rating rule

yachting
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rating rule, in yacht racing, rule used to classify sailing yachts of different designs to enable them to compete on relatively equal terms. The competition may be either among yachts in a particular rating class or on a handicap basis, with the highest-rated boat giving up time allowances to all lower-rated craft in a contest. Such rules are based on measurement formulas that take into account a yacht’s length, beam, displacement, sail area, and other design factors that affect its potential speed.

Early rating rules emphasized a yacht’s sail area and waterline length. To take advantage of these rules, flat-bodied hulls were developed with long overhangs and light displacement; the resulting skimming-dish type was exemplified in the defender of the America’s Cup of 1903, the Reliance, which had overhangs totaling more than 50 feet (15 m) on a waterline length of about 90 feet (27 m). The Universal Rule, adopted in 1905 in the United States and later internationally, retained length and sail area as chief factors but also imposed penalties on overhangs, draft, freeboard, and other dimensions. It established letter classes, such as the J-Class that was used in the America’s Cup competition in the 1930s.

Metric classes were created by the International Rule, adopted in 1906, which was more complex than the Universal Rule but retained many of its factors. In the late 1920s the 6-, 8-, and 12-Metre International Rule classes became popular. The 12-Metre-class yachts were used in a revival of the America’s Cup competition beginning in 1958, but most other rating classes were inactive after World War II, having been superseded by the smaller, more economical one-design classes (in which all competing boats are built to the same measurements).

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Long-distance ocean races continued to be conducted on a handicap basis, primarily under the Cruising Club of America (CCA) and the Royal Ocean Racing Club (RORC) measurement rules after the 1930s. The major international races of 1970 were the first run under a new International Offshore Racing Rule that combined aspects of both CCA and RORC rules.