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Svea Found at Fault in J-Class Collision with Topaz
A decision has been reached on the cause of the shocking collision between J Class sailing yachts Svea  and Topaz  during the Superyacht Challenge Antigua earlier this month.
The 43.6 metre Svea was captured riding over the stern of the 42.6 metre Topaz , resulting in the injury of three crew members.
A hearing report released by the J Class Association on the incident found Svea responsible for the collision for failing to keep clear as the port tack boat. It also concluded that it was deemed impossible for Topaz to avoid the collision.
The incident occurred shortly before the first race on March 12, with Topaz  approaching the starting line around one minute and 40 seconds ahead of the start of the race.
Svea , on port, was on course to collide with Topaz  and attempted to bear away at the last moment. Despite Topaz  luffing to avoid the crash, Svea  collided with the port side of Topaz , causing serious damage in the process.
Topazâs  boom, back stays and mainsheet were broken while the port runner was torn off. The mast was put under âextreme loadâ according to the report, and will undergo further inspection.
Two crew members on board Topaz  were thrown from the boat, including one who suffered four broken ribs when he was pushed overboard by the bow of Svea . A crew member on board Svea  was also pulled from the boat by the runner tail of Topaz .
Following the collision, both yachts immediately retired from the race and the Superyacht Challenge Antigua. Dramatic footage of the collision was captured on board fellow J Class yacht Velsheda .
Both Topaz  and Svea  are race veterans and have competed against each other in a number of international sailing regattas, including the St Barths Bucket and the Superyacht Cup Palma.
Built by Vitters, Svea  was launched in 2017 making her the newest member of the J Class fleet. Topaz  is also a modern J Class, and is based on an unbuilt 1935 Frank Paine design. Topaz  was delivered by Holland Jachtbouw in 2015.
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J Class Sloops Svea and Topaz Collide in Antigua
In an unfortunate and serious accident ahead of the start of this year’s Superyacht Challenge Antigua, there was a collision between Tom Siebel’s Svea and Topaz .
The video below shows 43.6-meter Svea on port hitting the transom of the 42.6-meter Topaz knocking one crew member overboard in the process.
Apparently, the accident occurred just before the start of the race on Thursday the 12th. Two crew members were injured and both boats were severely damaged so have withdrawn from the regatta.
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J Class Sailing Yachts Collide In Antigua (video)
BY APB Staff on 19 Mar 2020
Two of four racing superyachts damaged at starting line
During the 10th Superyacht Challenge Antigua (Mar 11-15), two of the four competing J Class superyachts â the 43.6m Svea and 42.6m Topaz â were in a collision before the start of Race 1 on Mar 12. Two Topaz crew members received medical attention, one with four broken ribs, and both boats pulled out of the race with severe damage, according to the J Class Association.âŁ
Click below to watch video:
Following the hearing into the incident, the protest committee statement reported these facts:
1. Topaz was approaching the start line on starboard approximately 1min 40sec before the start.
2. Svea on port was on a collision course with Topaz .
3. Despite a last-minute turn to bear away Svea collided with the port side of Topaz at the runner winch causing serious damage.
4. Topaz luffed to avoid when it was clear Svea was not keeping clear
5. On Topaz two crew members were injured with one crew member suffering 4 broken ribs as he was pushed overboard by the bow of Svea . On Topaz the port runner winch was torn off. The boom was broken. Both running back stays, mainsheet and backstay broke under the load. The port gunwale was damaged from the runner winch to the stern. The mast was put under extreme load from the impact and will need further inspection.
6. On Svea one crew member was pulled out of the boat by the runner tail of Topaz . His injuries were minor. The forward underbody of Svea was badly damaged.
7. Both boats immediately retired from the race.
The protest committee concluded that Svea failed to keep clear as a port tack boat and broke rule 10 & 14; and that it was not reasonably possible for Topaz to avoid the collision.
The decision was that Svea took the appropriate penalty by retiring; and Topaz is entitled to redress of average points for Race 1 based on her results in the remainder of the regatta.
