The first 12m offshore race boat designed by Rob Shaw, build by Craig Partridge Yachts.

Design Objective: to maximise the performance potential of a 12m offshore monohull, with the capacity to sleep a full crew and with a usable interior. This is a versatile boat, set up for high performance racing either short-handed or fully crewed, both harbour and offshore. Blink is built with racing in the infamous Cook Strait in mind, with robust construction and systems, foam core, and options chosen with the wisdom that 'to win you must first finish' in mind: twin rudders, twin hydraulic rams, and dual hydraulic keel power sources (electric and engine pumps).

These numbers are from before the extra 90kg added to bulb in 2019
Length: 12m / Sailing Displ: 4.1T (8 crew) / Empty Displ 3.6T / Draft: 3m / Keel Cant Angle: 50° / RM (max): 7,687 kg/m / Mast: 19.8m
Fixed prod: 1m / Retractable prod: 2.5m / SA up: 110m2, down: 268m2

Sail Number: 110011 / VHF Call Sign: ZMU2211
More details, interior pics, plans at bottom of page.

Ghost Ship

Ghost Ship

Race Results

Blink race results highlights
1st on elapsed time, Round North Island 2-handed 2014 (Rob Shaw and TW) and 2017 (VW and TW)
1st on Line, Round North Island 2-handed 2014 and 2017
1st PHRF Division 1, and 2nd IRC Division 1, Round North Island 2-handed 2017
1st in RPNYC 2014-2015 Offshore Series on Club, PHRF, and IRC
Season Champions RPNYC 2015-2016 PHRF and Line
New Zealand Design/Build Trophy (Muir Vonu Trophy) Auckland-Fiji Race 2016
Race record Kapiti-Chetwodes-Ship Cove 2015
Race record Cook Strait Classic 2015
Race record 2016 Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc Yacht Race
Race record 2018 Catherine Cove Race

First on Line:
Island Bay race Nov 2013*, Brothers Race Nov 2013*, Cook Strait Classic Dec 2013* (*beating Elliot 50 canter Ran Tan in all 3 of these races), Brothers Race 2014, Kapiti-Chetwodes 2015, Port Nich Regatta 2015 overall line honours, Alan Martin Series 2015, Cook Strait Classic 2015, Nelson Race 2016, RPNYC 2016 Season Div 1, Marlborough Sauvignon Blanc Yacht Race 2016, Mana-Ship Cove 2016, Brothers Islands Race 2016, Round North Island 2-handed 2014 and 2017,
Brothers Islands Race 2017, Catherine Cove Race 2018, Wellington-Lyttleton 2018

23 February 2015

Port Nich Regatta - 1st, 2nd, 3rd, 4th ...

Blink hasn't done so well recently around the cans.  Firstly there's quite a lot of boat to get right for a relatively inexperienced crew, and things typically happen pretty quickly.    Secondly, she is fabulously responsive to the right sails and trim, but with wrong sails up or not properly set up the performance hit is significant.

We'd also lost all of our regular trimmers in recent weeks and found replacements at short notice.  Plus there was some serious competition for line honours as well as handicap results: Wedgetail (Welbourne 42), St Laurence (trimaran), Crusader (Elliot 35ss), Revs (Ross 40), Satellite Spy (Ross 40) ... and some properly good sailors distributed through the rest of the Div A fleet.  So I went into this regatta not expecting too much...  a chance for some intensive boat handling practice, in mostly short windward-leeward races, and let's see how much we improve as the regatta progresses.

I was surprised on both counts.  We had Pete Geary (from Hall Spars) join us from Auckland and he taught us in the first race that the slightly higher upwind mode that we'd been trying still wasn't high enough.  So we reset out targets to his suggestions and suddenly we're pretty good upwind, able to hold and sometimes even climb off the benchmark Wedgetail.

The other great thing that happened was our crew have started getting most of our short-course boat handling right.  The team has started to click and we are able now to start thinking outside the boat a bit.  Of course we had plenty stuff-ups, a couple of the larger ones probably cost us the regatta (no doubt other contenders could say the same) but the improvement was noticeable.

There were some epic moments, especially during the windiest day (Saturday)

Eventually, we far surpassed expectations.  1st overall on line, second overall on PHRF, 3rd overall on IRC, 4th overall on club handicap.  Not bad at all against good competition.

Thanks to the Blink crew, for a most enjoyable regatta, ditto for the regatta organisers, race officer Paulie and the on-water regatta support.  Big thank you to Pete G for contributing to our big step up in performance.

