Find the good problems
They took the dinghy market by storm and now the Australian clothing specialists are (successfully) moving on to the offshore racing scene
Zhik hasn’t been around all that long in the sailing world, yet it quickly became the clothing of choice for many of the world’s best sailors. Olympic medallists like Nathan Outteridge and Pete Burling aren’t going to compromise performance by wearing inferior kit, at least not by choice.
‘We were pushing to be able to wear Zhik a long time before it was finally adopted as the official clothing for the Australian Sailing Team,’ says Outteridge, who won 49er gold at the 2012 Olympics and steers the Swedish entry for the America’s Cup, Artemis Racing.
Outteridge has been wearing Zhik as his first-choice kit for a decade now, from not long after the Australian company was launched in 2004 following the Athens Olympics. It has made great strides since then due to a never-ending search for the answer to difficult problems, as founder Brian Conolly explains: ‘We try to find the problems worth solving in order to differentiate ourselves from the other products out there,’ he says.
‘That’s the approach we adopted from the very start, to try to make kit that sailors want to use and that they’ll find benefits and improvements from. Which, actually, is not as easy as it sounds. Sometimes finding the good problems is the hardest part, and once you find those good problems it can take a while to find a solution.’
Zhik made its early reputation by developing high-performance apparel designed specifically for the needs of dinghy sailors. ‘There was a lot of stuff in the sailing market that was basically just a copy of what had been developed for surfing or scuba diving,’ says Conolly. ‘A lot of stuff was very derivative, without really looking at what the different requirements were.
‘I mean, for a start, in sailing you’re mostly on top of the water – not in the water like you are with surfing or diving. And the flex requirements of the clothing – the way you use your body – are very different too. So there were some clear developments we could make early on that the dinghy sailors responded to very quickly and enthusiastically.’
Avlare
One of the next big developments on Zhik’s never-ending programme of innovation was the launch of Avlare, with similar stretch properties to Spandex or Lycra but which is also waterproof. Hmm, a rash vest that’s waterproof... Conolly admits it sounds almost too good to be true, and concedes that you have to try it to believe it.
Top: product ambassadors don’t come any better than Nathan Outteridge – seen relaxing after winning the 2014 Moth worlds. Even at this relatively early stage considerable amounts of Zhik offshore clothing are finding their way into top campaigns; this (above) is the very light and flexible Isotak 2 offshore solution
‘It sounds obvious to say it, but one of the problems is that when you wear Spandex or Lycra, it gets wet, and you get wet in it. Not many people really question that. ‘You get wet, and you’re in the water!’ Trouble is, windchill is a big consideration for competitive sailors.’
So Conolly and his research team set about looking for ways of taking the same kind of hydrophobic technology found on many shell garments today, and seeing if they could achieve the same levels of water repellency using stretchier fabrics. It has taken many years of trial and error before Conolly was satisfied that they had achieved the necessary combination of stretch, water repellency and durability.
‘To apply hydrophobic technology and to make sure it lasts and really works well is actually very difficult,’ says Conolly. ‘But we’ve now sourced a relationship with a leader in this field that has granted us an exclusive arrangement with their technology. Avlare doesn’t have a membrane in it, instead we went for high-stretch woven fabric; you have to do unique things to filaments and fibres to make things stretch. We believe Avlare ticks a lot of boxes that sailors perhaps didn’t even know could be ticked…’
While its roots and origins are in sailing, Zhik is increasingly expanding its reach into other water-based activities and he sees Avlare offering answers to problems in many sports. ‘Avlare meets our “made for water” agenda at Zhik, where we want to provide great products to people who are on or in the water, whether they’re kayaking, SUPing, wakeboarding, sailing, whatever.
‘The actual product, when you experience it is quite interesting. It’s very light and disrupts windchill completely. It’s like wearing a very light flexible shell, but that’s really quite warm. If you’re a paddler for example and you want to go out on a cold morning, the Avlare will keep off the windchill and keep you dry. But as you warm up through exertion, the Avlare breathes so you don’t need to take it off. We’re already getting some great feedback from our “Team Riders” training out in Rio for the Olympics. It works really well through a range of conditions and we’re confident you’ll be seeing Avlare win medals in a range of sports this summer in Brazil.’
