Bullet Bob Schroeder returning to the pits in U-54 Wildroot Charlie. The white boat in the foreground is my Uncle Ray DeGlopper in his Eby & DeGlopper Marine dealership committee boat.
Bill DeGlopper
Fiberglass Hydros
Four different hydroplane builders pulled a few fiberglass inboard hydros out of their molds back in the day. Click to see/read the story. Perhaps this could have been a neat way to start a stock or modified class that would have been very competitive if you had a field of a dozen boats and everyone of them was the same boat and motor combination?
Modified hulls
APBA rules did not allow any apparatus (like an extended cowling) that could be simply bolted on the boat to meet the legal class minimum boat lengths (LOA) required. A boat or two tried that and it was soon outlawed so the wood hulls were cut and modified so they could compete in the next class up. If you look at all of these boats, something just doesn’t seem right. Regardless of how they looked, some were very competitive moving up in class at the time. There are even a few instances were boats moved down in their class and became successful. Click here to read/see a few hydroplane hulls that were extended
HORNET(S)
Story of Marion Cooper and Jim Davis and some of the hydros that they both campaigned under their ownership as HORNET.
Chiro III F-89, High Winder F-71, Miss Ottawa F-53 and Chevrolier F-222, Chiro Too F-93 and High Winder II, N-71
In the 1950s, Mitch ‘Doc J’ and Mitch Jabczenski, Sr. were Chiropractors in the Detroit area and were very active in hydroplane racing. The father and son team purchased two hydros: a 266 class Lauterbach (photo above) and the other hydro was a Les Stadaucher built 266 hull, using Ted Jones plans from their friend, Bill Muncey. They campaigned both boats together under the names, Chiro Too and Chiro III for a few years.
Interestingly, both boats were sold to Ed Morgan and he campaigned them under the names: High Winder and High Winder II. He later sold the Lauterbach, but kept the Stadaucher/Jones and it was converted to a 225 (N) class and went on to be very successful boat earning two National High Point Championships and setting a competition speed record.
The Lauterbach was sold and a couple of years later, it had the misfortune of hitting a submerged log in Madison 1963, Phil Kunz and another photographer caught the entire flip.
Together both boats had interesting Owners, Drivers, and racing careers: Read the story on the Stadaucher/Jones hull here and read the story on the Lauterbach hull here.