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Great White North
For Fellow Sailing Burgers: Tom Perkins and his Mega Sailing Yacht
2007-11-05
For sailors-tech guys who enjoy 4 star hotel comforts. An American capitalist on the water. Be sure to see the video and enjoy.

If there were a hall of fame for business tycoons, Tom Perkins would be a first ballot shoo-in. His hands-on engineering skills, combined with his nose for profit, made him the captain of venture capitalism and helped transform Silicon Valley into the money machine of the West. As correspondent Lesley Stahl reports, the firm he co-founded, Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers, provided start-up capital for companies like AOL, Amazon.com, Netscape, and Google; the list goes on and on.

More recently, he has been at the center of some corporate boardroom battles at Hewlett-Packard that led to the ouster of one of the most powerful women in business: then-CEO Carly Fiorina. And last year he triggered a confrontation that then brought to light how HP was spying on its own board members and journalists.

Tom Perkins has his own personal mega-yacht, "The Maltese Falcon." She's the worldÂ’s largest privately-owned sailboat, what one magazine called a "big boatload of ego."

The Maltese Falcon embodies all the grandeur of a 19th century clipper ship. It's also the biggest, fastest, most high-tech sailboat on the high seas, a triumph of science, vision and money.

"Somebody has to have it, right?" Perkins says, laughing. "Why not me?"
Why not indeed.

"Isn't she beautiful?" Perkins remarks.

The Falcon is also a technological breakthrough. The masts stand 192-feet tall, weigh 25 tons each, and are made of carbon fiber.

"The B-1 bomber's made out of carbon fiber," Perkins explains. "Except for the American Air Force, I purchased the most carbon fiber of anybody ever."
On board, the boat is no less spectacular. On a scale of 1 to 10, the boat is a 12. "You know I never had the sense of how long the boat is until now," Stahl remarks, walking along the bow. "Well it's your typical football field size sailing yacht, you know," Perkins says, laughing.
Can I have it when you are done?

Inside, there are two 1,800-horsepower engines, 11,000 square feet of living space, and his crew of 20 includes a gourmet chef and a team of stewards and stewardesses.

Perkins also showed Stahl how to unfurl the boat's 15 sails, a job that would take about 80 deckhands an hour on a traditional sailboat. All it takes on the Falcon is five minutes, and the touch of a screen. And just like that the sails housed inside hollow, carbon fiber masts began to unfurl -- all 26,000 square feet of them. That's over half an acre's worth of sail.
All covered on the video
Posted by:Icerigger

#1  Ouch. He should have a bumper sticker on that dingy: "I brake for Nobody"
Posted by: mojo   2007-11-05 22:05  

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