Isotak
While Zhik made its name in dinghy sailing, the focus is increasingly on bringing similar levels of innovation to the offshore sailing scene. Although some professional offshore sailors are nowadays unable to declare that they are using some of Zhik’s apparel, due to potential conflicts with existing sponsors and suppliers, unbranded Zhik clothing is finding its way onto a growing number of the best-known yachts. And Conolly says you can expect to see the brand occupy a much more overt, commercial place in future classic ocean races.
‘We want to prove ourselves at the extreme end of yachting, and we’ve already done so in a number of key events including the Sydney Hobart, the Vendée Globe, the Fastnet Race, the Mini Transat and a few more besides,’ says Conolly.
‘Early feedback from some top sailors is that a lot of the existing gear – while brilliant in most conditions – doesn’t necessarily make it to the end of the longest and toughest events.
‘It’s certainly well serviced by the other brands, but we wondered if we could do better, if we could come up with a product that is more durable and retains the highest levels of waterproofness for longer. In a tough environment like a round-the-world race, the membrane in the fabric gets really beaten up – with all the sitting, the kneeling, moving about the boat, doing things repetitively over a long period of time.
‘Now there are good industry measures for breathability and waterproofness, but for waterproof durability there was no standard at all. So we wanted to investigate this, and it sparked some interest with some universities in Australia. The result is that they’re going to publish an academic paper about a new measure of waterproofness, which will enable us and others to work to a far more sensitive and measurable datapoint when designing for extreme ocean sailing.’
While Conolly acknowledges that other manufacturers put their products through rigorous durability tests and washing tests, he’s not aware of anyone else going to the lengths that Zhik has gone.
‘We have made a machine that cycles around predictively, with both hard objects and water inside. Using different balls with varying sizes and levels of hardness, we wrap the fabric around these balls and it gets wet and gets banged up for a few thousand cycles. We then take the fabric out and put it on a standard hydro-tester and measure its subsequent pressure resistance.’
The result is Isotak 2, which Conolly believes offers the best combination of form and function out in the market today. ‘Because the membrane we’ve developed is so durable we could bring back the weight of the fabric itself. It’s quite ergonomic and lightweight for the durability it delivers.’
The combination of lightweight and durable has been a theme of Zhik since it started. One of the company’s longest-standing Team Riders is Nathan Outteridge who has been wearing Zhik for more than a decade.
‘When I first spoke to Brian about wearing his gear, I was only just getting into the 49er and learning how to sail it. When I got the first wetsuit through, it was really thin but still warm. Compared with what I’d been used to wearing, it was so different. In fact, I called Brian and said, “You need to make me something thicker because I’m going to bang up on my shins on the 49er! I’m still learning how to sail the thing.”‘
Even if that first wetsuit was ‘too thin’, Outteridge has been a Zhik evangelist ever since. ‘The great thing about Zhik is they always listen to what you have to say. And with Brian in particular, if there’s a new technology that’s worth exploring, you can be sure he’ll be the first on to it.’
Click here for more information on Zhik »
We invite you to read on and find out for yourself why Seahorse is the most highly-rated source in the world for anyone who is serious about their racing.
To read on simply SIGN up NOW
Take advantage of our very best subscription offer or order a single copy of this issue of Seahorse.
Online at:
www.seahorse.co.uk/shop and use the code TECH20
Or for iPad simply download the Seahorse App at the iTunes store
Elegantly targeted
Marc Lombard Design have teamed up with successful Mini 6.50 builder Yann Dube at Chantier Ofcet to create the first (ever) purpose designed and built IRC shorthanded racer
Yann Dube is the co-founder of Chantier Ofcet, the boatyard behind the Ofcet 650s that took first and second place in last year’s Mini-Transat. He is currently building the Ofcet 32 – arguably the first IRC design aimed solely at the doublehanded offshore IRC market – with several boats already sold. Eric Levet is a senior naval architect from the Marc Lombard Design Group which has designed the Ofcet 32…
Seahorse: First of all, Yann, congratulations on your Mini-Transat success in the Series division; but what led you to build these specialist boats?
