Rolls-Royce Motor Cars PressClub · Article.
ROLLS-ROYCE PHANTOM: 100 YEARS OF PERFECTION
Tue Jan 14 09:54:00 CET 2025 Press Release
In 2025, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars marks the centenary of the launch of the first Phantom. Throughout its long history, the Phantom nameplate has been reserved for the pinnacle model in the marque’s portfolio – the very apex of excellence.
Press Contact.
Andrew Ball
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
Tel: +44-1243-384-064
send an e-mail
Author.
Andrew Ball
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
Downloads.
- Rolls-Royce Motor Cars celebrates the 100th anniversary of Phantom in 2025
- The marque’s pinnacle product and its most famous nameplate, now in its eighth generation
- An unparalleled motoring experience, uncompromised by other considerations
- The ultimate blank canvas for exquisite Bespoke commissions
“One hundred years ago, Rolls-Royce launched the first motor car
to bear what would become the most evocative and enduring nameplate
in its history: Phantom. Through eight generations, Phantom’s
fundamental role as the pinnacle Rolls-Royce motor car has always
been the same: to be the most magnificent, desirable and above all,
effortless motor car in the world – the very best of the best. In
many respects, the history of Phantom is the history of Rolls-Royce:
always moving with the times and its clients’ needs and
requirements, transcending fleeting trends and providing the setting
for the most remarkable executions of craft and artistry, all while
resolutely refusing to compromise its core engineering and design
principles. We’re proud to continue this tradition of excellence,
elegance and serenity into the next 100 years.”
Chris Brownridge, Chief Executive, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars
In 2025, Rolls-Royce Motor Cars marks the centenary
of the launch of the first Phantom. Throughout its long history, the
Phantom nameplate has been reserved for the pinnacle model in the
marque’s portfolio – the very apex of excellence.
Each iteration, up to and including the eighth generation
currently being handcrafted at the Home of Rolls-Royce at Goodwood,
has seen advances in design, engineering, materials and technology.
Today, Phantom is the ultimate blank canvas for Bespoke commissions,
where clients can bring their most elaborate, imaginative and personal
visions to life. Inspiration for Bespoke commissions is everywhere,
and Phantom’s scale, elegance, presence and adaptability enable it to
be whatever its owner wishes it to be. Recent inspirations include
haute couture (Phantom Syntopia), famous films (Phantom Goldfinger),
Chinese culture (Phantom Extended ‘Year of the Dragon’) and the
marque’s own Spirit of Ecstasy Mascot (Phantom Scintilla).
Phantom has always had the same fundamental aim: to provide the
most magnificent, desirable and, above all, effortless motor car in
the world – the very best of the best. At the start of Phantom’s
anniversary year, Rolls-Royce reveals the fascinating story behind its
pinnacle product, and how it earned – and maintained – that reputation
through a century of constant, often profound change.
A NEW BEGINNING
Rolls-Royce first earned the accolade of ‘the best
car in the world’ with the 40/50 H.P., universally known as the Silver
Ghost, launched in 1906. The key to its legendary reputation was Henry
Royce’s principle of constant improvement to its underlying
engineering, which he conducted on an almost chassis-by-chassis basis.
By 1921, Royce realised the Silver Ghost’s design was reaching
the point where no further developments would be possible without
compromising either smoothness or reliability – both by now essential
elements of the Rolls-Royce character and legend. He therefore began
work on its replacement.
“Rolls-Royce Ltd beg to announce that, after prolonged tests, they
can now demonstrate and accept orders for a new 40/50 H.P. chassis.
The 40/50 H.P. chassis hitherto manufactured by them will be sold as
before… The original chassis of this type was the famous Silver
Ghost, and to prevent confusion such chassis will be known as the
Silver Ghost model, whereas the new chassis will be known as the New Phantom.”
Original Advertisement from The Times Newspaper, Saturday 2
May 1925
Despite being couched in terms that today seem rather
quaint and stilted, this advertisement made history. It was the first
public acceptance by Rolls-Royce that the outgoing model would be
called Silver Ghost officially, rather than as a byname. More
significantly, it was the first recorded use of the Phantom name.
THE GAME OF THE NAME
Although there is no specific documentary evidence,
it seems safe to assume that the Phantom name was coined by
Rolls-Royce’s energetic and ever-inventive Commercial Managing
Director, Claude Johnson. It was he who recognised that naming the
company’s products could act as a sales device, and it was his fertile
imagination that produced the inspired sobriquet ‘Silver Ghost’ for
the otherwise prosaically titled 40/50 H.P. in 1907. That same year,
he christened another 40/50 H.P. ‘Green Phantom’, before bestowing the
rather more evocative ‘Silver Phantom’ on two examples in 1909.
