Blaze (dinghy)

Blaze

Class symbol

Helmed by Paul Hemsley
Boat
Crew 1
Hull
Hull weight 72 kg
LOA 4.20 m
Beam 2.48 m
Rig
Mast Length 6.5 m
Sails
Mainsail area 10.0 m2
Misc
RYA PN 1032[1]

The Blaze was designed in the mid-90's by Ian Howlett, one time International 14 designer and associated with Americas Cup design work and John Caig, winner of Fireball Worlds. It is a powerful winged single-hander with well-developed 10 m2 sail. Unusually in recent performance designs both foils are pivoting enabling the centreboard to be adjusted from the wing as well making it particularly suitable for estuaries and shallow lakes.

Development

The Blaze was originally built by Ian Howlett and John Caig, and marketed by Topper International from 1996. In 2000 an active class association ran a sail development program to produce a more responsive sail, dropping some of the excessive leech of the original that proved 'difficult' in any real breeze for many helms. The slight loss in area was countered by a more efficient sail and balanced handling characteristics, and the class rapidly adopted the sail with numbers raced and sold rising very rapidly. In 2006 Topper moved out of performance composite boats and the manufacturing and marketing rights transferred to Cirrus Raceboats (www.cirrusrace.com) who have refined the boat further and work with Rondar to produce the current boat. As of November 2007 there are just under 250 registered boats.

Since 2012 White Formula have been producing the Blaze. White Formula were the original builders, building all Topper International boats.

Area

The Blaze class is concentrated in the UK but there are boats in many other countries. Under the guidance of the Class Association the Blaze has developed an almost cult following and there are plans to pro-actively develop fleets in other countries.

References

  1. "Portsmouth Number List 2013" (PDF). Royal Yachting Association. Retrieved 31 July 2013.

Related Links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 1/7/2014. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.