Typhoon
In 1928 the stock market hit its dizziest upward
spiral, Al Smith was defeated for the presidency, the first
all-talking motion picture was shown at the Strand Theatre in New
York, the Graf Zeppelin flew around the world, Henry J. Gielow
designed "the largest diesel yacht in the world," the 294
foot Savarona, and a youngster named Nina swept her class in the
ocean race to Spain.
Inspired by the excitement and affluence of this last year of the
Jazz Age, and no less by Gar Wood's incredible feat of both setting
a world's speed record of 92.838 mph and keeping the British
International Trophy in America, all while racing a boat he took but
three weeks to build, the desire for elegance and power reached its
peak among boatmen.
Thus was born Typhoon, with lines running back to the great power
racing days of the early part of the century, yet reaching ahead to
the stark and demanding days of the as-yet only horizonal WW II.
An instrument panel reminiscent of an aircraft is
a telltale indication of Typhoon's impressive and complex power
plant and electrical system, worthy of an ocean going yacht. A
sometimes troubled lady from an era when boating was still a wealthy
man's sport, Typhoon returns to a former glory under work by a
doting restoration crew.
Designed by George W. Crouch, whose three-point
suspension hydroplane, Cinderella revolutionized early speedboat
racing, and whose ideas for a motor torpedo boat were later
incorporated into H. Scott-Paine's PT boat designs, Typhoon was
built for Edsel Ford to be used for commuting between his home and
the Ford plant on the Detroit River. The 40 foot runabout was
constructed at the Henry B. Nevins Shipyard, City Island, New York,
where Crouch, who died in 1959 was design consultant, reportedly for
over $70,000. Estimates of her replacement cost today run upward of
$100,000.
Typhoon took her name from the original engine, a 600 hp, 12
cylinder Wright Typhoon aircraft engine, designed initially for a
dirigible. This power plant was carried in a lacquered African
mahogany hull which was double planked forward, single planked aft,
had seven feet, eight inches of beam and was pointed at both stern
and bow. She had three broad seats, two forward and one aft of the
amidship engine well.
Typhoon's experience was no less troubled than the
times which gave her birth. Ford, reportedly told by his doctors
that the powerful boat was a threat to his health, announced
the craft for sale in the September, 1934 Motor Boating. The half
page ad gave the barest of specifications and the accompanying
photograph showed her dead in the water, looking deceptively meek.
The boat had several subsequent owners in and around Chicago, among
them the racer, Joseph Van Blerck Jr., but generally spent more time
out of the water than in. From time to time her power plant was
changed. At one point an Allison aircraft engine with marine
conversion was put in, another owner installed a V12 Hall Scott
Defender which developed 650 hp at 2200 rpm and weighed an
incredible 4300 pounds.
Late
in 1961, motor boating enthusiast George Babcock of Puritan Cordage
Mills, Louisville, Kentucky., found the boat in the Henry G. Grebe
storage yard in Chicago, where it had lain for five years. Deciding
to bring Typhoon back to life, Babcock shipped her home, where
restoration was begun in May 1962. The Hall Scott
"collapsed" after fifteen minutes of operation, so Babcock
and his seven-man crew replaced it with an aluminum, 3000 pound V-12
Packard W-14, a 2500 cubic inch marine engine developing 1500 hp at
2500 rpm. Ironically, this engine was built for the same PT boats
which were inspired in part by Typhoon's designer.
The Packard came complete with a 604 page manual, restricted
information in 1944 when the government paid $19,000 each for the
engines, three of which were used on each PT boat. Finding no
hydraulic system with enough "travel," Babcock paid $50
for an original government cost $1400 surplus eight ton GM actuator,
built to raise and lower the nose carriage of cargo planes, and uses
it to operate the reverse gear actuating arm on his Packard.
Finding the hull sound but in need of refinishing, and the
electrical system and accessories deteriorated, Babcock had the
entire boat revarnished inside and out, replacing the windshields,
seats and cushioning, and installing a rather impressive new
instrument panel and a complete complement of electronic equipment.
All in all Babcock estimates that more than 5000 working hours have
gone into Typhoon, with more engine adjustment yet to come before
the Packard can be opened to full throttle. Top speed, he says,
should be about 70 mph, consuming nearly 125 gallons of 100 octane
gasoline per hour, drawn from two 120 gallon tanks. So far, Typhoon
has reportedly cost nearly $20,000 to restore or about one fifth of
her replacement cost.
Launched in October last year near Louisville, the graceful
powerhouse had to be towed one mile away from the launch site before
being started in order to get away from the hundreds of small boats
whose awed skippers maneuvered for a closer look.
Present plans for this survivor from an era when a
runabout could, and in this case did, mean something far
different than it does today, call for the kind of attention Typhoon
has long merited but infrequently received --- a series of special
appearances at boat shows and regattas where there will be nothing,
absolutely nothing, quite like her.
-ROBERT L. MAYALL
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