Hoping to break the record for fastest crew around the world, Groupama 3 are one-and-a-half days ahead

After 5 days 15 hours and 23 minutes, Groupama 3 has crossed the equator and established a new reference time over this stretch of course (between Ushant and the equator). Now sailing close-hauled in a southeasterly tradewind, Franck Cammas and his nine crew are making headway at an average speed of 20 knots, heading due South.


In the middle of last night, the crew saw that the clouds and squalls were behind them. They’d ploughed through the Doldrums at an average of over 15 knots, which remains an good performance.

Franck Cammas was certainly not sparing of his crew’s efforts though as they tried to extract themselves as quickly as possible from the Inter-Tropical Convergence Zone, on a mission to drive down towards the equator – which they crossed at 07:13 GMT.

As such, they have a lead of one day, eleven hours thirty three minutes over the Jules Verne Trophy record time set back in 2005 by Orange 2.

Crewman Jacques Caraës commented “We crossed the equator at first light and I was on watch with Franck (Cammas) and Loïc (Le Mignon). We ticked off the miles on the GPS to savour the exact moment of passage: it?s always a slightly magical moment when you switch from one hemisphere to another… We?ve done rather better than we could have anticipated on leaving Ushant so it seems that we?ve had more wind than forecast. We?ve improved on the reference time by around fifteen hours: it augurs well to be back in contention in this way with a boat in tip-top condition? You can sense that Groupama 3 has been very well prepared. It?s really very agreeable to see the degree of work which all the technical team have put into the boat. Today we?re reaping the benefits of that and it?s enabling us to make headway in some great conditions.”

3,235 miles at an average of 24 knots is what the ten crew on Groupama 3 have already achieved on crossing the equator. And if all goes to plan, at the latitude of Recife (Brazil), scheduled for this evening, the wind is set to shift round to the East, which will enable the trimaran to make headway beam onto the wind and set the speedo reeling at an average of over 25 knots.

As such the daylight hours of Thursday (12 November) promise to be quick, as the giant trimaran gains grounds to the South, the breeze will clock round to the North-East, then North level with Salvador de Bahia.

At this latitude, a stormy zone currently in the process of forming will generate a series of little depressions, which will push the Saint Helena High over towards Africa: a corridor of steady downwind condition should then form towards the Cape of Good Hope. Franck Cammas explained:

“We’re now into the Southeasterly tradewinds, which are proving to be fairly steady since they’re pumping out 20 to 25 knots of breeze: we’re living on a tilt, close on the wind and it’s not the most pleasant point of sail on a trimaran. The sky has cleared, with some good heat, but it’s not very comfortable. We’re going to have to wait a few more hours before we begin to open the sails a little, ease the sheets and accelerate…

“We’ve got a fairly short chop with lots of spray so we’re having to hold on! We don’t have too many manoeuvres to perform at the moment though; simply hoisting the mainsail or putting in a reef from time to time, according to the strength of the tradewinds. It’ll be a whole different ball game in a weeks time in the cold. We’re hoping to hook onto a front near Brazil in order to rapidly drop down towards the Cape of Good Hope, which is why we can’t afford to hang about as a few hours could make all the difference.”

The record to beat:
Currently held by Bruno Peyron on Orange 2 since 2005 with a time of 50 days 16 hours 20 minutes at an average of 17.89 knots. Lionel Lemonchois, Ronan Le Goff and Jacques Caraës were aboard at the time.