The Boat Works Extreme 40 is set to sizzle

During Airlie Beach and Audi Hamilton Island Race Weeks.

Fleet racing during 2015 Audi Hamilton Island Race Week Hamilton Island, QLD 17/08/2015 ph. Andrea Francolini
Fleet racing during 2015 Audi Hamilton Island Race Week
Hamilton Island, QLD
17/08/2015
ph. Andrea Francolini

One sleek orange and silver multihull is hell-bent on igniting Queensland’s Season of Sailing, tracking north from her Gold Coast base to thrill spectators, guests and media with her foiling form at Airlie Beach and Audi Hamilton Island Race Weeks.

The Boat Works Extreme 40, already a familiar sight on the waters of Gold Coast and Moreton Bay is the rebadged and modified former SAP, the Danish entry in the Extreme Sailing Series, now owned by former champion racing driver and owner of The Boat Works, Tony Longhurst. IMG_0157

This waterborne weapon supersedes the boat Longhurst entered in 2015, former Indian Chief with her distinctive red hull and black sail.

“Our new Extreme 40 will be a sight to behold,” promises Julian Griffiths, boat captain and director of Noosa Marine. “She specialises in short, inshore Grand Prix style racing and can reach speeds of 30 knots on flat water in around 20 knots of wind. That said, we will still give the spectators and five crew a thrill in as little as 8 knots of breeze.”

Longhurst, who built his cruising catamaran Kato with Griffiths at Noosa Marine, and has another ground-breaking project in build, describes The Boat Works Extreme 40 as “incredible to watch and breathtaking to sail”.

“This high-tech one design multihull combines all the excitement of a beach cat, with the power of an ocean racing multihull,” the speed specialist enthuses. “It was designed for speed and agility, built entirely in an autoclave from carbon fibre with a nomex core.”ext 40 still

From a purely sensorial point of view, The Boat Works cat promises to steal the spotlight as she streaks around the azure waters off Airlie Beach, 11 to 18 August.

“She looks sensational from either side and when the wind is up, you literally glide above the water surface,” says Longhurst. “It’s surreal and addictive!”

Longhurst will face stiff competition in another foiling craft, the GC32 catamaran, Vodafone32, in the Multihull Racing division, owned by Auckland-based, Simon Hull, who claims his best speed is around  36.5 knots in good tradewinds.

“With our boat, our team and our appetite for speed, we’re confident we can put up a sporting fight,” says Griffiths. “People are in for a fantastic show!”

Hosted by the Whitsunday Sailing Club, the 27th Airlie Beach Race Week, has registered more than 100 boats for this year’s event. Then on to Australia’s largest offshore sailing regatta, the 33rd Audi Hamilton Island Race Week, 20 to 27 August, which attracts the international yachting fraternity, serious sailors, celebrities and socialites.

“We are looking forward to sharing the extreme experience with sponsors, clients and media during both regattas,” says Longhurst. “It’s a once-in-a-lifetime experience for most people and the closest you will come to flying on water.”

 

The Boat Works specs:

LOA 40’

Beam 26’

Displacement 1250kg

Mast height 62ft

Mainsail 75msq

Jib 25msg

Gennaker 78msg

Top speed 30kts

5 crew

 

For information or additional images contact Charmaine Webb, Marketing Manager at The Boat