Results here:
http://www.rpnyc.org.nz/club/regattas/port-nicholson-regatta/results


Here's a mashup of some video clips from someone kind and enthused enough to spend hours standing with a camera and tripod in roaring wind on Satuday, and much less action on Sunday.  


Photos from Chis Coad (link here)






And some from LiveSailDie 
'










14 February 2015

A little bit of silver

First on General and on PHRF for the Kapiti Chetwodes Ship Cove record breaking race.

8 February 2015

New Record for 120nm Kapiti-Chetwodes

Previous Record: Starlight Express (Davidson 55) 11h 51m 43s, 1999-2000 season.

After the CSC we had out rudder alignment returned to where it should have been (thanks Rob, Matt G, Matt S, Craig, Gordie and all who helped). Soooo much better.

The Forecast for Kapiti-Chetwodes starting at 6am Waitangi Day was for a southerly front dying out.  We'd anticipated a nasty harbour exit in the rain, against tide, 30 knots southerly, and swell, in about 12 degrees. It came through right on schedule with some force just after 4am as we all left home for the marina, gusts of up to 50 knots along the south coast and rain showers.  Start was to be at 6am but delayed due to a berthing container ship to 6.30.

Things started getting better.  The rain stopped.  We got a good start and unwrapped the Fractional Zero off the line, worked really nicely for us and we led across Evans Bay.
Like many of the boats we liked the pin end, Wedgetail and others nearer the middle, not in this pic

Then the FR0 took us a bit low, so we lost a bit of our lead in height and Wedgetail made good use of that, leading us out of the harbour - which wasn't as rough as we'd anticipated - by about a minute

Unfortunately for us the next leg was almost hard on the wind, so we couldn't crack off much as we'd have liked, but that angle suited us slightly better than Wedgetail and we regained the lead.  Not as fast as usual across the south coast, only about 8-9 knots, but current was with us so SOG was usually over 10.  Next were the rips, Sinclair was again less than we had anticipated,

but the Karori rip was bigger, which had bowman Matt alternately airborne and submerged while he prepared a downwind sail for the ride north to Kapiti. Matt was probably the wettest of us, but we were all a tad damp.

At Terawhiti we were lulled by the strong current (5-7 knots) going our way to think that the breeze was only in the upper teens or low 20s. So we went for the A2.

Which was awesome until we crossed a tide line out of our nice stream.  Both the true and the apparent wind increased significantly, now high 20s, and suddenly it was clear we had too much kite on.  After a couple of very restful lie-downs we got the A2 below, granny-tacked, and changed to the A6.  Which was great...



  we cruised along with boat speeds consistently between 17 and 20 (well, that's what the speedo said, although it may not have been in the water all the time!) and extended on the fleet.  We had got the layline just right, gybed the A6 next to Kapiti island after 4 hours of sailing (52 nm rhumb line to here), and then dropped it for the 40 nm reach to the Chetwodes   This started windy and rough, 25+ knots on our beam with waves to match,
but got progressively lighter as we got further west.


We'd been trying to get height to get around the Chetwodes clockwise, like we always had.  As we started to get close, Craig actually read the SIs carefully and noted that we were supposed to round *anticlockwise*  Oops.  We'd been sailing too high and too slow for several miles, should have had a bigger sail on. Never mind the disturbing realisation that it would have been a much more costly mistake had we actually gone around the wrong way.

Just after this, we realised we'd thrown our belts of the canting motor / 24V alternator and they'd need to be replaced before we next had to cant.  i.e., very soon.  So there was a not very pleasant, messy, hot, rushed, knuckle-skinning engine-bay job to do.  Some expletives were utilised.

Then we just had to ghost through the horrid Chetwodes wind shadow which seems to last forever, before tacking upwind towards Point Jackson and the finish line.  Near Jackson, with a 10-15 knot breeze, lots of daylight left, and a little over 6 miles to go, we thought we'd have a good chance of taking a big chunk off the record time.

Yeah, right -- not long after rounding Jackson, with the finish line in sight, we starting running out of wind.  We spent a long time going very slowly, often in the wrong direction, and getting generally frustrated.   We were saved by a few knots of wind on the beam which got us the last mile or so with our masthead zero.

We crossed the line at 11 minutes past 6pm, setting a new record: 11h 41m 42s.