However, after the collision neither Svea nor Topaz were able to take any further part in the Antigua Superyacht Challenge regatta.
Svea Photos: J Class Association
The original lines for the Super-J Svea were by Swede Tore Holm in 1937, but the yacht was never built, according to the J Class Association. Holmâs drawings were eventually discovered by yachting historian John Lammerts van Beuren, and the longest modern J-Class at 43.6m (143ft) was built at the Vitters yard in Zwartsluis, the Netherlands, for an American owner and launched in 2017.
Topaz Photo: J Class Association
The J Class yacht J8, Topaz, was an unbuilt 1935 design by Frank Paine, who also designed Yankee . Topaz was launched in 2010 by Holland Jachtbouw, with naval architecture by Hoek Design.
The J Class has its roots in the oldest sporting race in the world, The Americaâs Cup, which was born from an annual race around the Isle of Wight, hosted by the Royal Yacht Squadron and called the 100 Guinea Cup, according to the association.
In 1851, an overseas yacht was allowed to enter the race for the first time. The yacht America was built that year to an innovative new design and had sailed to the Solent in search of racing. Initially excluded from racing against British yachts, she was finally allowed to enter the Round the Island Race for the 100 Guinea Cup.
Winning the race a few minutes ahead of the next British yacht, America claimed the trophy that became known as the Americaâs Cup and took it back to the USA to await challengers.
In 1929 Sir Thomas Lipton, famous for his import of Lipton Tea from India, issued his fifth challenge to the Americans for the Americaâs Cup. He commissioned the build of the first J Class yacht, Shamrock V (37m), which signified the start of a new era in design evolution and racing.
The Universal Rule came into effect in 1930, whereby the size of a yacht was determined by waterline length and shown as an alphabetical list. âJâ signified yachts with a waterline length of 75ft to 87ft. The addition of the new design Bermuda mast allowed the yachts to carry a huge sail plan. Nothing so large and âawesomeâ had been built previously.
The rest is history, and Shamrock V is still sailing strong.
The 11th Superyacht Challenge Antigua will be held March 9-14, 2021.
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Superyacht Challenge Antigua : Dramatic J-Class collision off Antigua
Tatjana Pokorny
 · 13.03.2020
The accident occurred shortly before the start of the first race of the Superyacht Challenge Antigua: 90 seconds before the starting signal, the J-Class yacht "Svea" collided with her classmate "Topaz", dramatically running over her stern with her pointed bow. The fact that the sailors were largely unharmed seems almost miraculous when you look at the pictures. Both yacht beauties were badly damaged. One sailor from "Topaz" went overboard, two "Topaz" sailors required medical treatment but were not seriously injured. This was announced in a very brief statement on Friday night by the J Class Association.
The jury decided that the "Svea" crew was at fault for the crash
Both boats were able to reach the harbour of Antigua under their own power, but can no longer take part in the regatta. The regatta jury has since determined that the "Svea" crew violated rules 10 and 14. At the time of the collision, "Svea" was sailing on starboard, "Topaz" on port and with right of way. There was initially no further comment from the up to 35 crews involved, nor from the organisers or the class association. The video of the momentous crash is one of several clips circulating on social networks and shows at the end how the "Velsheda" crew members sailing very close to the accident take cover below deck because they fear that the masts of the boats involved in the collision will break. The shouts of "below deck now" can be heard loudly.
For the rest of the fleet, the start of the beautiful sailing show was less dramatic: in the "Bucaneers" class, the 26-metre Oyster 885 "Firebird" with tactician and double Olympic champion Jesper Bank from Denmark took the lead. In the "Privateers" class, the 33-metre-long "Missy" is in the lead, and in the "Corsairs" class, "WinWin" was initially ahead of "Nilaya" and "Pink Gin VI".
Here to the intermediate results of the Superyacht Challenge Antigua.
Here to go to the homepage of the J-Class Association.
