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Afterburner reached speeds in excess of 25 mph during portions of the race and finished in time for dinner Friday night in Ensenada Mexico. Several entries were still coming in more than 24 hours after Afterburner finished the course as conditions varied out on the water.
First hand race account by Mark Michaelsen aboard Afterburner:
Sunday April 25, 2004
We started the race 2.5 minutes late as planned. This may seem strange to some of you who take great pride (As do I) of having your nose on the line at the gun on the favored end but with this year's unusual downwind start and many boats far more maneuverable than the 'BURNER" on the line it wasn't worth risking as someone leeward (right of way) position taking us up in an uncontrollable situation as the boat was hitting speeds of 23 knots as we wound it up in the fresh WNW breeze. The wind had filled in just as the ULDB A class (Magnitude, a TRANSPAC 80 etc) started 20 minutes before us at 1200 noon.
I would have preferred a much hotter (faster) approach, but frankly lost the line in the maze of boats that filled the starting area outside of their own sequence.
As we crossed the start line and wound up BURNER we immediately sped up to around 19-21 knots with main and jib only and headed out to 118' Longitude line that we had selected as our base line for the building breeze. 25 minutes after our start we had caught the lead boats which had started 22 1/2 minutes ahead of us and were driving in dead flat water at 18-20 knots of boat speed.
We continued down course as the wind would allow and continuously found the edge of the windline which put on the brakes several times.
We arrived in the Coronado Islands southwest of San Diego in Mexican waters around 4:45 PM and set the screacher for the first time. This took us just 10 degrees high of course and still moving at between 19-21.5 knots. At around 7:00PM the wind started backing way off and we had to set the spinnaker to maintain anything close to course for Todos Santo lighthouse. The wind varied in both speed and direction from 7:00-8:15 PM at which time we were nearly to the outside of Ensenada Bay. We knew at some point the wind would shift and shut off and just our luck it happened about 8 miles from the finish line. For the next two hours we sailed upwind in very light and shifty conditions.
On final approach we looked hard for the finish line but unfortunately it had not yet been set by NOSA. We observed a boat underway with a red strobe and correctly assumed this to be the finish line. One more tack and we sailed through the line at 10:17PM. 9 hours and 57 minutes after we started the race 125 miles up course in Newport Beach.
The conditions were great for most of the race and we'd like to thank NOSA and all of the related clubs, volunteers and associated people who made this a fun event for all.
Many thanks too to our sponsor Gill North America for great foul weather gear and to the Sailing Pro Shop in Long Beach.
Just getting to the start line was no easy task. We broke both of the rudders the weekend before when winds of 20+ stressed them out! We had to arrange for rudders to be sent from DOWN UNDER-
The rudders came off a boat called SLIME but they were not donated to our cause. Bill Gibbs (AFTERBURNER owner) was able to purchase the rudders at what seems like a fair price. The overnight International DHL costs weren't so reasonable but given we needed them from to be taken off of SLIME, delivered to the AIRPORT, airfreighted to LA, cleared through customs, picked up in LA, transporrted to Newport Beach, fitted into the existing sleeves, raked the required 3 degrees and them we "hoped they would be close to correct" all in four business days...it's frankly amazing we got to the start line at all. EVERYONE on the rgular crew- Bill, Don, Mark, Mike, and Vincent busted their butts to make a go of it and while they were NOT perfect, they didn't break and they roughly steered the boat.
Are they as good as the old rudders that were 8" longer? No. But they weren't bad. In fact they were good enough to get us downwind at an average speed of 18 knots for five hours....
Thanks to the owner of SLIME for helping us make this the event.
The crew all worked hard to have the boat in race shape prior to race day:
Bill Gibbs-skipper, helmsman
Don Meifert-helmsman, main trim
Mark McNulty-spinnaker, screacher, jib trim
Vincent Schmitt- Communication specialist, foredeck
Mike Dobbs-main trim,traveler, electronic tracker set up
Mark Michaelsen-Tactician, Helmsman, Weather routing
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For additional information please feel free to contact us:
Bill Gibbs- Helmsman-Owner
Mark Michaelsen- Tactician-Primary Helmsman
562 773 0552