Johnson clearly understood the power of names like Phantom,
Wraith and Ghost to convey the products’ supernatural quietness and
ethereal grace;
all have graced Rolls-Royce
motor cars in the modern era for precisely the same
reason. How different history would have been had
one of his more fanciful efforts – The Dreadnought, The Cookie, Yellow
Bird, The Elusive Pimpernel – been adopted instead.
THE BASIS FOR GREATNESS
The Times advertisement also assured readers the New Phantom
would retain the “sweet running qualities always associated with
Rolls-Royce products”. At this time, Rolls-Royce supplied only rolling
chassis, with the form, styling and appointment of the motor car
itself in the hands of independent coachbuilders, who created bespoke
bodywork to the owner’s specification. Rolls-Royce offered the New
Phantom in long-wheelbase form, suitable for formal saloon and
limousine designs, and with a shorter wheelbase ideal for owner-driver
motor cars with closed, open and ‘sportier’ coachwork.
Then as now, Phantom’s generous proportions enabled owners to
specify almost any detail or indulgence they wished. Some clients
asked for concealable writing desks or swivelling occasional seats in
their long-wheelbase limousines, while owner-drivers are known to have
requested safes, dedicated spaces to stow golf clubs and even, in one
famous instance, a secret compartment in which to carry diamonds.
On 8 May 1925, The Autocar magazine published its
review of the new model. “Few are the firms engaged in the manufacture
of motor cars who enjoy quite such a reputation as Rolls-Royce Ltd,”
it enthused. “Almost the conjoined names have become the household
word for luxury, and every novelist worthy of the name imparts a
distinguished air to any character by crediting him or her with the
possession of one of the firm’s cars.” With Phantom, Rolls-Royce had
clearly succeeded in not only maintaining, but furthering the
qualities established and made famous by the Silver Ghost.
ONWARDS AND UPWARDS
Though undoubtedly gratifying, such encomiums did not
distract Henry Royce. The design of the original New Phantom had
closely followed that of its predecessor, Silver Ghost – so closely,
in fact, that some modern enthusiasts refer to it as a ‘Super Ghost’.
Over the next four years, Royce continued to refine his design until,
in 1929, The Times carried a fresh advertisement announcing
the arrival of Phantom II. The advertisement listed all the
engineering improvements and upgraded components that justified its
designation as an entirely new model.
VIVE LA DIFFÉRENCE
Somewhat ironically, the only person who remained
unimpressed was Royce himself, who insisted that even the
short-wheelbase Phantom II was irritatingly oversized for his personal
use. He therefore instructed his design team to develop a more
compact, sporting Phantom II variant which he could enjoy driving
across France to his winter home at Le Canadel on the Côte d’Azur.
The designers dutifully produced a close-coupled car, 26EX –
‘EX’ standing for ‘Experimental’ – on an adapted short Phantom II
chassis. Records show that neither the Rolls-Royce sales department
nor the factory were keen on the concept; indeed, had it not been
intended as Royce’s personal transport, it might not have been built
at all.
As it transpired, a highly successful continental sales tour
demonstrated there was, in fact, great demand for a car capable of
high-speed touring over long distances on the smooth, straight roads
of Europe. Rolls-Royce successfully met this demand with the now
highly prized Phantom II Continental – perhaps the only pre-Goodwood
Phantom variant in which weight, wind resistance and other
performance-related factors were afforded equal consideration with
out-and-out passenger comfort.
A NEW POWER RISING
By the time of Royce’s death in 1933, the company was
already only too aware that luxury car customers were seeking models
that offered more power without sacrificing comfort or excellence.
American competitors including Cadillac, Lincoln and Packard were
responding with straight-8, V12 and even V16-cylinder engines, which
were rapidly eclipsing the large-horsepower, in-line six-cylinder
units that had served Rolls-Royce so well for so long.
Given this commercial pressure and the company’s proven
experience in designing and building aero-engines, it was inevitable
that the next Phantom would have a V12 engine. In accordance with
tradition, Phantom III’s arrival in 1936 was announced in The
Times, which informed the public that “many outstanding features
distinguish this car from its famous predecessor the Phantom II”.
