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The International 2.4mR Class rule is closely related to the International 12mR class rule that was used at the America's Cup. While there is a small but active group of amateur or professional designers and builders around the world, around 90% of the 2.4mR boats are the commercially produced Norlin Mark III designed by Swedish yacht designer ...
The 2.4 Metre World Championship is an annual international sailing regatta of 2.4 Metre keelboats, organized by the host club on behalf of the International 2.4mR Class Association and recognized by World Sailing, the sports IOC recognized governing body.
International 14 Team Racing Worlds (Inter Country Team Racing) World Sailing Classes – Fleet Racing ... Yachts: Class 40: Class 40 World Championships: Fleet:
What was needed was a common rating or an agreed International rule, which would enable yachts from one country to race competitively in a different country. The leading yacht racing countries came together and laid down a system that calculated the rating of yachts, measurement rules, construction regulations (scantlings) and rules for racing.
Four classes of radio sailing boat are designated as IRSA classes, as follows from the smallest to largest: International One Metre; The IOM class rules specify a monohull of maximum length 1000 mm, with maximum draught 420 mm. There is a minimum weight of 4000 g, which makes homebuilding of competitive boats possible.
The International 14 is an International racing sailboat, crewed by two sailors.The class was established in 1928. [1] [2]The boat is a developmental sailing class and so the design rules and the boats themselves have changed dramatically over time to keep the International 14 at the leading edge of sailing technology.
The yachts were required to keep all the sails forward of the mainmast on deck until the starting signal was given. [5] The Yacht Racing Association was founded in 1875 by Prince Batthyany-Strattman, Captain J. W. Hughes, and Mr. Dixon Kemp. [6] The Y.R.A. wrote standardised yacht racing rules which included the 'Flying Start' used today. [7]
The International One Design (IOD, International) is a class of sail boat developed in 1936 for yacht racing. It is a 33-foot open-cockpit day sailer used for day racing, rather than for overnight or ocean races. Popularised prior to the Second World War, the International One Design class is considered a classic one today.