NEW ZEALAND KZ 1 yacht
Posted: Thu Oct 02, 2014 7:27 pm
NEW ZEALAND KZ 1 she is depict on the stamp of Grenada and Grenadines as seen on the number in the sail.
Built as a yacht by Marten Marine, Auckland for the Mercury Bay Boating Club (Bruce Farr).
Designed by Holland, Farr and Davidson.
27 March 1988 launched as the NEW ZEALAND KZ 1.
Displacement 37.64 ton, dim. 40.48 x 7.92 x 6.40m (draught), length on waterline 27.43m.
Sail are 696.77 m².
She was completed after 24 weeks after laid down.
She was built of carbon fibre and Kevlar/Nomex sandwich.
Built for the challenge for the 1988 America’s Cup in San Diego.
Skippered by David Barnes and manned by a crew of 40 from the Mercury Bay Boating Club in Whitianga, New Zealand, the KZ 1 challenged the STARS AND STRIPES at San Diego, USA from 7 – 9 September 1988, the STARS and STRIPES a catamaran was much faster that the monohull of KZ 1.
The Bruce Farr-designed America’s Cup boat KZ 1 (NEW ZEALAND), commonly known as the ‘Big Boat’, sit now outside the Voyager New Zealand Maritime Museum in Auckland.
The 1988 Big Boat challenge resulted from the first litigation over the wording of the deed of gift in the cup’s history. Michael Fay lodged the challenge on behalf of Mercury Bay Boating Club. When the New York Supreme Court ruled that the challenge was in order, the San Diego Yacht Club was forced to accept it.
KZ 1 was the largest single-masted yacht the rules would allow. Nicknamed the ‘Aircraft Carrier’, the 90-foot (27 m) monohull was skippered by David Barnes and had a crew of 40 (compared with 11 on the AC72s that competed in San Francisco in 2013). The defenders responded by building a much faster catamaran, STARS & STRIPES (US 1). When the two raced in September 1988, NEW ZEALAND was predictably defeated by a huge margin.
Fay took the case back to court, claiming that the race was not the ‘friendly competition between foreign countries’ that had been envisaged in the deed of gift. The court agreed and awarded New Zealand the cup. But when San Diego appealed, the decision was overturned. Fay’s final appeal to New York’s highest court failed. Many New Zealanders felt uncomfortable about trying to win the cup in court rather than on the water.
2014 KZ 1 is now on display in front of the Maritime Museum in Auckland.
Grenada and Grenadines 1992 $5 sg1585, scott1482. ( the catamaran is the STARS & STRIPES)
New Zealand 1992 80c sg1656, scott1086.
Wikimedia
'KZ 1', URL: http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/media/photo/kz1,
Built as a yacht by Marten Marine, Auckland for the Mercury Bay Boating Club (Bruce Farr).
Designed by Holland, Farr and Davidson.
27 March 1988 launched as the NEW ZEALAND KZ 1.
Displacement 37.64 ton, dim. 40.48 x 7.92 x 6.40m (draught), length on waterline 27.43m.
Sail are 696.77 m².
She was completed after 24 weeks after laid down.
She was built of carbon fibre and Kevlar/Nomex sandwich.
Built for the challenge for the 1988 America’s Cup in San Diego.
Skippered by David Barnes and manned by a crew of 40 from the Mercury Bay Boating Club in Whitianga, New Zealand, the KZ 1 challenged the STARS AND STRIPES at San Diego, USA from 7 – 9 September 1988, the STARS and STRIPES a catamaran was much faster that the monohull of KZ 1.
The Bruce Farr-designed America’s Cup boat KZ 1 (NEW ZEALAND), commonly known as the ‘Big Boat’, sit now outside the Voyager New Zealand Maritime Museum in Auckland.
The 1988 Big Boat challenge resulted from the first litigation over the wording of the deed of gift in the cup’s history. Michael Fay lodged the challenge on behalf of Mercury Bay Boating Club. When the New York Supreme Court ruled that the challenge was in order, the San Diego Yacht Club was forced to accept it.
KZ 1 was the largest single-masted yacht the rules would allow. Nicknamed the ‘Aircraft Carrier’, the 90-foot (27 m) monohull was skippered by David Barnes and had a crew of 40 (compared with 11 on the AC72s that competed in San Francisco in 2013). The defenders responded by building a much faster catamaran, STARS & STRIPES (US 1). When the two raced in September 1988, NEW ZEALAND was predictably defeated by a huge margin.
Fay took the case back to court, claiming that the race was not the ‘friendly competition between foreign countries’ that had been envisaged in the deed of gift. The court agreed and awarded New Zealand the cup. But when San Diego appealed, the decision was overturned. Fay’s final appeal to New York’s highest court failed. Many New Zealanders felt uncomfortable about trying to win the cup in court rather than on the water.
2014 KZ 1 is now on display in front of the Maritime Museum in Auckland.
Grenada and Grenadines 1992 $5 sg1585, scott1482. ( the catamaran is the STARS & STRIPES)
New Zealand 1992 80c sg1656, scott1086.
Wikimedia
'KZ 1', URL: http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/media/photo/kz1,