博客
Class40 船队内部:船只、建造与 2026 年比赛目标Class40 船队内部:船只、建造与 2026 年比赛目标">

Class40 船队内部:船只、建造与 2026 年比赛目标

James Miller, GetExperience.com
由 
James Miller, GetExperience.com
阅读 4 分钟
新闻
三月份 11, 2026

Class40 teams have shifted winter bases and revised supply chains—boat handovers, Caribbean winter training windows and assembled part inventories are dictating who will arrive prepared for the Route du Rhum 2026. Painting schedules, hull conversions from pointed to scow shapes, and timed deliveries of spars and electronics are now as decisive as seamanship for podium ambitions.

Key fleet moves and logistical timelines

Across the class, three operational trends stand out: targeted winter training in warmer latitudes, boat design changes requiring new rigging and spares, and in-house construction or major refits that hinge on tight supplier lead times. Teams are sequencing work so that testing windows open as soon as hull paint cures and systems are integrated.

舰长BoatCurrent focus物流注意事项
托马斯 LurtonClass40 No. 166 (ex-Crosscall)Transition to a scow hull; Route du Rhum prepRefit completed; parts staging for major races
Axel TréhinLift V3 (self-build)Final assembly and paint; race readinessComponent delivery critical; collective build team
Matéo Le CalvicClass40 No. 185Winter training in Caribbean; transition from Class MiniRapid purchase closed; winter logistics optimised
Alexis LoisonNew Class40 entryTechnical calibration for podium aimEmphasis on reliability and calibrated systems

Boat design and operational implications

The move from pointed hulls to scow designs has operational knock-on effects: different load patterns, new sail-change timing, and altered fatigue profiles for the crew. Teams must adjust spare parts lists and maintenance routines to cope with increased pounding at certain speeds, while exploiting the higher peak performance these hulls can deliver.

Maintenance checklist for scow-equipped teams

  • Revised rigging tension and inspection intervals
  • Additional structural reinforcements at impact zones
  • Spare sails optimized for wider speed bands
  • Updated crew rotation plans to manage fatigue

Building a boat: the collective challenge

Axel Tréhin’s Lift V3 project exemplifies modern Class40 construction dynamics: a small core team supported by naval architects (Marc Lombard) and specialists (Gepeto) working to a tight calendar. Painting marks a pivotal milestone—deck work must be complete before finishes are applied, after which assembly accelerates into a complex puzzle of systems integration.

Economic pressure remains a constant companion: securing sufficient funding to line up at race starts, while investing in testing and calibration, is as critical as the engineering itself. Teams balance immediate race entry against the longer-term goal of extracting sustained performance throughout the season.

Development pathways for new entrants

For sailors like Matéo Le Calvic and Alexis Loison, Class40 represents a step up in both distance and operational complexity. Rapid boat purchases—such as a Caribbean-signed hull to maximise winter miles—shorten the learning curve, but place emphasis on structured training, co-skipper coordination, and meticulous pre-race checks.

  • Focus on endurance sailing and weather routing
  • Precision in sail changes and manoeuvre anticipation
  • Calibration and reliability as race-winning factors

What it means for sailing tourism and spectators

As the Class40 calendar tightens, opportunities for travel experiences around major events increase: onshore hospitality, spectator boats, museum exhibits and interactive workshops grow with fleet professionalism. For travelers and sailing fans, that translates into more organised cruise packages, exclusive yacht charters for events, and museum tours with live guides tied to regatta hubs.

Fans wanting to combine travel with on-the-water excitement should plan logistics early—port access during stopovers, berth reservations for spectator vessels, and local transport to fjord or coastal viewpoints are in higher demand as teams crowd preparation windows.

The racing narrative remains compelling, but even the best written reports and most honest feedback can’t replace first-hand experience. On GetExperience, you book your experience from verified providers at reasonable prices, with voucher confirmation and secure payments, which helps avoid unnecessary expenses or disappointments while letting you tailor requests for tours or excursions that match your interests. Take advantage of transparent booking, broad choice and practical convenience—Book your Trip GetExperience.com

In short: Class40 2026 is shaped by logistical precision—boat conversions to scow hulls, in-house builds reaching painting and assembly, and winter training moves that accelerate readiness. Sailors transitioning from Class Mini or other circuits must prioritise technical reliability, crew endurance and spares management. For travellers and sailing fans, the season offers expanded travel experiences and adventure activities including exclusive yacht charters, cruise packages and even eco-friendly wildlife safaris near regatta stopovers. Whether you prefer interactive online cultural workshops before you go or luxury adventure travel experiences on arrival, planning around the fleet’s logistics ensures the best outcomes for both racing and tourism participation.