Most read in category Regatta
By SuperyachtNews 13 Mar 2020
J Class yachts collide in Antigua
J class yachts 'topaz' and 'svea' have collided on day one of the superyacht challenge antigua….
On day one of the Superyacht Challenge Antigua (12 March), J Class yachts 42.6m Topaz and 43.6m Svea collided in the final minutes leading up to the first race. This extremely unfortunate event has caused both yachts to retire from the race after they sustained damage as a result of the collision.
The J-Class Association has issued a statement after the incident. “During the final minutes leading into the start of race one for the J Class at the Superyacht Challenge Antigua regatta a collision occurred between Svea and Topaz.
“During the final minutes leading into the start of Race one for the J Class at the Superyacht Challenge Antigua regatta a collision occurred between Svea and Topaz" - The J-Class Association
“Both boats sustained damage and immediately retired from racing. Two crewmembers have received medical attention. Neither Svea nor Topaz are able to take any further part in the Antigua Superyacht Challenge regatta.” A video taken from a neighboring yacht, which is now circulating on various social media channels, captured the moment when Svea mounted the stern of Topaz , forcing a crewmember overboard.
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J-Class Topaz And Svea Collide At The Superyacht Challenge Antigua
The 42.62m/ 139’10” 2015 Holland Jachtbouw built Topaz and 43.6m/ 143’1″ 2017 Vitters Shipyard built Svea had a serious collision just before the start of Race 1 for the J Class at the Superyacht Challenge Antigua regatta.
According to the J Class Association, the incident occurred just before the start of the first race on March 12.
As a result of the incident Svea and Topaz have both withdrawn from this year’s Superyacht Challenge Antigua . The dramatic footage was captured on board J Class yacht Velsheda .
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Shocking images of superyacht collision
Monday, March 16th, 2020
Written by: Marine Industry News
J Class sailing yachts, Svea and Topaz , have been involved in a serious collision at the Superyacht Challenge Antigua.
A video circulating on social media shows 43.6m Svea riding over the stern of 42.6m Topaz , forcing a member of crew overboard in the process.
J Class Association says two crew members were injured and have received medical attention. Both boats sustained damage and had to immediately retire from the race.
As a result of the incident, Svea and Topaz have both withdrawn from this year’s Superyacht Challenge Antigua. The dramatic footage was captured on board fellow J Class yacht Velsheda .
Built by Vitters, Svea was launched in 2017 making her the newest member of the J Class fleet. Topaz is also a modern J Class and is based on an unbuilt 1935 Frank Paine design. She was delivered by Holland Jachtbouw in 2015.
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Published on May 20th, 2024 | by Editor
J Class: The “Queen” is back
Published on May 20th, 2024 by Editor -->
The 1930s America’s Cup challenger Shamrock V â also known as “The Queen of the J Class” â was relaunched on May 20 at Saxon Wharf in Southampton, UK. This follows the most comprehensive restoration and rebuild in her 94-year history.
The 36.4-metre sailing yacht sustained significant structural damage and was laid up ashore while racing at the America’s Cup in 2017. Following a change of owner and a strip down “literally to the last bolt”, the sailing yacht has been restored to concurs condition after seven years.
The yacht hit the water at Camper & Nicholsonsâ Gosport shipyard in 1930 as the first ever J Class, commissioned by Sir Thomas Lipton as his fifth and final challenge for the America’s Cup. She remains the only one built in wood and the only one to have never fallen into dereliction since her launch â the other two remaining members of the J Class fleet, the 38.5-metre Velsheda and the 39.6-metre Endeavour, had to be reconstructed entirely. – Full report
Tags: J Class , Shamrock
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Inside J Class yacht Svea â what it’s really like to race on board the newest member of the fleet
- Toby Hodges
- June 16, 2017
Toby Hodges sails the newest J Class yacht, Svea, and finds an elegant J crossed with a modern maxi grand prix yacht. Photos by Carlo Borlenghi
Svea , the newest addition to the now nine-strong J Class fleet, is one of the most outstanding new yachts of modern times â a harmonious meeting of historic and modern design; a blend of J Class lines and maxi grand prix yacht technology.
