Sutting water on the triple hall cell boot drawn by a giant kite, members of the SP -80 team are challenging the world travel speeds off the coast of southern France, which is a breeze at a time.
The SP 80 prefers three halls (trauma) design stability and low drag.
“There is nothing to earn in the end, except that you’ll be proud of getting it,” co -founder Bonoit Gadate, who is also one of the boat pilots.
The record that the SP 80 team aims is is 65.45 bales (more than 75mph), which Paul Larson rode on Westas Celloquet 2 in Waters away from Namibia in 2012.
Current World Record Holder Paul Larson and Wests Celeocate 2.
Goodiot says, the SP 80 team has taken some inspiration from the celructate design, especially the caretaker foil that allows cell boots to “control the sound of sound barriers for airplanes.”
The construction of air bubbles on the foil prevents the “Cavity Barrier” boats from pushing the boats to 55 bales (63.3mph), a part of the boat that remains down in the water for stability. The foil is also the point of dragging the boat as much as possible, and therefore requires a lot of precise engineering to make the foil “theoretically there is no pace until we keep the boat stable and gain the power to further advance it.”
The boat supervisor remains down in the hydro -failing water, which involves stability and helps to overcome the “quote barrier”.
Two pilots run the boat, which is focused on steering and one is on control of a kite that moves the boat forward. The boat is built to travel in a straight line, such as drag racing, zig zagging and traveling down like boats in cell GP.
The global shipping speed record rules require an average speed of more than 500 meters, at least one person boarding the ship and using only air as a source of energy.
SP 80 has so far reached 58 knots (about 67 67 miles per hour).
The SP 80 eventually hopes to break 80 knots with a kite -powered boat design. Beyond that, SP 80 acknowledged that the boat itself would be less beneficial for anyone, hoping that it would be expected to do anything other than breaking the world record. However, other markets can have some team technology useful applications such as hydropower, marine shipping and naturally, boat racing.
To look at the SP 80 team and its kite -driven cell boot, watch the video in this article.


