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Laser 4.7

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Class Symbol
Class symbol
Laser 4.7
Development
RoleJunior development class
Boat
Crew1
Draft0.787 m (2 ft 7.0 in)
Hull
ConstructionFiberglass
Hull weight58.97 kg (130.0 lb)
LOA4.2 m (13 ft 9 in)
LWL3.81 m (12 ft 6 in)
Beam1.39 m (4 ft 7 in)
Sails
Mainsail area4.7 m2 (51 sq ft)
Racing
D-PN95.4[1]
RYA PN1175[2]

The Laser 4.7 or ILCA 4 is a one-design dinghy class in the Laser series and is a one-design class of sailboat. All Lasers are built to the same specifications. The Laser is 4.06 m (13 ft 10 in) long, with a waterline length of 3.81 m (12 ft 6 in). The hull weight is 59 kg (130 lb). The boat is manufactured by ILCA and World Sailing approved builders.

Lasers are cat-rigged, meaning they have only one sail. The 4.7 uses the same hull and top mast section as the Laser, but has a different, shorter bottom mast section as well as a smaller sail. The bottom mast section is pre-bent which effectively reduces the power of the rig, and the sail is only 4.7 square meters, as opposed to 7 for the Laser Standard or 5.7 for the Laser Radial. (ILCA 6) The smaller sail means that the 4.7 can be easily sailed by sailors weighing only 50–65 kg (110–145 lb), though this boat can still be sailed competitively at all levels under and over the ideal weights.[3][4]

Description

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The Laser 4.7 has been increasing in popularity around the world since the late 1990s. In some areas it is less popular than the Byte dinghy, a very similar class also designed as a youth single-handed racing trainer, but the interchangeability of the rigs of the Laser series has always made them popular. It is popular among youth sailors graduating from the Optimist sailing dinghy and also the Topper (dinghy), and many 4.7 sailors graduate to the Laser Radial (ILCA 6) as they progress their sailing abilitie and size. The Laser 4.7 is also sailed widely at a club level as the smaller rig suits the more inexperienced sailors.

Events

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World Championships

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Boys

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Gold Silver Bronze Ref.
2002 Muiderzand  Tonči Stipanović (CRO)  Daniel Mihelic (CRO)  Colin Robaard (NED)
2003 Çeşme  Onur Derebaşı (TUR)  Ateş Çınar (TUR)  Mustafa Çakır (TUR)
2004 Riva del Garda  Justin Onvlee (RSA)  Mathieu Frei (FRA)  Ivo Kalebić (CRO)
2005 Barrington  Joaquín Blanco (ESP)  Adam Sims (GBR)  Dany Stanišić (SLO)
2006 Hourtin  Colin Cheng (SIN)  Viktor Serrezhkin (RUS)  Marko Pereša (CRO)
2007 Hermanus  Filip Matika (CRO)  Baepi Pinna (BRA)  Alexander Zimmerman (PER)
2008 Trogir  Shahar Jacob (ISR)  Scott Sydney (SIN)  Lovre Perhat (CRO)
2009 Búzios  Jonathan Martinetti (ECU)  Hermann Tomasgaard (NOR)  Juraj Divjakinja (CRO)
2010 Pattaya  Etienne Le Pen (FRA)  Supakorn Pongwichean (THA)  Jolbert van Dijk (NED)
2011 San Francisco  Francisco González (ESP)  Carlos Roselló (ESP)  William De Smedt (BEL)
2012 Buenos Aires  Benjamin Vadnai (HUN)  Nahuel Pérez (ESP)  Maximilian Kuester (ITA)
2013 Balatonfüred  Anıl Çetin (TUR)  Jonatán Vadnai (HUN)  Conor Nicholas (AUS)
2014 Karatsu  Alexandre Boite (FRA)  Ismael Less (ESP)  Federico Fornasari (ITA)
2015 Medemblik  Alejandro Bethencourt (ESP)  Rafael de la Hoz (ESP)  Guido Gallinaro (ITA)
2016 Kiel  Dimitrios Papadimtriou (GRE)  Guido Gallinaro (ITA)  Pere Ponsetti (ESP)
2017 Nieuwpoort  Yılkan Timurşah (TUR)  Sofiane Karim (FRA)  Cesare Barabino (ITA) [5]
2018 Gdynia  Daniel Hung (SGP)  Michael Compton (AUS)  Stefano Viale (PER) [6]
2019  Niccolo Nordera (ITA)  Roko Stipanović (CRO)  Gašper Strahovnik (SLO)
2020 Garda Cancelled due to COVID-19
2021 Dún Laoghaire  Mārtiņš Atilla (LAT)  Alexandros Eleftheriadis (GRE)  Massimiliano Antoniazzi (ITA) [7]
2022 Vilamoura  Nicoló Cassitta (ITA)  Dionysios Kalpogiannakis (GRE)  Max Frank (NED) [8]
2024 Viana do Castelo  Carlos Charabati (CAN)  Josip Tafra (CRO)  Ali Poyraz Özdemir (TUR) [9]