What follows will hopefully explain why she is the ultimate modern J; why her design and engineering had to be fast-tracked yet still produced such formidable results, and, crucially, why the other six Js and their 200 professional crewmembers racing in Bermuda this June were right to be worried about their new competition.
Svea âs build programme has been unrelenting since her American owner bought the bare aluminium hull two years ago. A serial yacht owner and experienced racer, his sights were firmly set on the J Class regatta in Bermuda.
This is the biggest year for the J Class since they raced for the Americaâs Cup in the 1930s .
The first time six Js raced together was in St Barth in March , but when Svea joins the fleet in Bermuda, it will be the first time seven have lined up. But for that to happen Svea had to take shape fast.
It was just 17 months from signing the contract to her delivery â a race-ready superyacht prepared to sail across the Atlantic to her first race, just as the original Js were designed to do.
Svea arrived in Palma in March to start sea trials and race training. I was invited aboard in late April for what turned out to be the last day of race training â and a day I shall never forget.
1930s lines, modern layout
All Js dazzle on the water, but Svea simply stops you in your tracks. Her lines and deck are kept spectacularly clean, thanks to the compact wheelhouse, sunken wheel and wonderfully low boom.
Her dark metallic grey hull and black and red sail wardrobe lend her timeless lines a slightly menacing appearance â a purposeful racing look that belies the luxurious interior below decks. The aggressive aesthetics are in keeping with her name, a Viking word (it means Swede).
The lines for Svea are from a Tore Holm design from 1937, the last J drawn but one that was never built. Holm was one of the most gifted Metre Class designers.
Andre Hoek reworked the design to make it competitive for modern day racing. This is his third J project in recent years following Lionheart and Topaz .
Continues below…
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Even compared to these âSuper Jsâ, Svea is big. She is, by 15cm, the longest J overall at 43.6m /143.1ft LOA.
Think of classic J Class pictures from the 1930s and you picture a helmsman in a blazer and tie standing high on the aft deck battling a traditional wooden wheel. One of Svea âs striking features is her extra large wheel, nearly half of which vanishes into a well below decks.
Hoek encouraged the extra wide, sunken wheel, a feature that Frers favoured in the 1980s because it allowed the helmsman to sit out and see the telltales. Here it allows the helmsman, trimmers and afterguard to remain in close communication.
Svea âs deck layout is optimised for modern racing thanks to a large cockpit directly in front of the wheel from which the main, genoa and running backstays are all controlled. This means crew dealing with the runners and their fearsome loads are not on the aft deck and can safely operate the winches from a standing position.
The cockpit also doubles as a guest area when the yacht is in cruise mode, and there is removable seating and table.
I observed the action from the aft deck, in the company of Andre Hoek and the ownerâs representatives and project managers Tako van Ineveld and Katie Beringer from Ineveld & Co. With its long overhangs a Jâs ends are prone to pitching and as they are raced with no guardrails you need to be vigilant when the yacht is heeling.
Maxi grand-prix set-up with walnut interior
âBe careful on deck â weâre running big loads â up to 36 tonnes on the forestay,â Svea âs captain Paul âPKâ Kelly told us as we left Palmaâs STP shipyard. Thatâs the weight of a 60ft cruising yacht, I thought!
âItâs a maxi grand prix set-up in every detail,â said Tako van Ineveld. âWe will race it as a grand prix boat. The owner loves that, but he also loves his walnut interior.â
And that, I thought, in a nutshell, is what todayâs J Class yacht is all about.
When I joined, the 24-strong race crew and six permanent crewmembers had been practising multiple pre-starts and two or three windward-leeward races a day. Granted, they had no competition, but I soon appreciated how getting the timing for the manoeuvres down and, crucially, knowing exactly how long each will take, is invaluable preparation.
As in a regatta, it takes a couple of hours between the time a J leaves the dock to the point at which it is fully prepared for the start. But when we were, and fully heeled over in full trim, sailing at 9.5 knots upwind in 9-9.5 TWS, the feeling was euphoric.
