US Sabot
| Development | |
|---|---|
| Designer | Charles McGregor | 
| Location | United States | 
| Year | 1939 | 
| Builder(s) | W. D. Schock Corp Catalina Yachts  | 
| Role | One-design racing Sailing dinghy | 
| Name | US Sabot | 
| Boat | |
| Crew | One | 
| Displacement | 68 lb (31 kg) | 
| Draft | 1.30 ft (0.40 m) with daggerboard down | 
| Hull | |
| Type | monohull | 
| Construction | Plywood or fiberglass | 
| LOA | 8.00 ft (2.44 m) | 
| Beam | 3.83 ft (1.17 m) | 
| Hull appendages | |
| Keel/board type | daggerboard | 
| Rudder(s) | transom-mounted rudder | 
| Rig | |
| Rig type | Bermuda rig | 
| Sails | |
| Sailplan | catboat | 
| Mainsail area | 38.00 sq ft (3.530 m2) | 
| Total sail area | 38.00 sq ft (3.530 m2) | 
The US Sabot is an American pram sailboat that was designed by Charles McGregor as a one-design racer and first built in 1939.
The design is a development of McGregor's Sabot, based upon the plans published in The Rudder magazine in 1939. The basic Sabot design has been widely adapted and other derivations include the leeboard-equipped Naples Sabot, as well as the daggerboard-equipped El Toro, Wind'ard Sabot and the Australian Holdfast Trainer.