Sailing gold for Britons
Iain Percy and Andrew Simpson continued Britain's impressive sailing campaign when they won gold in the Star class.
The pair came home in fifth place in their medal race but with Sweden finishing behind them it was enough to secure the gold medal in the final event of the sailing discipline.
It was Team GB's fourth gold medal - and sixth overall - to make them the top country in the regatta.
Percy: Win means so much
Iain Percy revealed winning an Olympic gold medal alongside Andrew Simpson made the achievement "more special".
The pair capped off a superb sailing campaign for Great Britain - a six-medal haul which contained four golds - by winning the Star class.
A jubilant Percy told Five Live: "I'm doing it with my best mate of 25 years. To cross the line after all we've been through adds so much more to it."
Simpson: Never any doubt
Andrew Simpson insisted there was never any doubt in his mind that he and Iain Percy would win sailing's Star class.
The Britons entered the medal race two points behind Sweden and knew they only had to finish ahead of their rivals to top the podium - which they did.
Simpson told Five Live: "We knew we'd win because we wanted it more than anyone else. It's a fantastic feeling. There's no words to describe it."
Park hails display
Great Britain sailing manager Stephen Park has hailed his team's stunning display in China, their greatest Olympic sailing success in a century.
Iain Percy and Andrew Simpson completed a memorable regatta by winning the Star class to take the team's medal haul to six, four of which are gold.
Park said: "It's absolutely fantastic, I'm over the moon - the gold for the Stars is the icing on the cake."
Consolation for Brits
Leigh McMillan and Will Howden gained some consolation at the end of a disappointing campaign in the Tornado class by winning the medal race.
The British pair took the lead before the halfway mark and never looked back, finishing 14 seconds ahead of Canada, to finish sixth overall.
Spain finished fourth in the race to secure the gold, with Australia taking silver and Argentina the bronze.
Double bid for Brabants
Tim Brabants will make a double bid for kayak gold this weekend after squeezing into the final of the men's K1 500m.
The Chertsey 31-year-old, who will also compete in his favoured K1 1000m final, grabbed the final slot after finishing behind Steven Ferguson of New Zealand, and Anders Gustafsson of Sweden.
He said: "This has been a successful bit of water for us over the last two weeks. It's time for me to do my part."
Wainwright into semis
Great Britain's Lucy Wainwright followed the lead of men's counterpart Tim Brabants by advancing to the semi-finals in the women's 500m K1.
The 30-year-old, based in Nottingham, trailed home in second in her heat behind winner Inna Osypenko-Radomska in a time of 1min 52.580sec, just over a second adrift of the Ukrainian.
South African Jennifer Hodson was the final qualifier from the race in third.