Yann Dube: I began my career as an aeronautical engineer, while my friend and business partner Mathieu Piquelé was a professional sailor. In 2008 we co-founded a boat-maintenance company in La Rochelle called Prepa Nautic. By 2013 we were well established with over 60 clients spanning IRC racers, Mini 6.50s and cruising boats. Then in 2014 we decided the time was right to build a new generation of Mini 6.50 for the 2015 Mini Transat.
We invite you to read on and find out for yourself why Seahorse is the most highly-rated source in the world for anyone who is serious about their racing.
To read on simply SIGN up NOW
Take advantage of our very best subscription offer or order a single copy of this issue of Seahorse.
Online at:
www.seahorse.co.uk/shop and use the code TECH20
Or for iPad simply download the Seahorse App at the iTunes store
Changing guard, changing philosophy?
The winning skipper of the 2014-2015 Volvo Ocean Race, Ian Walker, is closely watching developments following the arrival of new race CEO Mark Turner
It is now a full year since the end of the last Volvo Ocean Race in Gothenburg and with Mark Turner just recently taking up his role as CEO in place of Knut Frostad it is the start of a new era. Mark has all the skills, experience, enthusiasm and personality for the role as well as widespread support within the sailing community. He is an excellent and popular choice but he has a big task ahead.
The new CEO has large boots to fill. Former CEO Knut Frostad has lived and breathed the VOR for the last six editions and has stamped his mark on the race as race crew, team principal, skipper and then (for three editions) CEO.
Knut has presided over a particularly difficult period of transition as the costs of grand prix sailing have escalated at a time when the world economy has deteriorated. This has made it increasingly hard to attract the ever-increasing funding that teams require to compete in this new, highly professional era. Since Volvo took on the race there have been no more than eight entries and despite many syndicates striving to enter it is always a struggle for teams actually to make it to the startline.
We invite you to read on and find out for yourself why Seahorse is the most highly-rated source in the world for anyone who is serious about their racing.
To read on simply SIGN up NOW
Take advantage of our very best subscription offer or order a single copy of this issue of Seahorse.
Online at:
www.seahorse.co.uk/shop and use the code TECH20
Or for iPad simply download the Seahorse App at the iTunes store
The life of a sails man
In a career spanning five decades Tom Whidden has seen and done almost everything in the sport and business of sailing. But if you think one of the most powerful men in the sport is nearing the end, think again. Sean McNeill talked to the most consummate of sailing professionals
Tom Whidden is sitting in his office at North Technology Group’s headquarters in Milford, Connecticut, on a raw day in late April. Looking fit and relaxed, Whidden has just arrived after his morning workout and is in a talkative mood. ‘I read recently that you’re “retired”,’ begins the interviewer, who first raced with the masterful tactician on an IOR 41-footer in 1984.
‘Far from it,’ says the 68-year-old Whidden. ‘When North Sails was sold two years ago I signed a contract for three years that would expire next year. And I’ve just recently added another two years on to that. So I’m not going anywhere any time soon. I love what I do.’
It would be hard to imagine the sport of sailing without Whidden, a three-time America’s Cup winner, five-time Maxi worlds winner, Kenwood Cup winner, SORC winner, Key West Race Week winner… is there a regatta he hasn’t won? ‘I’ve also lost the Cup twice,’ he’s always quick to point out in an act of deference.
We invite you to read on and find out for yourself why Seahorse is the most highly-rated source in the world for anyone who is serious about their racing.
To read on simply SIGN up NOW
Take advantage of our very best subscription offer or order a single copy of this issue of Seahorse.
Online at:
www.seahorse.co.uk/shop and use the code TECH20
Or for iPad simply download the Seahorse App at the iTunes store