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-   -   Nice new teal 515 & GO Yacht. (https://www.offshoreonly.com/forums/cigarette/370192-nice-new-teal-515-go-yacht.html)

thisistank 01-27-2021 12:39 PM

Nice new teal 515 & GO Yacht.
 
You guys see this? These yacht guys are stepping up their game. First You got Lorenzo Fertitta (founder of MMA) rockin the orange 46 with Hodor and Lionan.

And now you have Hans Peter Wild (ows Capri Sun) with GO and a new 515. Nice tenders! I like these guys style.

https://cimg4.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...4582104ea.jpeg
https://cimg5.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...25db89fa67.jpg
https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...db61eaef00.jpg



https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...b833d787e8.png
https://cimg9.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...59a73504e9.jpg
https://cimg0.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...32e969e597.jpg
https://cimg1.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...e3b7aaab49.jpg
https://cimg2.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...713644c222.jpg
https://cimg7.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...b074f577cc.png
https://cimg8.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...81ef8615e9.png


speicher lane 01-27-2021 12:53 PM

Those pics hands down pummel the " all I want is world peace and..." poster I had as a kid

speicher lane 01-27-2021 12:54 PM

the Teal 515 with the vintage stripe really works well on the big CIg.

Drock78 01-27-2021 02:30 PM

Apparently the juice box was worth the squeeze!

pm203 01-27-2021 10:10 PM

Years ago, when I used to boat in the salt, I was tied up in Boston Harbor filling up the tanks on my Top Gun. On the opposite side there was a 180 ft Fedship fueling up as well. I happened to see the captain on the deck ordering his help around while they were gassing up. He happened to look down at me and I looked up at him and I said "do you want to race for titles"? His response was priceless. He laughed and said "sure, I'll meet you 300 miles offshore"!

thisistank 01-28-2021 10:25 AM


Originally Posted by pm203 (Post 4775302)
Years ago, when I used to boat in the salt, I was tied up in Boston Harbor filling up the tanks on my Top Gun. On the opposite side there was a 180 ft Fedship fueling up as well. I happened to see the captain on the deck ordering his help around while they were gassing up. He happened to look down at me and I looked up at him and I said "do you want to race for titles"? His response was priceless. He laughed and said "sure, I'll meet you 300 miles offshore"!

That's awesome!!

1Zoom 01-31-2021 05:43 PM

All it takes is cubic dollars, And they obviously have them.

Quinlan 02-01-2021 07:06 AM

Go Big or Go Home lol

Madman7 02-25-2021 08:42 AM

Seen yesterday on FarceBook the Teal Yacht wiping out a bunch of docks... Pretty painful to watch.

thisistank 02-25-2021 09:13 AM

Yeah, pretty gnarly. Wonder what happened. Mechanical failure, seems pretty windy too.

The Yacht handled the collision really well. Second video shows what looks to be zero to minimal damage on the starboard side.




speicher lane 02-25-2021 09:58 AM

So that's what the stainless bow plate is for..... Holly F*k that was gnarly.... at least no one(appears) to be hurt.

In the btm vid, is that yacht crashing through a concrete dock or is that the side of the yacht emitting the white dust on the stb side?

cheech 02-25-2021 10:04 AM


Originally Posted by speicher lane (Post 4779009)
So that's what the stainless bow plate is for..... Holly F*k that was gnarly.... at least no one(appears) to be hurt.

In the btm vid, is that yacht crashing through a concrete dock or is that the side of the yacht emitting the white dust on the stb side?

It appears so, that video had me confused at first, as it appears it was a separate crash. Like it hit 2 different times. But I think it's just 2 different views of the ordeal.

H20 Toie 02-25-2021 01:43 PM

Just needed someone to yell hey you scratched my anchor

96scarab 02-25-2021 02:44 PM


Originally Posted by cheech (Post 4779010)
It appears so, that video had me confused at first, as it appears it was a separate crash. Like it hit 2 different times. But I think it's just 2 different views of the ordeal.


Madman7 02-25-2021 03:09 PM

^^^^ Wow.... Never seen the overhead video...... Good shot of the 515 supervising things :drink:

Rhythm and Blues 02-25-2021 07:14 PM

This happens more then your aware of, especially with new build yachts. Owners/Captains/Architects get the brightest ideas for control stations and “exotic” attributes. When Excellence III (M/Y Dream) was new following our crossing from Germany we went to Gustavia Harbor in St Bartz. When the captain stepped out on the bridge wing to actuate the pilot controls they shorted out while headed astern and we hit the pier transom 1st. Not a ton of damage, but none the less embarrassing and humbling.
The controls were housed in a flush mount streamlined part of the superstructure on the PT & STB exterior bridge wings. These had no weather tight seals installed; so rain water and salt just ebbed and flowed throughout the trip.