Girls

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Gold Silver Bronze
2002 Muiderzand  Tugçe Subasi (TUR)  Céline Olivon (FRA)  Mandy Mulder (NED)
2003 Çeşme  Ayda Ünver (TUR)  Anita di Iasio (ITA)  Didem Şarman (TUR)
2004 Riva del Garda  Anita di Iasio (ITA)  Tina Mihelić (CRO)  Cansın Karga (TUR)
2005 Barrington  Stephanie Roble (USA)  Annie Haeger (USA)  Cecilia Aragão (BRA)
2006 Hourtin  Victoria Chan (SIN)  Agnieszka Skrzypulec (POL)  Julie Chehab (FRA)
2007 Hermanus  Tatjana Ganić (CRO)  Ewa Makowska (POL)  Lina Stock (CRO)
2008 Trogir  Elizabeth Yin (SIN)  Matea Senkić (CRO)  Ante Kordić (CRO)
2009 Búzios  Urška Košir (SLO)  Tomoyo Wakabayashi (JPN)  Hitomi Murayama (JPN)
2010 Pattaya  Caitlin Elks (AUS)  Amirah Hamid Nur (MAS)  Jacob Oren (ISR)
2011 San Francisco  Cecilia Zorzi (ITA)  Kim Pletikos (SLO)  Line Flem Höst (NOR)
2012 Buenos Aires  Celine Therese Herud (NOR)  Yolanda González (ESP)  Anja Hamerlitz (CRO)
2013 Balatonfüred  Silvia Morales (ESP)  Magdalena Kwaśna (POL)  Sofia Capparuccini (ITA)
2014 Karatsu  Asya Luvisetto (SUI)  Irene Miras (ESP)  Francesca Bergamo (ITA)
2015 Medemblik  Kateryna Gumenko (UKR)  Julia Büsselberg (GER)  Isaura Maenhaut (BEL)
2016 Kiel  Emma Savelon (NED)  Mariia Kislukhina (RUS)  Elisa Navoni (ITA)
2017 Nieuwpoort[10]  Federica Cattarozzi (ITA)  Giorgia Cingolani (ITA)  Anna Moncada (ESP)
2018 Gdynia[11]  Chiara Benini (ITA)  Simone Chen (SGP)  Giorgia Cingolani (ITA)
2024 Viana do Castelo[12]  Hieke Schraffordt (NED)  Féline van Ede (NED)  Katrina Micallef (MLT)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Centerboard Classes". US Sailing. Archived from the original on 15 March 2012. Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  2. ^ "Portsmouth Number List 2012". Royal Yachting Association. Retrieved 31 July 2012.
  3. ^ "LaserPerformance - Home". Archived from the original on 2014-04-04. Retrieved 2014-04-19.
  4. ^ "Home - ILCA North America". laser.org.
  5. ^ "2017 Laser 4.7 Youth World Championships – Final Results BOYS Nieuwpoort, Belgium".
  6. ^ "Unknown".[permanent dead link]
  7. ^ "2021 ILCA 4 Youth World Championship - Boys Division Dun Laoghaire, Ireland".
  8. ^ "vilamourasailing.sailti.com". vilamourasailing.sailti.com.
  9. ^ vilamourasailing.sailti.com https://vilamourasailing.sailti.com/en/default/races/race-resultsall/text/2024-ilca-4-youth-world-championship-en/menuaction/race. {{cite web}}: Missing or empty |title= (help)
  10. ^ "2017 Laser 4.7 Youth World Championships – Final Results GIRLS Nieuwpoort, Belgium".
  11. ^ "Unknown".[permanent dead link]
  12. ^ "2024 ILCA 4 Youth World Championships – Final Results Girls".
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