enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Eight (rowing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eight_(rowing)

    Eight icon Eights at the end of the 2002 Oxford and Cambridge Boat Race. An eight, abbreviated as an 8+, is a racing shell used in competitive rowing (crew). It is designed for eight rowers, who propel the boat with sweep oars, and is steered by a coxswain, or "cox".

  3. List of rowing boat manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_rowing_boat...

    The following are the most commonly used recreational sliding seat shell manufacturers in current use: Baumgarten Bootsbau; C-Line; Echo Rowing; Edon Sculling Boats; Gig Harbor Boat Works; Leo Coastal Rowing; LiteBoat; Little River Marine; Maas Boat Company; Peinert Boat; 1 Australia (wavecutter) Rowing Sport Boats (RS boats) Virus; Volans ...

  4. Octuple scull - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Octuple_scull

    An octuple sculling shell, often simply called an oct and abbreviated as an 8x [1] or 8x+, [2] is a racing shell used in the sport of rowing.. Unlike the eight (8+), a racing shell with a crew of eight rowers and a coxswain (cox) [2] that can be seen at the Olympic Games and the Boat Race, [2] in which each of the eight rowers have one oar (or blade) which they pull with both arms, [note 1] in ...

  5. Racing shell - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Racing_shell

    In watercraft, a racing shell (also referred to as a fine boat (UK) or simply a shell) is an extremely narrow, and often comparatively long, rowing boat specifically designed for racing or exercise. It is equipped with long oars, outriggers to hold the oarlocks away from the boat, and sliding seats.

  6. Empacher - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Empacher

    An Empacher 8+ racing shell from Harvard University at Henley Royal Regatta 2004, with distinctive yellow and black colors. Empacher (company name Bootswerft Empacher GmbH) is a manufacturer of boats. Today, they produce racing shells for the sport of rowing.

  7. Pocock Racing Shells - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocock_Racing_Shells

    In 1922 George returned to the University of Washington to build boats again, and in 1923, the unknown Washington rowing team went east and won the national sport rowing championship in a Pocock boat. For the next 50 years George built racing shells for nearly every racing college in the country and several abroad.

  8. Sweep rowing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sweep_rowing

    Eight (8+) A shell with 8 rowers. Always with coxswain because of the size, weight and speed of the boat; bowloader eights exist but are banned from most competitions for safety reasons. Four (4-) or (4+) A shell with 4 rowers.

  9. Alden Rowing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Alden_Rowing

    Alden Rowing manufactures sliding-seat rowing boats. Their original product, the Alden Ocean Shell, was designed in (sources differ) 1970 [ 1 ] or 1971. [ 2 ] Traditional shell designs use high aspect ratio hulls, with long waterline with minimum beam , that emphasize racing performance at the cost of stability.