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Piloting the Kite-Powered Sailboat Aiming to Be World's Fastest

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Table of Contents Piloting the Kite-Powered Sailboat Aiming to Be World's Fastest

Cutting through the water on a triple-hull sailboat pulled by a giant kite, members of the SP80 team are challenging the world sailing speed record off the coast of Southern France, one gust of wind at a time.

SP80's three-hull (trimaran) design prioritizes stability and reduced drag. SP80

"There is nothing to earn at the end, except that you are proud to achieve it," says co-founder Benoit Gaudiot, who is also one of the boat's pilots.

The record the SP80 team is aiming at is 65.45 knots (more than 75mph), set by Paul Larsen in 2012 aboard the Vestas Sailrocket 2 in the waters off Namibia.

Current world record holder Paul Larsen and the Vestas Sailrocket 2. Getty

The SP80 team has taken some inspiration from the Sailrocket's design, particularly the superventilating foil that allows sailboats to overcome "something really similar to the sound barrier for airplanes," Gaudiot says.

The "cavitation barrier" prevents boats from accelerating beyond 55 knots (63.3mph) due to a buildup of air bubbles on the foil, part of the boat that sticks down into the water for stability. The foil is also the point of maximum drag on the boat, and therefore required a lot of precise engineering to create a foil that "theoretically has no speed limit as long as we keep the boat stable and have power to push it further," says Gaudiot.

The boat's superventilating hydrofoil sticks down into the water, adding stability and helping overcome the "cavitation barrier." SP80

Two pilots operate the boat, with one focused on steering and one focused on controlling the kite that propels the boat. The boat is made to travel in a straight line, like drag-racing, rather than zig-zagging upwind and sailing downwind like the boats in SailGP.

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