Team pic a few minutes after finishing, finish line in background ... note lack of wind

The rest of the fleet suffered more from the wind dropping out than us.  Wedgetail had emerged around Jackson, didn't look very far away, and seemed to be sailing straight for the line instead of having to tack up. We thought that a little unfair.  But they ended up running out of wind too, and finished about 1.5 hours after us.  The Revs team described several slow and frustrating attempts to get around Jackson against the tide before giving up and withdrawing.  The Guarantee apparently sailed past Titi island 3 times, being knocked back by tide repeatedly before withdrawing.  With no breeze available or looking likely, darkness approaching and no favourable tide for 6 hours, several other boats withdrew also.

We had a great evening in the Furneaux Lodge bar, and decided to use the crew fund to buy some warm dry comfy beds there instead of wet sails.  Matt S was so pleased with this arrangement he even went back into bed for his post-brekky cup of tea.

The trip back was very pleasant, Vesna and Jono doing most of the steering, perfect conditions and masthead zero to the south coast, and then a typical 'welcome back to Wellington' 25-30 headwind to get back around the south coast and into the harbour.

Should be some silverware and an official record after this race...

7 February 2015

Cook Strait Classic 2014

Not one of our best races - we had a very slow light air start out of the harbour, and had a very costly sail change to the heavy jib. so we got a bit of a sailing lesson from the Crusader team who led us out of the harbour by a healthy margin.

Once we got going in decent breeze we started to get back into the race, but were not able to catch Crusader on the downwind run to Tory Channel Entrance.
Tory Channel Entrance, finish line drawn in

We were surprised at not being able to hold our A2 kite in a little over 20 knots - had a few round-ups so were forced to sail low and slow to keep upright.

Eventually we worked out the problem ... our rudder angles didn't end up right after Blink's Birthday earlier this year, had a toe-in angle of about 4° instead of 1.5° ... so the inner sides of the rudder blades were spending much of their time stalled and at the very least dragging.

Great raft-up after the race, Blink even had her mirror-ball ...



Then off for a few weeks fast cruising. Should be much more salubrious than previous years ... lots more room, hot shower, fridge, freezer (ice cream!! Woohoo!!) etc.. 

6 November 2014

Brothers 2014

We managed first on line and got some great pics, but ended up a long way from a race record that we thought we might challenge ...

The forecast looked pretty good, reach/downwind out of the harbour, upwind in 20 knots to round the Brothers Islands, then a downwind blast in 25-30 to get home… Wellington’s northerly quarter winds often get accelerated and this day was no exception. The first reach and run out of the harbour were sublime, Blink led the rest of the 40-footers out of the harbour by 5 minutes, and at the south coast extended to a 15-minute lead. If the forecast held, a race record seemed possible and calculations led some friends of ours to arrange a helicopter for some photos. Unfortunately the beat up from the south coast to the other side of Cook Strait came with a 35-knot headwind, and we couldn’t keep our VMG high enough in those conditions to stay on record pace.
There was still hope, downwind with the A6 up in mid-30s windspeeds might make up some of that lost time… but it wasn’t to be. a series of lulls on the downwind kept us off full pace and then we were greeted by 35-50 knots just ahead of our beam all the way back across the south coast and then a tough beat with multiple short tacks into the harbour against 40+ knots and outgoing tide. Not so fast.
But the big wind wasn’t the scary part, the holy crap moment came when we gybed while doing 18 knots of boat speed to see a large whale about 20 metres dead ahead on our pre-gybe line. Had we not gybed we’d have hit that at speed and it wouldn’t have been nice for us or the whale.
Heli got close to us just as the breeze started to soften.  Great pics from the air by Chris Coad
 

Fun on the way home




Similar pic to the last one, but a bit of tilt-shift effect tinkering ...

40+ across the coast on the way home wasn't much fun though

28 September 2014

Spring Series Race 1

RPNYC's championship season got off to a typical start ... mid-20s gusting to mid-30s as we headed out to the racecourse.  We're still waiting for our new #4 from Norths - furling cable being built elsewhere - so decided that with the wind forecast to ease throughout the afternoon the heavy jib and a couple of reefs would be a good start.


Even with 2 reefs, all the crew on the rail, and full cant we still got some big hits that laid us over.  We had several 'free willy' (keel bulb out of the water) episodes that provoked discussion of whether there might be any keel walking later.  VW took this from the companionway, there's a wee bit of heel on ...


But we did manage to spend at least some time in our upwind planing mode


Joerg and Jono were looking forward to a big ride or two later - which didn't happen


We thought we'd had a nice start, hit the line at about 12 knots and got away cleanly.  Only we didn't, we were over the line at the gun by the front end of the prod, about 30cm or so.  We didn't hear the call to go back to restart over the wind noise, despite VW being downstairs with the VHF on and with another handheld VHF at the helm station.  It was blowing hard, so difficult to hear anything much.  We didn't know for the rest of the race that our result wouldn't count.

