The stopwatch for the fifth leg of the Volvo Ocean Race stopped for “Telefónica” on Friday 6th April at 19:22 UTC with 19 days, 18 hours, 22 minutes and 28 seconds of an intense leg behind them. At that moment, Horacio Carabelli, Technical Director at Team Telefónica set another stopwatch, but this time it's set for a countdown: the time available to the shore crew to get 'the machine' ready.
16 days until the start
Thankfully for the boats, crews and shore crews, the stopover at Itjaí is somewhat longer than the stopover at Auckland (New Zealand), where they barely had a week, and that week included a training race, a Pro-Am, an in-port and the start itself.
In the Brazilian city, from the moment the Spanish boat reached the quayside until it casts off its line for the start of the sixth leg, a return to the Northern Hemisphere, 16 days will pass.
It's a reasonable gap, “one that gives us some time to work on the boat here on shore”, said Carabelli. “The days ahead will be very useful for the repairs we've got scheduled (on the delaminated section of the bow) and some other things, because the boat always suffers”.
This last leg was where the boats took the biggest pounding, with some especially tough conditions, with huge waves. Aboard “Telefónica” the decision was taken to put the safety of the boat and crew ahead of racing.
“We really have just finished a very tough leg, especially with the problem we had 1,000 miles into the leg which we then carried out repairs on at Cape Horn. It was a very tough leg, with very strong winds and big swell”, said Carabelli.
Speaking about the hull delamination, the Brazilian explained that “what happened was that the core of the panel had collapsed, so it completely lost its rigidity”. The repairs, which are underway consist of “peeling back the entire internal skin of the boat and the core. It is then stuck onto a new core which has been shaped and pre-shaped and the hull's internal skin is relaminated. With that the structure becomes rebonded”.
Mast checks and new stays
Another item on the job-list at Itjaí, as well as general maintenance of the boat, planned in advance for the stopover, is the realignment of the mast on shore, followed by some 'tuning' on the water because as Horacio says, “we have some new stays which we also need to adjust”.
Work on the sails
However, the jobs also extend beyond the boat itself. The Spanish team's sailmakers are also busy at work, although it could have been a lot worse. The main job is working on the J2, one of the jibs which suffered from the blow of a 'Pampero' (a cold front with gusts from Antarctica), which took “Telefónica” by surprise two days before crossing the finishing line, and caused 13 deaths in the Argentine capital of Buenos Aires, as well as 20 injuries and widespread damage across the city.
The 'Pampero' crept up on “Telefónica” and unleashed winds topping 50 knots when the J2 jib was hoisted. “It took a battering”, admitted the Technical Director, but the Spanish team will attempt to recover the sail and keep it as a reserve. Because thankfully “our sail programme includes a new J2 for this leg”, so although it's not ideal, it could have been worse.
First training session 16th April
According to the Spanish team's schedule, the first feedback session for “Telefónica” will be on Monday 16th April, where the team will see how the boat behaves following repairs. Three days later it will be time for the official training race, whilst on Friday and Saturday the Pro-Am and in-port races will be held, in that order. On Sunday 22nd April, at 14:00 local time (17:00 UTC), the starting gun for the start of Leg 6 will be fired.
Skipper Iker Martínez explains how is the situation on board "Telefónica" and tells us what has happened in the last 24 hours
(On the first broken rudder on Thursday 14th June ...
At 20:00 UTC yesterday, 14th June, having solved the issue of a broken starboard rudder, “Telefónica” was back in the lead of the eighth leg of the Volvo Ocean ...
Information at 14.00 UTC. Despite beating the speed record for this edition of the Volvo Ocean Race for the fourth time this afternoon, notching up a 24 hour ...
What a final stretch! As expected, the storm which swallowed up the fleet has also provided the necessary ingredients for a speed record for this edition of the Volvo Ocean ...
The islands of the Azores have now been put astern by "Telefónica" after a night of very hard work in which the Spanish boat took back the lead. As ...
“Telefónica” has been embroiled in a no holds barred battle for the Azores, the obligatory waypoint on this eighth leg of the Volvo Ocean Race over the past 24 hours. ...
?The first 24 hours of the eighth leg of the Volvo Ocean Race have gone well for “Telefónica” with the boat moving into the lead of the leg with an ...
The eighth and penultimate leg of the Volvo Ocean Race is underway, kicking off today in Lisbon, Portugal at 12:00 UTC with 11 knots of northwesterly breeze. There are ...
19 knots of breeze were blowing in the River Tajo today as the tide began to come in, at the predicted time of 12:00 UTC. That's when the eighth ...
For the first time here in Lisbon we've seen the six Volvo Ocean Race skippers sit down at a table together. This took place in the press conference held ...
TeamTelefonica.com in Twitter
TeamTelefonica.com in Youtube