ICDEDPPL 02-25-2021 07:24 PM

I hate when that happens.

hoodoo 02-25-2021 07:36 PM

https://cimg6.ibsrv.net/gimg/www.off...dea6d532c.jpeg

jtbooten 02-26-2021 04:31 AM

Majority of society feels the need to video everything and post it. I find it annoying. I don’t need a constant reminder when I do something dumb.
Yes it can be useful sometimes for insurance purposes when an accident occurs but...
Enjoy life. Put the phone down! Lol.

offshoredrillin 02-26-2021 06:07 AM


Originally Posted by Rhythm and Blues (Post 4779091)
This happens more then your aware of, especially with new build yachts. Owners/Captains/Architects get the brightest ideas for control stations and “exotic” attributes. When Excellence III (M/Y Dream) was new following our crossing from Germany we went to Gustavia Harbor in St Bartz. When the captain stepped out on the bridge wing to actuate the pilot controls they shorted out while headed astern and we hit the pier transom 1st. Not a ton of damage, but none the less embarrassing and humbling.
The controls were housed in a flush mount streamlined part of the superstructure on the PT & STB exterior bridge wings. These had no weather tight seals installed; so rain water and salt just ebbed and flowed throughout the trip.

Agreed, Sh*t happens... so it got scratched and some damage... ive seen people with bayliners do about the amount of damage hitting piers... bottom line is, guy has an amazing set up and it will get fixed and his life hasn't changed one bit. all the naysayers on the net are correcting a guy with $$$$$$ from their doublewide trailer. thats why honey boo boo was a hit.

rak rua 02-26-2021 07:48 AM

I’d bet there was an electrical failure with the control systems. Once that boat is moving, it carries a lot of momentum and can’t be stopped on the spot. I can imagine crew all over the vessel on radios to the bridge, captain trying to correct things and controls not responding properly. Looks like property damage only and an insurance claim. Pity for the owner and crew this mess makes it onto social media.

RR.

cheech 02-26-2021 08:40 AM


Originally Posted by offshoredrillin (Post 4779125)
guy has an amazing set up and it will get fixed and his life hasnt changed one bit.

Of course it hasn't, he way more than likely wasn't operating it, hell probably wasn't even on it at the time.
Otherwise it's all just entertainment.

And people complaining, everything being videoed these days, facts of modern day life.
And don't only blame the phones, that last overhead appears to be security cam footage maybe.

Madman7 03-03-2021 08:26 AM

https://www.thedailyherald.sx/island...ed-malfunction

SIMPSON BAY--Captain of the 77-metre-long mega-yacht GO Simon Johnson has sought to dispel rumours, answer critics and set the record straight in an exclusive interview with The Daily Herald, by describing the moments prior to the yacht’s sudden control malfunction in the crucial minutes of the line-up procedure to exit Simpson Bay Lagoon on Wednesday, February 24.

He says the incident has inevitably brought his competence into question.

The ultra-modern yacht built in Turkey in 2018 is entirely computer-driven, yet for all the latest electronics and a bridge brimming with computer screens and displays, the software apparently failed the British captain at the worst possible moment, leading to his choosing a deliberate impact with the St. Maarten Yacht Club wooden dock.

A second run-in to the dock was caused by, yet again, a computer miscommunication between the bridge and engine room in a bid to regain control.

Johnson confirmed that the yacht’s insurance assessors are progressing well in their survey of all the damage sustained to the boat, which is minimal, and the dock, and are engaged to set things right.

That said, the root causes of the malfunction have not yet been definitively identified and an intensive investigation is underway while the yacht remains at Ile de Sol Marina.

Johnson has defended his unblemished record as a captain and his split-second decisions that averted a far worse disaster. Like an airline pilot reacting to something unexpectedly going wrong mid-flight, Johnson was faced with a similar predicament, the difference being there are 400 souls at stake sitting in a plane at 30,000 feet.

In some ways, Wednesday’s extraordinary incident was Johnson’s “Miracle in the Lagoon” moment. There were no injuries, no lives lost, there was no oil spill, and the bridge was still intact.

“I’m proud that we walked away from a crash landing, and most importantly, there was no injury and the island’s arterial road bridge was not compromised,” he said.