Chief among these was the new engine, with 12 cylinders “giving
greater engine smoothness, flexibility, silence and acceleration” –
all key requirements for Rolls-Royce’s fabled effortless progress. The
new V12 engine was also more compact than the old straight-6, allowing
a shorter bonnet and larger passenger compartment. Most importantly,
however, it delivered the increased power customers demanded – 165
H.P. against the 120 H.P. of Phantom II, rising to 180 H.P. in later cars.
Comfort was further improved with independent front wheel
suspension. “This is particularly noticeable in the back seats under
all road conditions and is further enhanced by remarkable road holding
qualities and stability on corners even at high speeds”, the
advertisement noted, while Phantom III’s new chassis frame allowed for
wider, more comfortable back seats.
And it wasn’t just passengers who benefited. As the
advertisement pointed out, Phantom III made life more relaxing for
owner-drivers and chauffeurs, too, explaining: “A modification in the
position of the change-speed [gear lever] and brake levers gives easy
entrance to the driver’s seat from the offside… the steering is
lighter in operation, has a larger steering lock and the car is more
easily manoeuvred by reason of the shorter wheelbase.”
Phantom III was suited to all manner of coachwork styles, and
both owner-driver and chauffeured use. And while it was never able to
beat its American rivals on price, such was Rolls-Royce’s reputation
that it remained the only choice for those who wanted to experience
the greatest possible comfort and be seen to be driving the very best.
A CHANGING WORLD
The Phantom name had graced the very best of the best
cars in the world for some 14 years when war broke out in 1939.
Rolls-Royce ceased all motor car production, and when peace returned
in 1945, the company found itself in an entirely different world – but
one it had anticipated and prepared for.
Rolls-Royce had correctly foreseen that under post-war
austerity, it would need to make its motor cars less complex, easier
to service, much less expensive to produce and able to use common
parts. At the same time, it was adamant that there would be no
reduction in quality.
Its solution was the Rationalised Range, which debuted in 1946
with Silver Wraith. Its new straight-6-cylinder engine was a backward
step from the V12 engine of Phantom III, but relevant in straitened
times. There seemed to be no place in the modern world for Phantom.
A ROYAL INTERVENTION
The Phantom story might well have ended there, but
for two serendipitous events.
As part of the ongoing development process for the Rationalised
Range, engineers produced four experimental EX cars on a 229.5-inch
chassis with a straight-8 engine. One of these, fitted with a Park
Ward & Co. limousine body, was officially named Silver
Phantom (and unofficially known as Big Bertha). A
smaller, lighter saloon version, known as the Scalded Cat, followed.
At the same time, the Royal Household was seeking to replace its
ageing fleet of Daimlers – the marque it had favoured since the motor
car was invented – but was unhappy with the range then on offer.
In 1950, Rolls-Royce was asked to supply a formal limousine for
Royal duties. The company had long been keen to usurp Daimler in the
Royal Mews, and gladly produced a ‘one-off’ straight-8 long-chassis
limousine with coachwork by H. J. Mulliner. During manufacture, the
car was given the codename Maharajah, and remains in active
service at the Royal Mews under that name to this day.
When requests for similar motor cars followed from other Royalty
and Heads of State, Rolls-Royce was happy to oblige. The company
decided it would be fitting that for such prestigious cars to
resurrect the Phantom name. Over the next seven years, the marque
produced just 18 examples of Phantom IV, including a second motor car
for the Royal Mews, a landaulette named Jubilee, delivered in 1954.
THE LAST HURRAH
The pinnacle Rolls-Royce experience became somewhat
more widely available once again in 1959 with the launch of Phantom V
– a splendid limousine fitted with coachwork by both the marque’s
in-house coachbuilder, Park Ward & Co., and other independent
companies, including James Young Ltd and H. J. Mulliner & Co.
(Rolls-Royce would go on to acquire the latter, merging it with their
own coachbuilder to form Mulliner Park Ward). Two motor cars, known as
Canberra I and Canberra II, were built for Royal
service, featuring transparent Perspex cupolas over the rear
compartments and concealed lighting to better view the occupants on
formal occasions.
After 13 years and 832 examples, Phantom V had received enough
technical upgrades to be designated as Phantom VI. As with all its
forebears, this new iteration prioritised comfort, with separate air
conditioning systems for the front and rear compartments. Most of the
374 examples were limousines with coachwork by in-house Mulliner Park
Ward Ltd., or James Young Ltd.: the last Phantom VI, a landaulette,
was delivered to the Sultan of Brunei in 1993.
