In 2004 Australian sailor Rohan Veal blew the world away with photos of his International Moth flying above water.
Since then, sailors have marvelled at how a boat can rise out of the
water and hydrofoil at almost twice windspeed. How long will be it be
before a Moth will hit 30 knots, a speed that shames just about any
monohull sailing yacht you care to mention, with the exception of the
Open 60s and canting-keeled SuperMaxis?
British hi-tech boatbuilder Linton Jenkins was quick to see the appeal
of the Moth and flew into production of his own foiling Moths in close
collaboration with former Olympic Tornado representative Adam May,
these days an egghead America’s Cup designer in Valencia for the
Swedish Victory Challenge. Linton loved the Moth, but wanted to make a
foiler for people weighing more than 70kg, considered the top end of
the Moth’s competitive weight range.
The RS600 was a popular singlehanded trapeze boat of the 1990s, a
modern-day revamp of the Contender with trapeze racks and a
carbon-fibre rotating mast with fully-battened Mylar sail. However, the
RS600 soon became superseded by the RS700 and Musto Skiff, both of
which boasted the added thrill and challenge of an asymmetric spinnaker
for rapid downwind sailing. The secondhand value of RS600s plummeted as
sailors sought their kicks elsewhere, but Linton saw a future for the
unloved singlehander, and the Moth’s foil package provided the answer.
When in early 2005 Linton rang me up and offered to put some prototype
Moth foils on my ageing and unused RS600, I leapt at the chance. It has
to be said I didn’t see my boat again for some time, as Linton tinkered
away at making the foil package work on a boat that was never conceived
with flying in mind! Various expert sailors came to Weymouth – where
Linton’s Full Force workshops are based – and did their best to break
my boat. And break it they did. Not satisfied with flying a few feet
above the water they decided to completely leave the water and aim for
the clouds, coming back down with a nasty thud. Masts, sails and
hydrofoils all got broken on the way to developing a foil package that
could work on the RS600.
But by the end of 2006, Linton and his sidekick Sam Pascoe, the 2006
British Champion in the International Moth, had moved away from trying
to make Moth foils fit the RS600 and constructed a sturdier,
purpose-built set of foils. This made all the difference. The boat flew
beautifully from day one. Linton was now sufficiently confident to go
into full production of foil sets for customers, and the RS600FF was
born, officially launched at the Dinghy Show in London, March 2007.