Svea âs immense black North 3Di RAW mainsail was allowed a little body to match the lighter conditions that morning. The sails are obviously big business on Js and Tom Whidden, North Sailsâs CEO, was aboard for the day assisting the afterguard.
Furling headsails are a new addition this year for some of the newer Js. A crewmember needs to go aloft to attach the lashing to the head during the hoist, so it takes longer to swap headsails, but the advantage is a marked improvement in sail handling time.
The decision was taken early during Svea âs build to incorporate furling headsails, for which a Reckmann torque tube is installed on deck. âItâs a big help not having to drag headsails out of the water,â van Ineveld remarked.
A glance aloft shows a particularly aggressive Southern Spars rig design. Every bit of weight and windage was minimised, with no staysail halyard and only a single VHF aerial permitted from the mast top for example.
The Southern Spars boom is tapered at each end and the spinnaker pole is a novel triangular shape â which is promised to be lighter than an equivalent tube, if more vulnerable to impact.
During a couple of the upwind legs I sat forward of the wheelhouse, watching the choreography of the pit and foredeck. While the main and trimmers may be in better contact with the afterguard in their aft cockpit setup, itâs still a separate camp up here.
The wide, shallow pit serves a useful area to tidy the vast amount of tail ends for spinnaker sheets, inhaulers, barbers, etc and for storing sails or snaking the spinnaker when zipping it up.
When the wind died down to 8 knots there was talk of whether to lead the sheets for inside gybing on the downwind leg. Itâs amazing to think that a 950sq m kite can be gybed inside these days, but itâs a call that needs to be made relatively early as it involves changing the tack strop and sheet leads.
Itâs almost impossible to take in the flurry of activity that two thirds of the crew are involved with around the mast and foredeck during a hoist â that was governed by Team New Zealand veteran sailor Andrew âMeatâ Taylor, a crew boss whose physical presence immediately ensures respect.
The spectacular bright red kite went fizzing up and ballooned into life, filling out a symbol depicting an ancient Nordic compass rose.
When the wind increased to 12 knots for the second practice race that afternoon, everything felt a little more intense on board. The headstay load pin readout was up to 30 tonnes. There was more water coming over the deck, the stiff carbon sails snapped into place with a bang, when the runner was eased, the blocks sounded like a shotgun going off, shuddering a vibration through the aluminium deck.
We were making up to 10.2 knots upwind now. Francesco de Angelis, the ex- Luna Rossa skipper hired as ownerâs coach, calmly steered sitting to windward, alongside the likes of Peter Isler navigating and the ownerâs long-standing tactician and fleet manager Charlie Ogletree (an Olympic Tornado sailor).
We crossed the line within a second of the gun and Svea stepped out into her full graceful stride on another long leg.
As we rounded the top mark into the short reaching leg a late call is made for an âIndianâ â or gybe-set. Itâs a test designed to time the crew response.
We gybed and the kite was hoisted in little more than a boatlength â I counted five seconds. There is a nod of approval from Tom Whidden, who comments: âThatâll allow you to go either way round the top mark â a pretty nice exit manoeuvre to have, especially if youâre in a train.â
I was astonished at the speed of the gybes. The boom is sheeted to two winches, both capable of spitting line out at 220m per minute. So even with the boom fully out when sailing downwind, it is centred in a couple of seconds.
The speed of the manoeuvres, especially after only three weeksâ training, was seriously impressive. I later learned that this was their best training day. Even so, it was remarkably quiet and well drilled.
Van Ineveld told me the crew was very pleased with how reliable all the systems have been, especially the hydraulics. He pointed out that Js have habitually suffered from hydraulic power failure, which is why they put the Power Take Off (PTO) on the main engine. âSo far weâve had no lack of hydraulic power and weâre only running at 70 per centâ.
