Can You Live Stream a Sailing Race? The Technical Challenges
“Broadcasting from a moving boat sounds easy… until you actually try it.”
From the shore, live streaming a sailing race looks straightforward.
Put a camera on a boat.
Connect it to the internet.
Press “Go Live.”
Simple.
Except it really isn’t.
The moment you try to broadcast from a moving boat on open water, an entire list of technical problems appears almost immediately:
- Cameras getting soaked
- Audio ruined by wind
- Mobile signals vanishing
- Batteries running flat
- Overheating electronics
- Salt spray on lenses
- Boats bouncing violently
- Camera operators trying not to fall overboard
And somehow, while dealing with all that, you are still supposed to produce a watchable programme.
Over the past few years, we have been experimenting with filming sailing from dinghies, safety boats, and powerboats on the River Thames, using everything from waterproof action cameras to 360 cameras, mirrorless cinema cameras, and multicamera live production systems.
The reality is that live streaming sailing is not just photography.
It becomes a mixture of:
- television production
- marine engineering
- networking
- power management
- weather forecasting
- problem solving
- and occasionally controlled panic.
The Biggest Problem: Connectivity
The first major issue is internet connection.
When filming at home in the studio, the connection is stable:
- fibre internet
- wired networks
- controlled environment
- mains electricity
On a boat, none of those luxuries exist.
Instead, you rely heavily on mobile networks.
And mobile networks over water can be surprisingly unreliable.
Why Water Causes Problems
Water reflects radio signals.
As the boat moves:
- signal strength changes constantly
- the antenna orientation changes
- nearby banks and trees block signals
- bridges interrupt coverage
- crowded events overload local mobile cells
You may have perfect 5G coverage one minute…
…and absolutely nothing the next.
A sailing race also moves over a large area, so your connection quality changes continuously throughout the broadcast.
The result?
Frozen video.
Dropped frames.
Audio glitches.
Complete stream failures.
The Solution? Redundancy
Professional broadcasters solve this using bonded cellular systems.
These combine multiple mobile connections together:
- EE
- Vodafone
- O2
- Starlink
- marina Wi-Fi
- shore relays
If one network drops, another keeps working.
For smaller productions, things become more creative.
Possible solutions include:
- multiple mobile phones acting as hotspots
- routers with dual SIM cards
- recording locally while streaming lower-quality previews
- shore-based relay stations
- safety boats acting as floating repeaters
It quickly becomes an engineering exercise.
Waterproofing Everything
The next challenge is obvious.
Water.
And not just rain.
Sailing creates spray everywhere.
A calm day can suddenly become chaotic when:
- another boat passes
- the wind increases
- the helm turns sharply
- the safety boat accelerates
Electronics and water rarely cooperate well.
The Real Enemy Is Salt
Salt water is especially destructive.
Even tiny amounts of spray can:
- corrode connectors
- damage microphones
- fog lenses
- short equipment
- destroy exposed metal parts
That means every component needs protection:
- waterproof cases
- sealed connectors
- silica gel packs
- rain covers
- dry bags
- anti-fog treatments
And even then, problems still happen.
One unexpected wave can end the entire broadcast.
For my broadcast we are on a river so salt isn't a problem.
Power: The Problem Nobody Notices
People think cameras are the difficult part.
Actually, power management is often harder.
A live production setup may include:
- cameras
- wireless transmitters
- microphones
- routers
- monitors
- switchers
- recording systems
- intercoms
- lighting
- charging systems
Every item needs electricity.
On shore, you simply plug things in.
On a boat, every watt matters.
Batteries Disappear Faster Than Expected
Cold weather reduces battery performance.
Bright screens consume huge power.
Wireless video systems drain batteries rapidly.
Continuous streaming is especially demanding because:
- encoding video uses processing power
- mobile transmission increases load
- external monitors stay on continuously
A setup that lasts three hours indoors may survive barely one hour afloat.
This is why power planning becomes critical.
Camera Placement Is Far Harder Than It Looks
One of the biggest lessons we have learned is that simply having cameras is not enough.
Where you place them matters enormously.
A poor camera position can make exciting sailing look completely dull.
Problems With Boat Cameras
Boats constantly move.
This means cameras suffer from:
- vibration
- sudden shocks
- rolling horizons
- changing light
- spray on lenses
- blocked views from sails or crew
Even mounting a camera securely becomes difficult.
Too high:
- unstable footage
Too low:
- constant spray
Too far back:
- no sense of speed
Too close:
- impossible framing
This is why 360 cameras have become incredibly useful for sailing.
You can mount them almost anywhere and decide later where to “point” the camera during editing.
That flexibility is incredibly valuable when conditions change every second.
Audio Is Even Worse
Most viewers will tolerate imperfect video.
They will not tolerate bad sound.
And sailing is extremely hostile to microphones.
The main enemy?
Wind noise.
Even gentle wind becomes destructive once a boat starts moving.
Without protection, microphones produce nothing but roaring distortion.
The Battle Against Wind
Solutions include:
- dead cats and furry windshields
- internal audio recording
- waterproof lavalier microphones
- sheltered microphone placement
- directional microphones
- post-production noise reduction
But every solution introduces compromises.
Cover a microphone too much and speech sounds muffled.
Expose it too much and the wind destroys it.
And communication becomes even harder when the crew are spread across a moving boat.
Multi-Camera Switching on the Water
This is where things become truly complicated.
A proper live broadcast may involve:
- onboard cameras
- shore cameras
- drone shots
- commentary feeds
- safety boat cameras
- mark rounding cameras
- finish line cameras
Synchronising all of this is difficult enough on land.
On water, it becomes a technical puzzle.
Latency Problems
Different cameras may arrive with different delays.
For example:
- one camera transmitted via Wi-Fi
- another via cellular
- another recorded locally
- another through HDMI wireless links
All arrive slightly out of sync.
The director may switch cameras only to discover:
- delayed audio
- mismatched commentary
- frozen pictures
- buffering streams
Professional sailing coverage uses large production teams for a reason.
The Engineering Side Is What Makes It Interesting
What makes sailing broadcasts fascinating is that they combine so many disciplines together.
You are simultaneously dealing with:
- storytelling
- cinematography
- networking
- electronics
- power systems
- waterproofing
- weather
- physics
- radio communication
- boat handling
It becomes a floating engineering project.
And every event teaches something new.
The Future of Sailing Coverage
The technology is improving rapidly.
Smaller waterproof cameras.
Better mobile networks.
Lighter batteries.
5G bonding.
Starlink marine systems.
AI tracking cameras.
360 live streaming.
All of these are making sailing broadcasts more achievable for smaller creators.
But the challenges remain very real.
The audience may only see the final polished footage.
What they do not see is the frantic effort behind the scenes:
- wiping spray from lenses
- rebooting routers
- changing batteries
- securing loose cables
- rescuing overheating equipment
- trying not to drop expensive cameras into the river
Or occasionally discovering that the best shot of the day was blocked by somebody’s waterproof hood.
Final Thoughts
Live streaming sailing races is possible.
But it is far from simple.
Every successful broadcast is really a collection of tiny engineering victories held together by preparation, improvisation, and a certain amount of luck.
And perhaps that is part of the appeal.
Because when everything finally works…
…and the audience can experience the movement of the boats, the sound of the water, the tension at the start line, and the atmosphere of the race live…
…it feels genuinely magical.

