Ultim (trimaran sailboat class)

The Ultim class (also Classe Ultime or Ultim 32/23) is class of offshore trimaran sailboats.

Ultim
Development
Designervarious
Year2015
NameUltim
Hull
LOA24 to 32 m
Beammax 23 m
← ORMA

Class rules

Basic rules

The class three major groups of rules:[1]

  • irremovable rules:
    • 24 to 32 m in length,
    • 23 m in maximum width,
    • guard at sea greater than or equal to 1.70 m (for vessels launched after the first of January 2015),
    • air draught not exceeding 120% of the largest length of hull found on the vessel;
  • rules that can be modified every four years (monitoring committee, group of experts, engine power, anchorages, adjustment of hull mobile appendages, skipper qualification method, etc.);
  • rules that can be modified every year, i.e. all those that are not part of the rules that are irremovable or modifiable every four years.

Comparable boats outside of the rules

History

On the occasion of the Route du Rhum 2010, the organization of the race decided to group together in a new category all the multihulls of 60 feet and more, with no maximum limit of size. The aim was to succeed the ORMA class of the 60-foot trimarans, to wait for the construction of the MOD 70 for the year 2011 and to open the race for large multihulls such as Groupama 3 or IDEC 2.

Creation of the Ultime Class

In June 2015, an Ultim Collective formed around the Team Banque Populaire, Macif and Sodebo teams. They decided that the overall length should be between 23 meters (minimum) and 32 meters (maximum), which excludes the MOD 70 and Spindrift 2. The Mod 70 class boats, at 21.2-meters LOA, falls short of the class minimum. Spindrift 2, originally Banque Populaire V, at 40 meters LOA, exceeds the maximum permissible LOA for the class.

The Class Ultim 32/23 (maximum length 32 meters / maximum width 23 meters) was approved by the French Sailing Federation on 29 January 2018.[2]

Boats

Overview

BoatSkippersSources
Current nameYearBabtismal nameFormer namesNotesCurrent skipper*Former skippers**
Use It Again (since 2018)2004B-Q/Castorama (till 2008)Oman Sail (2008-2009),

La Boîte à Pizza (2009-2011),

Région Aquitaine-Port-Médoc (2011-2018)

Romain Pilliard
IDEC Sport (since 2015)2006Groupama 3 (till 2010)Banque populaire VII (2013-2014),

Lending Club 2 (2015)

Alexia BarrierFrancis Joyon
Adagio (since 2023)2014Sodebo Ultim (till 2019)Actual Leader (2019-2022),

Mieux (2022)

Éric PeronArthur Le Vaillant
Actual Ultim 3 (since 2020)2015Macif (till 2019)Anthony MarchandYves Le Blevec
Destroyed2017Banque populaire IXlost at sea during 2018 Route du RhumArmel Le Cléac'h[3]
Maxi Edmond de Rothschild - Gitana 172017Maxi Edmond de Rothschild - Gitana 17Charles Caudrelier
Sodebo Ultim 32019Sodebo Ultim 3Thomas Coville
SVR-Lazartigue2021SVR-LazartigueTom LapercheFrançois Gabart
Banque Populaire XI2021Banque Populaire XIArmel Le Cléac'h
*Also: last skipper

**Not exhaustive

Active Ultimes

Use It Again

  • skipper Romain Pilliard (launched in 2004 under the name B-Q/Castorama).

IDEC-Sport

Originally out of class.