The hydraulic pressure for Js is normally 220bar, but Svea has larger diameter pipes allowing more flow at 300bar. â Svea comes out of the box where others want to be,â says van Ineveld. âItâs where all the recent work to Lionheart and Hanuman has led â itâs the advantage of starting from scratch.â
Sailing Svea â the newest member of a revered class
During our final upwind leg, something happened that has changed my appreciation of sailing a J forever. Ogletree beckoned me to the wheel, mocking de Angelis by telling the elite helmsman: âYouâre fired.â
My heart rate rocketed. I told myself to focus â I would only get a few taster seconds of the ownerâs experience on the wheel. Sailing a J in race mode with race crew? More people have been to the moon.
But that âtimeâs upâ pat on the shoulder never came. The gargantuan wheel was entrusted to me for the rest of the upwind leg, the mark roundings, the spinnaker hoist and the downwind gybes all the way to the finish.
Focus, Toby! I asked de Angelis what sort of numbers we should be doing. âJust sail it to the telltalesâ was his refreshing answer â although in fact the genoa is professionally trimmed before I could even correct the wheel. The subsequent â9.8 knots target speed at 45ÂșâŠâ certainly helped.
Standing to leeward I was struck by the force of the wind slot between the sails and how hard it becomes to hear anything. As we tacked I bent for support to hand-over-hand the 8ft diameter carbon and teak wheel. Svea was back up to full speed. âYou got the mark?â Ogletree asked. I nodded. âOver to you.â
Panic. Keep calm and donât hit the buoy. I was aware of a flurry of activity on a foredeck far, far away. It helped make me appreciate just how focused the crew have to be on their role during a race. You have to be able to trust that everyoneâs on it â I found it almost impossible to concentrate on anything other than pointing the boat from behind the wheel.
Turn the wheel and itâs still some moments (and distance) before the boat responds. It shows the value of anticipation.
We powered through a reach and bore away into a spinnaker set, at which point I went into a giddy trance, trying to mentally distill the moment while gybing Svea downwind. To drive the latest, most high-tech yacht in the most revered class in the world, with a full complement of rock stars and one of the worldâs foremost sailors alongside coaching me through it⊠no, superlatives will never suffice.
âWell done everyone, that was a great day today,â said Ogletree in the debrief back on the dock, as my pulse began to settle. âThe best weâve sailed the boat and the best itâs gone.â
No room for delay
Svea âs deck is kept wonderfully clean. The original lines didnât even have a deckhouse, something the class insisted upon, says Hoek, but Svea âs is kept low.
The furler and tensioner for the inner forestay are hidden under the deck. The anchor arm (removed for racing) rotates out of a locker and extends over the port bows. The chainplates with integrated turnbuckles are underdeck leaving just the ECsix rigging exposed.
It was eye-opening to see just how well Svea is finished below, particularly after visiting her in build at Vitters in December â at which time no cabin had yet been completed. Austrian company List pre-fabricated the interior entirely off site â a feat of 3D modelling and engineering.
The late Pieter Beeldsnijder (who worked on Athena , Hyperion , Hanuman , and Ethereal ) designed an elegant interior that is timelessly finished by Michiel de Vos.
Raised and fielded panels are used together with both decorative and practical features such as curved handrails built into panels. These reflect the ownerâs taste for millwork carpentry. His preference for an open grain to the Claro walnut helped produce a tactile finish.
The intricate design details and the complex build skills required are particularly impressive when you consider the time frame in which Svea was completed. Normally an interior is built in parallel with the hull, but in this case it was built and fitted during the 14-month Vitters yard period.
âThere was no room for delays with the race programme for Bermuda,â said Tako van Ineveld.
A traditional skylight floods the saloon in natural light. A sliding hatch in the bulkhead between the saloon and the galley further forward helps open out this space and allows the owner to incorporate the compact galley into his living space. Itâs a clever arrangement that also keeps the teak-finished crew area forward private.
The layout elsewhere is traditional for a J, with guest en-suite cabins (twin and double) each side of the companionway and the master stateroom aft. The saloon and cabins lacked a personal touch during our visit â the bulkheads were still bare â however 16 marquetry pieces inspired by classic Beken pictures were imminently due to be hung.
