and  again I get something really different to do, and here is a quick look at one  of those projects. 
              
              The Mini Transat  race from France,  singlehanded across the Atlantic in 6.5m (21  ft 4in) ultra lightweight super fast racers.   This is one of the toughest races of all those in the yachting calendar,  the speed of the boats is staggeringly quick, the weather often foul, the boats  tiny and the distance - 4000 odd miles - means a month on board with 10 minute  catnaps every hour or two,  mostly dried  and cold food,  and very very few  creature comforts. 
              To give you an  idea, my Navman design, 3rd place getter in the 1999 race, was only 4  nautical miles short of 250 miles in one 24 hour run, and made over 1500 miles  in a weeks run. That’s a quick boat, averaging 1 ½ times hull speed for  a week singlehanded.  That’s daytimes,  nighttimes, and no breaks for coffee, breakfast and a shower!  Staggering stuff! 
              The experience  gained designing these “other“ projects finds its way back into the small boats  that I’m better known for, and the research undertaken to design competitive  extreme class boats has yielded much useful information. 
              I raced on  Navman a few times during the boat's workup period, and have vivid memories of  being on the helm when closing the narrow gap between Cape Brett and Peircy  Island at the southern entrance to New Zealand’s Bay of Islands at about 2am on  a pitch dark howling gale night, the GPS was indicating between 18 and 20 knots  as we screeched along under the small kite (only 90 sq m) and reefed  main  planing toward the occasional  patches of white surf that I could just make out ahead. 
              
              Skipper Chris Sayer was comfortable,  controlling the speed with the sheet winch by easing and sheeting on the  spinnaker, watching the course to the waypoint on the GPS he knew where we were  within a few metres, and knew we were well clear of the headland.  But my heart was going pitter-patter in a big  way for a while there. 
              Chris and Navman  went on to finish third in that year's big race, and it's been raced by  subsequent owners in several more.  A  wooden and epoxy fibreglass boat, essentially home built but by a skilled  builder who had just been awarded New Zealand’s top Boatbuilding  apprentice of the year.  It was built as  cheaply as possible for a boat intended to compete in a major international  event, and is reported to be still in top order after half a dozen Atlantic  crossings, trips from NZ to Fiji, New Caledonia, Southern Ocean and Australia,  two races around New Zealand’s North Island and a whole lot of Mini Transat  races in Europe. 
              I was privileged  to travel to Guadeloupe in the Caribbean  courtesy of Navman Marine Electronics to be at the finish of the 1999 race,  although the job was done mostly for love the experience was one of the  highlights of my designing life, and I remember the boat and the campaign very  fondly. 
              I was very  pleased to recently have an email exchange with Stanislaus Delbarre, the  current owner of the boat, and he’s sent me some photos which show the boat in  its current configuration  and I thought that I’d share them and some  reminiscences with you. 
              
              Here are some of  the little racer’s vital statistics, and no the sail area figures are not wrong  or exaggerated. 
              
                
                  | Length overall | 
                   6.5m   | 
                  21 ft 4in | 
                 
                
                  | Beam | 
                  3m | 
                  9ft 10in | 
                 
                
                  | Draft keel straight down | 
                  2m | 
                  6 ft 6in | 
                 
                
                  | Distance from masthead to keel base | 
                  14m  | 
                  45 ft 11in | 
                 
                
                  | Sail area (working sail only) | 
                  55 sq m | 
                  580 sq ft | 
                 
                
                  | Largest spinnaker | 
                  142 sq m | 
                  1525 sq ft | 
                 
                
                  | Maximum downwind sail area  | 
                  210 sq m | 
                  2215  sq ft | 
                 
                
                  | Carbon fibre Canting keel | 
                  325 kg bulb | 
                    | 
                 
                
                  | Twin “handed“ daggerboards  | 
                  forward | 
                    | 
                 
                
                  | Single tacking daggerboard | 
                  aft | 
                    | 
                 
                
                  | Twin rudders  | 
                    | 
                    | 
                 
                
                  | Full width semicircular traveller | 
                    | 
                    | 
                 
                
                  | Spinnaker pole (prod)  | 
                  3.5m long | 
                    | 
                 
               
                
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