Columbia Challenger 24

Description

The Columbia Challenger (also known as the Columbia 24 Challenger) is a compact, trailerable daysailer and weekender sailboat celebrated for its simplicity, seaworthiness, and value as an entry-level cruiser-racer. Designed by Joseph McGlasson as a raised-deck evolution of the Columbia 24, it was built by Columbia Yachts (a division of Glas Laminates) from 1963 to 1968, with approximately 534 units produced alongside its siblings (Columbia 24 and Contender 24). This masthead sloop features a fin keel, tiller steering, and a no-nonsense fiberglass hull derived from the earlier Islander 24, offering stable handling for beginners or families while competitive in light club racing. At 24 feet, it's lightweight (under 4,000 lbs), easily towed, and sleeps 2–4 in a cozy interior—ideal for coastal hops, lakes, or bay sailing. Columbia Yachts emerged in 1962 when Glas Laminates, a fiberglass pioneer in Southern California, partnered with designer Joseph McGlasson to adapt his wooden Catalina Islander into the molded Islander 24. To expand the lineup, Columbia created the Challenger as a raised-deck variant of the Columbia 24 hull, specifically to rival the popular Cal 20 on the West Coast—offering similar performance with added headroom and interior volume at a competitive price (~$3,000 new in 1964). The design retained the smooth-hulled mold (sans the Islander 24's faux-plank texture) and shared tooling with the trunk-cabin Contender 24, allowing efficient production. Built in Newport Beach, CA, the Challenger hit the market in 1963 and quickly gained traction for its affordability and racing pedigree, with early wins in SoCal regattas. Production totaled thousands across the 24-foot family (exact Challenger figures ~100–200), ending in 1968 as Columbia shifted to larger models like the 26T. LWL 18’0". Beam 8’0". Draft 3’4". Disp. 3930 Ballast 1800

Construction Details

Designer Joseph McGlasson
Length 24.330 ft
LOA 24.330 ft
LWL 18.000 ft
Beam 8.000 ft
Displacement 3930 lb
Max Draft 3.330 ft
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The standard boat dimensions

i 30.08 ft
j 9 ft
p 27 ft
e 11.33 ft
p2 -
e2 -

Blueprints

Sails

Sail Type MAINSAIL
Luff * 27 ft - (8230 mm)
Foot * 11.33 ft - (3453 mm)
Leech * 28.66 ft - (8736 mm)
Tack Angle * 88 °
Diagonal * 28.91 ft - (8812 mm)
Head (inches) * 5.25 in - (133 mm)
Area * 158.03 ft²
Sail Type JIBSAIL
Luff 26.75 ft - (8153 mm)
Foot 10.67 ft - (3252 mm)
Leech 24.67 ft - (7519 mm)
Percentage LP * 109.33 %
Length Perpendicular * 9.84 ft - (2999 mm)
Deck Angle * 6.1 °
Area * 131.6 ft²
Sail Type JIBSAIL
Luff 29.83 ft - (9092 mm)
Foot 9.5 ft - (2896 mm)
Leech 28.5 ft - (8687 mm)
Length Perpendicular 9.07 ft - (2765 mm)
Area 135.34 ft²
Sail Type GENOA
Luff 30.75 ft - (9373 mm)
Foot 14.08 ft - (4292 mm)
Leech 29.83 ft - (9092 mm)
Percentage LP * 149.56 %
Length Perpendicular * 13.46 ft - (4103 mm)
Deck Angle * 0.4 °
Area * 206.96 ft²
Sail Type SPINNAKER
MidGirth 16.21 ft - (4941 mm)
Foot * 16.2 ft - (4938 mm)
Perc LP * 180 %

Disclaimer. Boats are not all the same -- even when produced in the same factory of the same model. Sailrite does its best to publish accurate dimensions, but we often find it worthwhile to have our customers measure their boats carefully before we produce kits for them. You should take the same precautions, especially when the data is not from Sailrite.