Beeldsnijder succeeded in pushing accommodation space to the maximum inside. This is evident in the aft cabin, where the longitudinal frames rise up towards the transom through the berth and sofas. The low wheelhouse squeezes the accommodation in the passageway aft, but this has been cleverly sculpted out at shoulder height.
The engine room, accessed from the passageway opposite the compact navstation or via the saloon sole, is particularly well laid out offering easy access to all the systems.
One to watch
The flurry of new Js and competitive regattas in the last decade has brought with it a chase to upgrade to the latest equipment. This is particularly the case with Hanuman and Lionheart . Svea , however, is todayâs true answer to a race-ready J class.
âWhat an accomplishment it will be to make the start line at Bermuda, a year after going into Vitters,â said captain Paul Kelly. When I left, I was bowled over by this yacht, build and crew work and results so far have been very encouraging .
I am also now that bit closer to understanding the charms of the mercurial J from an ownerâs point of view. To buy and helm a J Class yacht in a competitive race is the ultimate money-can-buy experience in sailing â and, arguably, in any sport.
The J Class has its roots in the oldest international yacht race in the world, the Americaâs Cup.
Our Heritage
Considered some of the most beautiful yachts ever built, the story of the J Class is defined by fierce transatlantic competition for the Americaâs Cup, followed by an era of steep decline, and the modern-day revival.
The J Class includes a mixture of refitted surviving yachts along with a number of new yachts faithfully built to original hull lines from 1930âs designs, with more yachts currently in build.
The J Class Association was founded in 2000 to protect the interests of the Class, present and future, and organises an annual calendar of racing for these magnificent yachts.
2024 Calendar
The Superyacht Cup Palma
Palma, Spain
8 - 14 September
Maxi Yacht Rolex Cup
Puerto Cervo, Sardinia
5-11 October
J Class Barcelona Regatta
Barcelona, Spain
We love them because they are sublimely beautiful, utterly impractical and fiendishly demanding.
Elizabeth Meyer
Modern-day saviour of the J Class
Latest news
Svea win the super maxi class in porto cervo.
Winning the 31-mile coastal race outright in fhe Supermaxi division the Swedish flagged Svea won the class overall.
Racing finally underway in Porto Cervo
After two days of no sailing due to the big breeze, racing finally got underway today in Porto Cervo.
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A decision has been reached on the cause of the shocking collision between J Class sailing yachts Svea and Topaz during the Superyacht Challenge Antigua earlier this month. The 43.6 metre Svea was captured riding over the stern of the 42.6 metre Topaz, resulting in the injury of three crew members. A hearing report released by the J Class ...
During the final minutes leading into the start of Race 1 for the J Class at the Superyacht Challenge Antigua regatta a collision occurred between Svea (on p...
Before the first race at the Superyacht Challenge Antigua on March 12, the J-Class yacht collision between Svea and Topaz occurred. Event News Topaz skipper describes damage following J-Class yacht collision with Svea. Written by Laura Nicholls. Mon, 23 Mar 2020 | 13:30.
The dramatic scenes unfolded during the final minutes leading into the start of Race 1 for the J Class at the Superyacht Challenge Antigua regatta. Two crew ...
J Class Sloops Svea and Topaz Collide in Antigua. In an unfortunate and serious accident ahead of the start of this year's Superyacht Challenge Antigua, there was a collision between Tom Siebel's Svea and Topaz. The video below shows 43.6-meter Svea on port hitting the transom of the 42.6-meter Topaz knocking one crew member overboard in ...
Two of four racing superyachts damaged at starting line. During the 10th Superyacht Challenge Antigua (Mar 11-15), two of the four competing J Class superyachts - the 43.6m Svea and 42.6m Topaz - were in a collision before the start of Race 1 on Mar 12. Two Topaz crew members received medical attention, one with four broken ribs, and both ...