Revs lost their mainsheet block at the top mark, so withdrew from the race, and we got to the first top mark just behind Wedgetail, managed to overtake them on the way down to leading light despite being taken well of course by a ferry that was doing harbour laps.  




So we were in front at the leading light bottom mark, and just held our lead up to the next top mark after a beat with fluky/gusty conditions with monster shifts and lulls all the way back across the harbour.  We had taken out the reefs at this point.  It was after that mark when things starting not going so well.  We went a little too high after the last top mark, and ended up in a windless lane down towards Evan's Bay.  Lots of little gusts seem to appear and then vanish before getting to us.  Wedgetail was a couple of hundred metres east of us, in much more consistent breeze, and was making up lots of ground.  In hindsight we should have gybed out, taken a small loss to get into better wind.  

After that we just got more unlucky.  Wedgetail had got alongside, and forced us to gybe as we approached them on port.  No problems, all we needed was one good bit of breeze to get us to the correct side of the mark.  Didn't happen.  We might have made it but for a kite collapse about 200m out.  So we had to gybe again, late, really close to the mark.  Then the gust that we hadn't had for the last 2 miles of downwind arrived at just the wrong moment, rounded us up, right in front of Wedgetail.  Who were still on starboard.  We were not on starboard, but couldn't manoeuvre while we were on our side and Wedgetail we now moving fast and about to ram us amidships.  Thankfully Meric was able to avoid us, but in the process of their gybe the partly-down kite and boom conspired to throw one of their crew into the harbour.  

So we rounded the mark, got to the MOB fairly quickly, picked him up, Wedgetail sailed past on their way to the race win, and we went off to do our 720° penalty.  Not that it mattered, with our OCS ... but we didn't know at the time, nor did Wedgetail.

So that wasn't the result we wanted - even a finish would have been OK -  but we did many things well, and our boat handling continues to improve.  Next Saturday's race 2 might have better breeze and we're overdue for some good luck.

23 August 2014

Blink's Big Birthday

After a year of sailing and several thousand offshore miles, Rob suggested that we check that the keel mechanism was wearing as it should.

Last time we went out was a great training day...



So Blink came out last Monday for a rig check, keel and canting mechanism check, and a bit of a general workover while out of the water this week - including having some of the NPC signworks crew (Dave and Regan) from Kerikeri replace the graphics.



We also weighed the boat and rig, partly to know what it is but partly with a view to seeing how entertaining an IRC rating we might get.  It looks like our IRC weight will be in the low-3700kg area (yet to be confirmed).  The 20m mast and rigging, including running rigging, electrical cables, halyard lock, etc... was only 180kg.

Matt and Scott have knocked over a big list of jobs big and small, everything from new keel pin bushes (just a trace of wear on the front one, would have been fine but since it was all disassembled ...) to adjusting the vang height, outhaul adjustment, and refurbing the sticky halyard lock in the last few days.  We also have a new pad eye on the foredeck for the furling J4.









And lastly...
No, not a carbon bike seat for riders with severe piles, but a protector for the recurrently dented forestay well

25 May 2014

Blink RPNYC Boat of the Year

A fabulous surprise to receive boat of the year last night at the RPNYC 131st Season prize giving.  Not many other trophies this season, Blink spent most of the summer away for the RNI. Some great photos of the night taken by the fabulous Chris Coad of Chris Coad Photography. www.chriscoad.co.nz




3 April 2014

Mike Sanderson visit

We had one of those great sailing days yesterday - instead of going to work we went out in a perfect 10-20 knot breeze with Mike Sanderson - who flew down from Auckland with Rob Shaw to come out for a ride on Blink - and Mike gave us lots of fantastic advice on how to get the most out of the boat derived from his extensive Volvo 70 and Ocean Race experience. We put up pretty much every sail we had and ripped around the harbour testing and tweaking.  He had lots of great suggestions, and some pretty significant tweaks to sail setup which should have us getting around racetracks even faster.  

Vesna was having a great afternoon too ...


Not sure what everyone is looking at here.  Maybe just away from the guy with the camera ...?

29 March 2014

RNI Prize Giving


Great night at the Devonport Yacht Club. Blink won line honours - fastest boat around the North Island of NZ (7days 11hours:51mins:02secs)  (Elliott Marine Line Honours Cup). Blink is the smallest boat to win that cup. Blink also won 3rd on PHRF overall, second on PHRF for Division 1 and first on line for Division 1.