Phantom 14 Explained

Phantom 14
Designer:Jack Howie
Location:United States
Year:1977
No Built:9,000
Builder:Howmar Boats
Role:Racer
Draft:2.83feet with daggerboard down
Displacement:1200NaN0
Hull Type:Monohull
Construction:Fiberglass
Loa:14.21feet
Lwl:10.5feet
Beam:4.42feet
Keel Type:daggerboard
Rudder Type:transom-mounted rudder
Rig Type:Lateen rig
Sailplan:Lateen
Sailarea Main:84.5square feet
Sailarea Total:84.5square feet
D-Pn:103.7

The Phantom 14 is an American sailing dinghy that was designed by Jack Howie as a racer and first built in 1977. It is a board sailboat, similar to the Sunfish.[1] [2]

Production

The design was built by Howmar Boats in Edison, New Jersey, United States from 1977 until the company went out of business in 1983. A total of 9,000 boats were completed, but it is now out of production.[1] [2] [3]

Design

The Phantom 14 is a recreational sailboat, built predominantly of fiberglass. It has a Lateen rig, a raked stem, a vertical transom, a transom-hung rudder controlled by a tiller and a retractable daggerboard. It displaces 1200NaN0.[1] [2]

The boat has a draft of 2.83feet with the daggerboard extended and 0.31feet with it retracted, allowing beaching or ground transportation on a trailer or car roof rack.[1]

The design uses sail sleeves, with the hard-coated aluminum spars inserted into the sleeves to rig the boat. This results in less aerodynamic drag and creates an even sail shape. The boat is equipped with hiking straps and has a storage compartment in the cockpit. The hull has a high bow design and molded in coaming to reduce the submarining of the bow that is common with "board boats". The sail halyard is routed through the coaming.[2]

The design has a Portsmouth Yardstick racing average handicap of 103.7 (suspect) and is normally raced by one sailor.[2]

See also

Similar sailboats

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Phantom 14 sailboat . 23 July 2020. McArthur. Bruce . sailboatdata.com. 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200705104139/https://sailboatdata.com/sailboat/phantom-14-howmar. 5 July 2020. live.
  2. Sherwood, Richard M.: A Field Guide to Sailboats of North America, Second Edition, pages 42-43. Houghton Mifflin Company, 1994.
  3. Web site: Howmar Boats Inc.. 23 July 2020. McArthur. Bruce . sailboatdata.com. 2020. https://web.archive.org/web/20200704045729/https://sailboatdata.com/builder/howmar-boats-inc. 4 July 2020. live.