Force 5

The Force 5 is a small one-design racing sailboat that is similar to the more well known Laser but with a hard chine aft. Although it is designed for single-handed racing, two people can easily fit into the large cockpit. The boats are currently built in Long Island, New York by Weeks Yacht Yard.[1]

Force 5
Class symbol
Development
DesignerFred Scott and Jack Evans
LocationUSA
Year1972
DesignOne-Design
Boat
Crew1
Draftmax 3 ft 2 in
min 3 in
Hull
Hull weight145 lb
LOA13 ft 10 in
LWL13 ft 2 in
Beam4 ft 10 in
Hull appendages
Keel/board typeDaggerboard
Rig
Rig typeBermuda rig
Sails
Mainsail area91 sq ft
Racing
D-PN95.4

History

The Force 5 was designed in 1972 by Fred Scott and Jack Evans who were well known for their boat designs. AMF Alcort manufactured the boats in increasing quantities and by the late 1970s the boat and class was highly popular.[2] In 1989, Pearson Small Boats, which owned AMF at that time, was bought out by SLI who also owned the rights for Laser sailboats. Because the boats were similar they decided to concentrate on only one model and the Laser won out, eventually becoming more popular and causing the production of Force 5 boats to cease. Eventually, Weeks Yacht Yard bought the rights to the boat and it was re-introduced at the 1994 SAIL EXPO in Atlantic City, New Jersey and it continues to be produced in Patchogue, on the Great South Bay of Long Island.[3]

Rigging

The Force 5 has full sail controls, including a cunningham, outhaul, boom vang, and traveller.[4] The mainsail has a sleeve which fits over the 3-piece aluminum mast. A junior sail is available with reduced sail area for better handling when used by lower weight individuals under 185 lbs. The rudder and centerboard are solid varnished mahogany but recently fiberglass versions became available.

Racing

Fred Meno won the 2013 Force 5 North American Championship, which took place on Lake Lemon in Bloomington, Indiana, beating out 27 other boats in excellent race conditions. The 2014 Force 5 North American Championship will be held on Lake Huron in Port Huron, Michigan.

gollark: Oh, so it just does login and no actual sandboxing?
gollark: I'd like to see. Some offense, but I bet it either doesn't allow you the ability to write/run arbitrary code or doesn't work.
gollark: That's nice, but you still have to implement very complex sandboxing to *do* it.
gollark: The option #3 I suggested was to not have multiple users; just let the person using it edit everything and don't try some awful nonfunctional sandboxing implementation like you've made.
gollark: I mean, you could do that; that's option #1. It would be an awful solution. But you could.

References

  1. "SailboatData.com - FORCE 5 Sailboat". sailboatdata.com. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  2. "AMF/Alcort vintage sailboat ads". my2fish: a blog about sunfish sailing. 2012-01-17. Retrieved 2019-08-14.
  3. "Class Information". force5.us. Retrieved 2019-08-15.
  4. "WEEKS Service 1". www.force5sailboats.com. Retrieved 2019-08-15.

Weeks, Brian. An Introduction to Force 5 Sailing Weeks Yacht Yard, NY 1994

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.