Phantom VI was the final body-on-chassis model Rolls-Royce ever
produced, and its discontinuation effectively ended the tradition of
coachbuilding until it was revived at Goodwood in 2017 with ‘Sweptail’.
PHANTOM REBORN
When the marque was relaunched at the new Home of
Rolls-Royce at Goodwood, a ‘Phantom-type’ model quickly emerged as the
natural and obvious choice for its inaugural motor car. The design
concept, for which legendary Rolls-Royce designer John Blatchley was
consulted and of which he approved, included signature elements
inherited from previous generations. These included a long wheelbase
with the front wheels well to the fore and a minimal front overhang of
the bodywork, a long bonnet comprised of a massive expanse of metal
along the side, and a rising sweep of the door edge towards the front
windscreen pillars.
Rolls-Royce Motor Cars’ first Design Director of the Goodwood
era, Ian Cameron, formed a specific team to create the interior design
for the much-anticipated new model. Their remit was to express the
ambience of past Phantoms and the traditional high-quality materials
of coachbuilding – leather, wood, deep-pile carpeting – in a totally
up-to-date way.
At one minute past midnight, on 1 January 2003, the first
Phantom VII was handed over to its new owner. Unlike every Phantom
that had gone before, it was built entirely in-house by Rolls-Royce
Motor Cars, with spaceframe bodywork to a single design rather than
coachbuilt. In one important sense, however, it retained a link with
its heritage, in that every motor car was hand-built by a team of
skilled craftspeople. Furthermore, the marque’s Bespoke programme
meant Phantom was effectively a blank canvas on which patrons could
realise their own visions and desires.
THE EVOLUTION CONTINUES
Over its 13-year lifespan, Phantom VII cemented
Rolls-Royce as the world’s pre-eminent super luxury motor
manufacturer, and its own place as the marque’s pinnacle product. But
just like their predecessors, Rolls-Royce’s designers and engineers
understood that perfection is a moving target: that Phantom was never ‘finished’.
In 2017, Rolls-Royce presented Phantom VIII. This was the first
Rolls-Royce to be built on the Architecture of Luxury, an advance on
the all-aluminium spaceframe used on Phantom VII, and designed to
underpin every future motor car produced at Goodwood.
Phantom VIII was specifically designed to be the ultimate canvas
for Bespoke commissions. With this in mind, it is the only Rolls-Royce
model to feature the Gallery – an uninterrupted swathe of glass that
runs the full width of the fascia, behind which the client can display
a commissioned work of art or design.
This singular focus has made Phantom the subject of some of the
most technically ambitious and challenging Bespoke projects ever
undertaken by the marque’s designers, engineers and specialist
craftspeople. Commissions such as Phantom Syntopia, Phantom Oribe,
Phantom Koa and Phantom ‘Inspired by Cinque Terre’ all incorporate
features, materials and engineering innovations never seen before in a
Rolls-Royce or any other motor car. Each is a unique, one-of-one
creation that will never be repeated, echoing the very first Phantoms
that were individually hand-built for their commissioning owners.
THE ESSENCE OF PHANTOM
For 100 years, the Phantom name has occupied a unique
position in the Rolls-Royce product family and story. While the
standards of quality, engineering and design are consistent across all
Rolls-Royce motor cars, Phantom has always been the grandest, most
impressive and, above all, most effortless motor car being built in
series production by the marque at any given moment.
Through all its eight generations, Phantom has never been
compromised by existing engineering orthodoxy, fleeting trends or
development costs. From Henry Royce’s original New Phantom to today’s
Phantom VIII, the essential purpose behind Phantom has always remained
the same: to build the motor car that offers owner-drivers and
passengers alike the most comfortable, satisfying experience available
in the world at that moment in time – the unassailable pinnacle of
luxury and motoring excellence.
CO2 EMISSIONS & CONSUMPTION.
Phantom Series II: NEDC combined: CO2 emissions: 345 g/km; Fuel consumption: 18.7 mpg / 15.1 l/100km. WLTP combined: CO2 emissions: 351-362 g/km; Fuel consumption: 17.7-18.2 mpg / 15.5-16.0 l/100km. Phantom Extended Series II: NEDC combined: CO2 emissions: 345 g/km; Fuel consumption: 18.7 mpg / 15.1 l/100km. WLTP combined: CO2 emissions: 353-365 g/km; Fuel consumption: 17.4-18.1 mpg / 15.6-16.2 l/100km. Further information: https://bit.ly/3XtQW7q