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they’re protected from impact. Then there will be three or four sailors on the “speed team”, whose needs are different as they're not operating at 100 per cent heart rate the whole time. For them it will be a little closer to traditional sailing, but low windage is another important component, along with safety and comfort.’ It’s a tough design challenge


making kit that will tick all those boxes but Canfield is very happy to be working with the global leader in performance sailing clothing. ‘Musto is best in class. If it’s up to the sailor what they wear, they’ll choose Musto. I feel honoured that we’re working with them because they are the best at what they do.’ Stars & Stripesmedia manager


Matt Knighton was onboard reporter for Abu Dhabi Ocean Racing when Ian Walker’s crew won the 2014-15 Volvo Ocean Race. ‘We were wearing Musto for that circumnavigation so I’ve got personal experience of what it’s like to work with these guys. Musto has always done a really good job partnering with the athletes. During the Volvo they were at almost every stopover asking how they could make their garments better. Whether you're sailing offshore, racing the America's Cup or sailing in dinghies, it's all about staying dry and comfortable, at the optimum temperature. And that’s what Musto works so hard to achieve.’ A big part of Musto’s success over


the years has come through its close partnership with Gore-Tex. Now Shane Rhone sees that a major part of their success with developing high- performance gear for speedsters such as the Stars & Stripes sailors will come from the partnership with D3O. ‘They are the industry standard for impact protection,’ he says. ‘They set the pace for everyone else to follow. A lot of companies do their own version of impact protection, but they never catch up. D3O are pushing ahead in so many interesting areas; they have worked on creating lighter


Top: A recent product innovation from D30 is Impact Print, which allows impact protection material to be printed directly onto a fabric. Above: D30’s LP2 Pro limb protectors are among the most advanced, breathable armour now available for motorcyclists and mountain bikers. Similar protection for sailors is now in development


versions of impact protection, to help with the venting and breathability of pads. They recently showed us the work they’ve been doing with a Japanese motorbike brand, where they have custom made some carbon-fibre plating, which looks super modern, and is basically bulletproof impact protection.’ Chris Meadows, technical sales


manager at D3O, says there is always a compromise to be found in impact protection, but D3O’s materials and products bridge that compromise more effectively than anyone else. ‘There are other products out there, but if they protect as well as D3O they won't be as comfortable, and if they're as comfortable as D3O they won't provide as much protection. ‘Something we’re working closely


on with Musto is to find the best way that our material can be integrated into their suits, in terms of making it flexible and comfortable. Where we've done well in the motorcycle market is not only have we provided good impact protection, but it's a low- profile, comfortable solution that people want to wear and which enables them to move freely. Nowhere is that more important than on a boat. If you've got a protective solution that stops you moving, you just won't wear it because you won't be able to do your job on the boat. That's where our materials and applications already excel in other markets and we believe we can make a difference in sailing, too.’ The Musto project is close to D3O CEO Stuart Sawyer’s heart. A pro


windsurfer back in the sport’s heyday 30 years ago, Sawyer is a keen keelboat racer these days. He’s won the Vice Admiral’s Cup, the J/111 National Championships in the UK and is currently campaigning a J/122 on the south coast of England. ‘From my windsurfing days I’ve always had that understanding that the last thing you want is to be wearing something that gets in the way of your performance. Out in Hawaii, I used to hate wearing a wetsuit. You didn’t need it for the weather, it was to protect you, but you could really feel it impeded your movement, and your performance would suffer as a result. So I'm always mindful of that when we're working with a global leader like Musto. Our job is to be invisible really as best we can.’ One exciting development out of


D3O is called D3O Impact Print. ‘This enables us to print D3O directly on to a fabric,’ says Sawyer. ‘I can see this being very applicable to our work with Musto, in terms of trying to keep the impact protection as low profile, as integrated and as comfortable as possible. It makes it possible to create some really intricate, customised designs where the D3O might start at half a millimetre thick, then build up to 3mm thick at its maximum, and then taper away again to half a millimetre. Whenever the Musto developers come and meet up with our designers I think we’re going to see some very interesting ideas come out of that collaboration.” While the Stars & Stripes project


is a very high-end niche piece of work for Musto, Sawyer can see impact protection becoming mainstream in sailing. ‘We’re all aware of the high loads involved in keelboat sailing and people do get injured from time to time. So the risks are there,’ he says. Seeing helmets being worn in the America’s Cup is starting to break through to the mainstream, for example in the Open BIC dinghy fleet where helmets are compulsory for the kids. ‘The comparison I would draw is with skiing,’ says Sawyer. ‘Just 10 years ago wearing a helmet on the slopes wasn't cool. Now everyone is wearing them, they're very functional, they keep your head warm and some of them look really cool. They don’t get in the way of your enjoyment of skiing whatsoever, you just don’t really think about them anymore. When you’re sailing in 25kts of breeze and your keelboat is doing 18kts and you’re about to gybe, well you know you need to keep your head down because if the boom hits you, it could kill you. So the need is there, and I can see helmets and other impact protection filtering down to the wider sailing world.’ www.musto.com


q SEAHORSE 73


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