GO’s width is 13.5 metres, the widest yacht to date to come through the bridge with just 50 centimetres of space on each side left to pass (Limitless is 12.5 metres wide). In that sense, lining up absolutely correctly is key. GO has passed through the bridge in St. Maarten perhaps 20 times unscathed, always with a well- trained crew.

“With not much water between us and the bridge, I always set to align my stern and get parallel well in time for the bridge opening,” he explained. “We left the dock an hour before and went through all the checks. There was nothing different from the other times we’ve done this exit. I was in good shape. The wind was a brisk 24 knots and we were being pushed towards the bridge. I am familiar with this manoeuvre even in even stronger winds.

“Then, when we were about 50 metres away and holding position, the yacht started moving mysteriously forward. There was nothing I seemed to be able to do; all the controls on the bridge were showing normal. I called the engine room and everything was normal down there.

“I found I had extremely limited control, almost limited to only the bow thruster, but with now only 50 metres between us and the bridge I had to make a decision fast.

“I certainly did not want to put the anchor down. That would have been disastrous. By the time the anchor hit the bottom we would have been 30 metres further in. Then we would have pinned the bow upwind, and slewed the stern towards the rocks and the road bridge.

“We have 160,000 litres of fuel on board. If I had done that, I would not only have disabled the bridge, but potentially breached the hull on the rocks beneath and could have caused an oil spill. My preferred option was to point the bow towards the yacht club dock, and beach her gently there. I had a crew member up front shouting a warning to make sure everyone was out of the way.”

Johnson said he is deeply upset by the incident, but not concerned for his own record. He has done 28,000 miles on GO during his 3˝ years as its captain. He has been in the business for 40 years, 35 as a captain, visited 276 ports on GO alone, and often manoeuvred her in the tightest places.

“I’m very proud of my handling of yachts,” he stressed. “My biggest concern was not to stop the activity of the island, which I am very fond of, by taking out the bridge. I used to live here and have many friendships over the years.

“The fact that there were no warning alarms, no lights on board to indicate something was wrong was really scary. I know this yacht so well, yet I had 13 seconds to make a decision before hitting the bridge. The decision I made was one I would make again if faced with the same circumstances.”

Insurance assessors have arrived, as well as control systems people. The investigations are ongoing as to how an engine can be locked into gear, and why it never showed up. New parts are being flown in. Johnson indicated the investigation should be concluded by the end of this week.

“We will not leave this dock until Lloyds Insurers approves the repairs and then we will have to do a sea trial to check all the systems. (I might not be at liberty to share a conclusion yet with these investigations ongoing, but it is looking like a computer malfunction seized us into gear). We are of course confident this will be solved.”

He criticised modern electronics as getting “ridiculously over the top” with no manual overrides or back-ups if something goes wrong. GO has 14 computers on the bridge and two more below decks.

“Questions have to be asked in this industry about what’s going on; who is building these boats, who is designing them, who is supervising them, and why we aren’t being asked what we (captains) need to operate them,” he said.

The owner of GO released the following statement: “The owner is extremely supportive of the captain’s decisions and performance. Personnel, economic, environmental disaster was averted for the island. I have full faith and confidence in the captain and am very grateful.”

ICDEDPPL 03-03-2021 09:26 AM

28,000 miles in 3 years, daum.
I did like 1500 miles :banned:

seafordguy 03-03-2021 08:05 PM


Originally Posted by ICDEDPPL (Post 4779961)
28,000 miles in 3 years, daum.
I did like 1500 miles :banned:

​​​​​

There have been years I've only managed 15

speicher lane 08-22-2021 08:11 AM

Hodor article with pics - ABSOLUTE Jaw dropping vessel!!

https://www.thedrive.com/news/42064/...es-very-simple

erik1976 08-28-2021 07:28 AM


Originally Posted by Madman7 (Post 4779944)
https://www.thedailyherald.sx/island...ed-malfunction

SIMPSON BAY--Captain of the 77-metre-long mega-yacht GO Simon Johnson has sought to dispel rumours, answer critics and set the record straight in an exclusive interview with The Daily Herald, by describing the moments prior to the yacht’s sudden control malfunction in the crucial minutes of the line-up procedure to exit Simpson Bay Lagoon on Wednesday, February 24.

He says the incident has inevitably brought his competence into question.

The ultra-modern yacht built in Turkey in 2018 is entirely computer-driven, yet for all the latest electronics and a bridge brimming with computer screens and displays, the software apparently failed the British captain at the worst possible moment, leading to his choosing a deliberate impact with the St. Maarten Yacht Club wooden dock.

