Contact Information: Contact: Tami Casey Kulesa Faul for MotionX/Pegasus Racing (650) 340-1984
Long-Standing Double-Handed Transpacific Record Broken by Philippe Kahn and Mark Christensen
Successful Record Powered by iPhone 3GS and MotionX-GPS
| Source: Fullpower
HONOLULU, HI--(Marketwire - July 13, 2009) - The record for double-handing the Transpac
yacht race from Los Angeles to Honolulu has been broken. At 4:38:35 a.m.
Hawaiian Time today, Philippe
Kahn and Mark "Crusty" Christensen, crossed the Diamond Head finish
line in the Open 50 Pegasus, completing a record time of 7 days, 19 hours,
38 minutes and 35 seconds, shaving two and a half days off the previous
record of 10 days 4 hours, 4 minutes and 49 seconds was set in 2001 by
Howard Gordon and Jay Crum also with an Open 50, the Etranger.
The Transpacific Yacht Race is
one of the longest standing and most prestigious ocean races in the world
covering 2,225 nautical miles from Los Angeles to Honolulu.
"Double-handing the Open 50 to Hawaii is one of the highlights of my year,"
stated Kahn, a noted technologist and the creator of the camera phone. "I
love being out in the open Ocean. Once we're out there, that's all that
matters -- we had our sites on the record and we beat it. Mark and I are a
perfect team. We work together at MotionX and we race together as partners
on Pegasus across the Pacific. Mark's experience as one of world's greatest
offshore sailors is invaluable. Transpac is a navigator's race and that
plays into our strength."
The Race Boat and the Team
The Pegasus 50 is an Owen Clarke designed Open 50 acquired by Pegasus Racing in 2007. After an
extensive refit, it launched in San Francisco. The Pegasus Racing Team has
spent countless hours training, racing and preparing the boat for this most
difficult challenge from its base in Santa Cruz, Calif.
Kahn and Christensen, a formidable team both on and off water, are
colleagues at Fullpower, the maker of MotionX. When not at sea, Christensen is
the vice president of engineering at Fullpower. While Philippe has raced
the Trans-Pacific course 11 times with six wins, he first attempted a
double-handed Transpac record in 2007. This is Philippe's eleventh
Trans-Pacific race and his sixth win. Mark has raced around the world four
times and won twice.
"Congratulations to Philippe and Crusty for sailing hard, smashing a record
and doing a great job sharing the experience with the race organizers and
the rest of the world," said Lynn Fitzpatrick of Transpac 09. "The Pegasus
team and their story added tremendously to the regatta and everyone's
experience. MotionX proved itself in so many ways."
Race Chronicle: Fast, Wet and Wild
As race day approached the skippers scour the weather information, and see
that the weather is shaping up nicely. The team would get a fast and windy
race, just what they needed for a shot at the double-handed record. They
set sail with equipment that includes two iPhones 3GSs loaded with
MotionX-GPS to navigate from start to finish and to allow them to instantly
document their journey via text and video posts to Philippe's blog
on www.pegasus.com/log.htm, Facebook and YouTube.
Before the Tranpac start, the sailing team met its first test when their
hydraulics to cant the keel failed on the way to the starting line. The
well prepared Pegasus team managed to partially fix the hydraulics in the
50 minutes remaining prior to the start, which enabled the use of one of
the two hydraulic rams for the keel. Though not ideal, it was enough to
start the race on time.
Clouds covered the sky for the first days at sea with winds steadily build
to 22-24 knots. The Pegasus accelerated to 17-20 knots of boat speed and
headed west into the deep black of night. At about 1:00 a.m. Pacific Time
as he was on the helm, Philippe was suddenly hit directly in the chest by a
flying fish. Philippe made a leap to save the fish just as the sea jerks
the boat violently to the right. The fish is successfully rescued, but the
sailor is a bit battered and a little bloodied. Philippe learned to avoid
going to the rescue of strange large flying fish.
The next few days brought on a few sail changes to take advantage of the
wind velocity and direction. With MotionX-GPS running on their iPhone 3GS
they could instantly know their VMG (Velocity Made Good) or rate at which
they were moving towards the Hawaiian finish line. Excitement grew as they
realized that if they could keep up their current VMG of 12.6 knots over
the next seven days, they would smash the double-handed record and meet
their goal.
Mid race days and nights were filled with periodic heavy squalls bringing a
mixture of strong winds and rain. Riding the puffs from these squalls was
extremely important to team Pegasus in order to keep their boat speed high
and push for the double-handed record.
As the sun set on the sixth day the team knew it was decision time.
Philippe looked at MotionX-GPS in combination with other instruments and
weather patterns to determine when to jibe onto port to take advantage of
the veering trade winds on their approach to Honolulu.
With Diamond Head in their sights, day seven welcomes the duo with a series
of 30 knot squalls and lots of fast and wet sailing. The team was really
making great progress, but at around 8 p.m. the mighty Pegasus lost all
electrical power and communications. "There was a smell of an electrical
fire, so we got out the extinguishers," said Philippe. "There is nothing
worse than a fire on a boat."
The pair began troubleshooting to find the source of the electrical issue
as they continued to sail full steam to Honolulu. While electrical problems
are bad, the situation provides a platform for MotionX-GPS to shine. With
nothing more than enough juice to send messages via e-mail, the two-man
boat navigated through the darkness with flashlights, a mechanical compass,
a hand held iridium and an iPhone running MotionX-GPS. Co-skipper Kahn
writes on the experience in his blog, "Sailing fast. Using the brail
method."
Finally, just after 5 a.m., the sailors are able to partially charge the
batteries with a temporary fix. They continued to hand steer and managed to
gain just enough power throughout the final day to jibe the keel three more
times. Kahn and Christensen carried their speed right down Molokai Channel
in high winds to finish just before dawn on Monday in record double-handed
time.
About the Transpac
With 44 races starting in 1906, the Transpacific Yacht Race to Hawaii is
one of the longest and oldest ocean races in the world from Point Fermin
near Los Angeles to Diamond Head in Honolulu. The race was inspired by King
Kalakaua, the revered Hawaiian leader of the late nineteenth century who
believed that such an event would strengthen the islands' economic and
cultural ties to the mainland. For more information, including results and
position reports, visit www.transpacrace.com.
About Pegasus Racing
Pegasus Racing is a world-class one-design sailboat racing team made up of
some of the finest sailors in the sport. Led by Philippe Kahn, successes
range from winning the Melges 24 Worlds twice (2003 and 2007), to winning
the Transpac (2001 and 2003) and setting both the Pacific Cup double-handed
(2008) and the Transpac double-handed (2009) records. For more information
on Pegasus Racing visit www.pegasus.com
About Fullpower/MotionX
Founded in 2003 by Sonia Lee and Philippe Kahn, Fullpower's mission is to
put motion-sensing in every mobile device. As the leader in mobile sensing
solutions, Fullpower is building on its expertise in wireless sensor
technology to deliver unique, interactive motion-sensing applications.
MotionX solutions are designed and developed in Santa Cruz, Calif.
Important Links:
Pegasus Racing: www.pegasus.com
Skippers Blog Transpac 2009: www.pegasus.com/log.htm
MotionX Website: www.motionx.com
MotionX-GPS in the iTunes Store:
http://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewSoftware?id=299949744&mt=8