Launch (boat)

A launch is an open motorboat.[1][2] The forward part of the launch may be covered. Prior to the era of engines on small craft, a launch was the largest boat carried on a sailing vessel, powered by sail or by oars. In competitive rowing, a launch is a motorized boat used by the coach during training.

1910 Mathis launch, 15 horsepower universal engine, at Saranac Lake, New York
An Iranian launch, used for fishing
Launches at river port in Dhaka

History

Originally a launch, or a long-boat, was the biggest boat carried by a warship or a merchant vessel in the age of sail.[3] The word comes from the Spanish lancha ("barge") and Portuguese, from Malay lancaran ("swift boat"), which in turn derived from lancar ("velocity without effort").[4]

In the age of sail, a ship carried a variety of boats of different sizes and used for different purposes. In addition to the launch, examples include the jolly boat, captain's gig, pinnace, and cutter. Distinctions among the smaller vessels were clear, both in design and purpose.[5] In the age of motorized ships, these distinctions of size and purpose have largely disappeared, but the terms continue in use.

During the Demak Sultanate attack on Portuguese Malacca of 1513, lancaran were used as armed troop transports for landing alongside penjajap and kelulus, as the Javanese junks were too large to approach shore.[6]

In the 18th century, a launch was used to set the large anchors on a ship. The launch of that era had a square transom and was about 24 feet long. In 1788 Captain Bligh was set adrift in Bounty’s launch.

Civilian use in the UK

On the River Thames the term "launch" is used to mean any motorised pleasure boat. The usage arises from the legislation[7] governing the management of the Thames and laying down the categories of boats and the tolls for which they were liable.

Military launches in the UK

Motor Launch was the designation for a type of vessel used in World War II by the Royal Navy and some other navies for inshore work defending the coast from submarines. They were typically 60-to-115-foot or 18-to-35-metre long and carried relatively light armament – a few depth charges, a gun and a few machine guns.

Sports

In competitive rowing the term "launch" is used to refer to any motorized boat used by the coach to follow practicing boats during workouts.

gollark: RTL-SDRs are also very cheap (£30, or less for slightly lower end models).
gollark: As far as I know there are already ones around for most of the easy to receive ones.
gollark: It's entry 2.93e36 on my "should probably do but don't" list.
gollark: Because the second one is apparently pretty practical with a cheap SDR and some antennas, I believe some people on here do it.
gollark: Do you mean actually meddle with them or just receive them?

See also

References

  1. "Launch (3) noun". Merriam Webster. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
  2. "Launch (2) noun". Oxford Dictionaries. Retrieved October 29, 2014.
  3. Young, Arthur; Brisbane, James (1863). Nautical Dictionary: Defining the Technical Language Relative to the Building and Equipment of Sailing Vessels and Steamers, Seamanship, Navigation, Nautical Astronomy, Naval Gunnery, Maritime Law and Commerce, General and Particular Average and Marine Insurance, and Other Terms Relating to Maritime Affairs ... Longman, Green, Longman, Roberts, & Green. pp. 44–45.
  4. Collins English Dictionary (Second ed.). London, Glasgow: Collins. 1986. p. 868. ISBN 0 00 433135-4.
  5. Folkard, Henry Coleman (1863). The Sailing Boat: a Treatise On English And Foreign Boats, Descriptive of the Various Forms of Boats And Sails of Every Nation; With Practical Directions for Sailing, Management. London: Longman, Green, and Roberts.
  6. Winstedt, Sir Richard (1962). A History of Malaya. Marican.
  7. Thames Conservancy Act 1932


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