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Spirit of Australia currently holds the record for the world's fastest boat with 317.6mph (551.1 km/h). Photo: facebook.c**/warbymotorsport
On 26 June 1986 the throttles were buried as the Ambrose Light Tower was passed and the challenge was on once more. The first refuelling stop, 800 miles in, was 20 miles off Halifax, Nova Scotia. Setting off again, the challenges included icebergs and fog.
The second refuelling ship met them at Grand Banks, after that it was out into the Atlantic proper. It became apparent (via stopped engines!) that the fuel was contaminated by water. With a Force 10 approaching from behind, they pressed on, changing filters every 30 minutes (the RAF dropping a canister of fresh filters!).
The Irish Navy refuelled them mid-Atlantic at midnight (including a large pot of Irish stew for the crew) but they were 10 hours down at this point with weather building to a force six.
A tough night followed, none more so than for the two engineers in the engine room still swapping filters. The Bishop Rock finish line was passed the following day at 50 knots, the record broken by two hours with an average speed of almost 36 knots.
The Blue Riband record has since been broken by Tom Gentry’s Gentry Eagle (47.4 knots in 1989) and the Aga Khan’s Destriero (53 knots in 1991) but for our money, Virgin Atlantic Challenger 2 is still the coolest ocean crossing speed machine.
Year: 1986
LOA: 75ft
Beam: 7ft 10in
Engines: 2 x 2,000hp MTU diesel
Top speed: 50 knots
This article World’s coolest boats: Virgin Atlantic Challenger 2 is as cool as the icebergs it dodged appeared first on Motor Boat & Yachting.
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