A second run-in to the dock was caused by, yet again, a computer miscommunication between the bridge and engine room in a bid to regain control.

Johnson confirmed that the yacht’s insurance assessors are progressing well in their survey of all the damage sustained to the boat, which is minimal, and the dock, and are engaged to set things right.

That said, the root causes of the malfunction have not yet been definitively identified and an intensive investigation is underway while the yacht remains at Ile de Sol Marina.

Johnson has defended his unblemished record as a captain and his split-second decisions that averted a far worse disaster. Like an airline pilot reacting to something unexpectedly going wrong mid-flight, Johnson was faced with a similar predicament, the difference being there are 400 souls at stake sitting in a plane at 30,000 feet.

In some ways, Wednesday’s extraordinary incident was Johnson’s “Miracle in the Lagoon” moment. There were no injuries, no lives lost, there was no oil spill, and the bridge was still intact.

“I’m proud that we walked away from a crash landing, and most importantly, there was no injury and the island’s arterial road bridge was not compromised,” he said.

GO’s width is 13.5 metres, the widest yacht to date to come through the bridge with just 50 centimetres of space on each side left to pass (Limitless is 12.5 metres wide). In that sense, lining up absolutely correctly is key. GO has passed through the bridge in St. Maarten perhaps 20 times unscathed, always with a well- trained crew.

“With not much water between us and the bridge, I always set to align my stern and get parallel well in time for the bridge opening,” he explained. “We left the dock an hour before and went through all the checks. There was nothing different from the other times we’ve done this exit. I was in good shape. The wind was a brisk 24 knots and we were being pushed towards the bridge. I am familiar with this manoeuvre even in even stronger winds.

“Then, when we were about 50 metres away and holding position, the yacht started moving mysteriously forward. There was nothing I seemed to be able to do; all the controls on the bridge were showing normal. I called the engine room and everything was normal down there.

“I found I had extremely limited control, almost limited to only the bow thruster, but with now only 50 metres between us and the bridge I had to make a decision fast.

“I certainly did not want to put the anchor down. That would have been disastrous. By the time the anchor hit the bottom we would have been 30 metres further in. Then we would have pinned the bow upwind, and slewed the stern towards the rocks and the road bridge.

“We have 160,000 litres of fuel on board. If I had done that, I would not only have disabled the bridge, but potentially breached the hull on the rocks beneath and could have caused an oil spill. My preferred option was to point the bow towards the yacht club dock, and beach her gently there. I had a crew member up front shouting a warning to make sure everyone was out of the way.”

Johnson said he is deeply upset by the incident, but not concerned for his own record. He has done 28,000 miles on GO during his 3˝ years as its captain. He has been in the business for 40 years, 35 as a captain, visited 276 ports on GO alone, and often manoeuvred her in the tightest places.

“I’m very proud of my handling of yachts,” he stressed. “My biggest concern was not to stop the activity of the island, which I am very fond of, by taking out the bridge. I used to live here and have many friendships over the years.

“The fact that there were no warning alarms, no lights on board to indicate something was wrong was really scary. I know this yacht so well, yet I had 13 seconds to make a decision before hitting the bridge. The decision I made was one I would make again if faced with the same circumstances.”

Insurance assessors have arrived, as well as control systems people. The investigations are ongoing as to how an engine can be locked into gear, and why it never showed up. New parts are being flown in. Johnson indicated the investigation should be concluded by the end of this week.

“We will not leave this dock until Lloyds Insurers approves the repairs and then we will have to do a sea trial to check all the systems. (I might not be at liberty to share a conclusion yet with these investigations ongoing, but it is looking like a computer malfunction seized us into gear). We are of course confident this will be solved.”

He criticised modern electronics as getting “ridiculously over the top” with no manual overrides or back-ups if something goes wrong. GO has 14 computers on the bridge and two more below decks.

“Questions have to be asked in this industry about what’s going on; who is building these boats, who is designing them, who is supervising them, and why we aren’t being asked what we (captains) need to operate them,” he said.

The owner of GO released the following statement: “The owner is extremely supportive of the captain’s decisions and performance. Personnel, economic, environmental disaster was averted for the island. I have full faith and confidence in the captain and am very grateful.”

My company built that bridge beside the yacht club in 1985 and the owner of the yacht Limitless pretty well paid the whole bill for us to lengthen the bridge so the channel could be wide enough for Limitless to get through around 2008. Anyone who can put something that big through that pass is no joke. Current, wind and not to mention 500 people watching you. Like it was said, everyone has a bad day.


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