Skip to main content
Left hand glove worn by Campbell Reid
Left hand glove worn by Campbell Reid

Left hand glove worn by Campbell Reid

Date1985
Object number00001210
NameGlove
MediumTextile; synthetic material, cotton
DimensionsOverall: 250 mm, 0.1 kg
ClassificationsClothing and personal items
Credit LineANMM Collection Gift from BHP Steel Division
DescriptionLeft hand glove worn by Campbell Reid, a crew member/forward hand on the 18-foot sailing skiff COLORBOND during the 1985-1986 racing season. The 18-foot skiff COLORBOND was designed by Scott Jutson. Made of Nomex and pre-impregnated carbon fibre and manufactured in the USA in 1985, it exemplifies 18 footer development at its most hi-tech and grandiose before the class introduced design restrictions to limit escalating costs. HistoryCOLORBOND was developed by two aeronautical engineers and a naval architect on behalf of BHP. Some research and development was undertaken in the United States with hydrodynamic computer simulation and stress analysis being completed in Australia. The high-tech hull has a composite sandwich construction outer skin of Nomex paper honeycomb core material.The hull was then baked and cured with a carbon fibre cloth. A carbon fibre frame gives the hull rigidity and strength. The skiff has carbon fibre wings, alloy mast and boom, a selection of Kevlar/Mylar sails, and a lightweight Dacron spinnaker. The retractable spinnaker pole is made of Nomex and carbon fibre. This construction technique further reduced hull weight without sacrificing overall strength. This method of construction, like the boat's design, relies on technology that has evolved in the aeronautical industry. The thing that has become obvious about 18-footers is that their development is only Iimited by the imaginations of the men who design, saiI and buiId what became the fastest mono huIled class in the world.SignificanceCOLORBOND came to represent a time in design and construction that favoured hi-tech and grandiose elements. It remains a symbol of a decade that thrived on large budgets through corporate sponsorship and exhibited elaborate designs such as huge rigs and asymmetrical spinnakers.