Adagio

  • skipper Éric Peron (launched in 2014 as Sodebo Ultim).
  • Builder: Multiplast
  • Designer: VPLP Design

Actual Ultim' 3

Maxi Edmond de Rothschild (Gitana 17)

  • skipper Charles Caudrelier
  • Builder: Multiplast
  • Designer: Guillaume Verdier

Sodebo Ultim' 3

  • skipper Thomas Coville
  • Builder: Multiplast
  • Designer: Sodebo Design

SVR-Lazartigue

  • skipper Francois Gabart
  • Builder: CDK Technologie-Multiplast
  • Designer: VPLP Design

Originally not considered to be part of the class, among other things due to a fully closed cockpit. After legal action of the team to be included in the class, the boat went through extensive rebuilding to allow the skipper more visibility during manoeuvring on the other hand fully closed cockpits have been allowed since.[4][5]

Banque Populaire XI

  • skipper Armel Le Cléac'h.
  • Builder: CDK Technologies
  • Designer: VPLP Design

Past Ultimes

Banque populaire IX

  • skipper Armel Le Cléac'h.

Lost at sea during 2018 Route du Rhum.[3]

Future Ultimes

Gitana 18

The Gitana Team has announced a new boat to be launched in 2025. The design team consists of Guillaume Verdier and Benjamin Muyl of the Orient Express Racing Team as well as the Gitana in house design team. CDK Technologies will be main contractor for the build, while Multiplast will be involved as well.[6]

Competitions

The class has been part of the Route du Rhum since 2010.

The class has been part of the Transat Jacques Vabre since 2015 (with the exception of 2019).

The class has been part of the Rolex Fastnet Race since 2019.

Arkéa Ultim Challenge - Brest

In January 2023, the start of the first solo tour of the Ultimes, the Arkéa Ultim Challenge - Brest, was announced for 7 January 2024, with six participants. The maxi-trimarans will perform the round the world from west to east by the three capes (Good Hope, Leeuwin and Horn), about a distance of 21,760 miles from Brest to Brest. The organization of this race was entrusted to OC Sport Pen Duick.[7]

Participants:[8]
SkipperBoatResultRef.
NameSail Nr.DesignerBuilderPos.Time
 Charles Caudrelier (FRA)Maxi Edmond de RothschildFRA 17Guillaume VerdierMultiplast150d 19h 7m 42s[9]
 Thomas Coville (FRA)Sodebo Ultim 3FRA 73Sodebo DesignMultiplast253d 1h 12m 40s[10]
 Armel Le Cléac'h (FRA)Maxi Banque Populaire XIFRA 11VPLP DesignCDK Technologies356d 8h 1m 31s[11]
 Anthony Marchand (FRA)Actual Ultim 3FRA 53VPLP DesignCDK Technologie-Multiplast464d 1hr 38m 21s[12]
 Éric Péron (FRA)Adagio-VPLP DesignMultiplast566d 1h 14m 27s[13]
 Tom Laperche (FRA)SVR Lazartigue-VPLP DesignMultiplast CDK TechnologiesDNF[14]

Notable performance

In its Jules-Verne Trophy record in 2009-2010, the Trimaran Groupama 3 in the hands of Franck Cammas travelled 798 nautical miles in 24 hours on February 13, 2010 featuring 17 days at more than 600 miles, including 10 days at more than 700 miles.

In its Jules-Verne trophy record in 2016-2017, the Idec Sports trimaran in the hands of Francis Joyon travelled 894 nautical miles in 24 hours,[15] with 10 consecutive days at 809 miles/24 h. Francis Joyon doubled Cape Horn, 16 days after hooking the first depression off South America, and after a trajectory of nearly 12,000 miles above an average of 30 knots (730.16 hours a day over 16 days). He then showed an increase in performance between 30 and 40% compared to the peak of Louck Peyron's record five years earlier. Leaving the Southern Seas with a 4-day 6-hour 35-minute lead on the previous record of Louck Peyron, Francis Joyon and his crew regained the equivalent of 2,800 miles at the record for this episode.

During the return after his victory at the Transat Jacques-Vabre 2021, Charles Caudrelier broke two unofficial records on the Maxi Edmond de Rothschild: in training in false-solo, he made a point at 50.7 knots, and traveled 880 miles in 24 hours at the average speed of 36.6 knots. The latter record may not be certified for lack of adequate equipment on board.[16]

See also

References