Additional video, now pulled offline, revealed the physical damage to the yacht. The J Class Association released the following statement: During the final minutes leading into the start of Race 1 for the J Class at the Superyacht Challenge Antigua regatta a collision occurred between Svea and Topaz. Both boats sustained damage and immediately ...
VIDEO: Massive J Class collision. With four J Class yachts competing in the 10th anniversary of the Superyacht Challenge Antigua on March 12-15, it was the strongest class fleet since the 2017 J ...
In a crash shortly before the first start of the Caribbean classic, "Svea" and "Topaz" were badly damaged. Two sailors required medical treatment. Premium Subs new! Webreader. Abo-Shop. Premium Subs new! Yachts. Alle Themen. Yachts. Superyachts. Small cruiser. Cruising yachts. Dinghies. Catamarans | Trimarans. Regatta yachts.
On day one of the Superyacht Challenge Antigua (12 March), J Class yachts 42.6m Topaz and 43.6m Svea collided in the final minutes leading up to the first race. This extremely unfortunate event has caused both yachts to retire from the race after they sustained damage as a result of the collision. The J-Class Association has issued a statement ...
According to the J Class Association, the incident occurred just before the start of the first race on March 12. As a result of the incident Svea and Topaz have both withdrawn from this year's Superyacht Challenge Antigua.The dramatic footage was captured on board J Class yacht Velsheda.
One of the first rules of big boat racing, if not the first rule, is to avoid collisions. Unfortunately, on March 12, that was not the case at the Superyacht Challenge Antigua where the J Class yacht Svea rode over the stern of the J Class yacht Topaz, causing significant damage and injuring two crew members.
đđSuscribte: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCCfymeyZc_13F6sM8QrfulA?â J Class Crash@J Class Association Mundo NĂĄutica, es tu magazine semanal de la nĂĄut...
J Class crash đ„ between Svea and TopazđŹ At the superyacht challenge Antigua in 2020 Two crew members was thrown overboard by the bow of Svea whereof one suffered four broken ribs.
On day one of the Superyacht Challenge Antigua (12 March), J Class yachts 42.6m Topaz and 43.6m Svea collided in the final minutes leading up to the first race. This extremely unfortunate event has caused both yachts to retire from the race after they sustained damage as a result of the collision. The J-Class Association has issued a statement ...
J Class sailing yachts, Svea and Topaz, have been involved in a serious collision at the Superyacht Challenge Antigua. A video circulating on social media shows 43.6m Svea riding over the stern of 42.6m Topaz, forcing a member of crew overboard in the process.. J Class Association says two crew members were injured and have received medical attention.
J Class yachts Velsheda, Topaz and Svea downwind legs. The J Class is one of several classes deriving from the Universal Rule for racing boats. The rule was established in 1903 and rates double-masted racers (classes A through H) and single-masted racers (classes I through S). From 1914 to 1937, the rule was used to determine eligibility for ...
The yacht hit the water at Camper & Nicholsons' Gosport shipyard in 1930 as the first ever J Class, commissioned by Sir Thomas Lipton as his fifth and final challenge for the America's Cup.
A serial yacht owner and experienced racer, his sights were firmly set on the J Class regatta in Bermuda. This is the biggest year for the J Class since they raced for the America's Cup in the ...
These magnificent boats, up to 140ft, where once competing in the America's Cup. Nowadays they are one of the most beautiful kinds of sailing boats existing.
The J Class Association was founded in 2000 to protect the interests of the Class, present and future, and organises an annual calendar of racing for these magnificent yachts. 2024 Calendar. 19-22 June.
J class collision, expensive crash!Collision between two J-class yacht during the Superyacht Challenge Regatta in Antigua. The two yachts involved are the "S...
There are 32 videos from the years 1914 to 1937 but here we just list the top ten. We have omitted anything dull/repetitive or where the image is of poor quality. So many of those videos were silent and shot from a distance. Our oldest footage comes from even earlier than the Cup era. Gaff rigs with mast hoops, and jib-booms, were used back then.