Miss U.S.

George, JJ and I have been busy working on U 36 since our last outing at Buffalo last September. In the past four months we have made numerous changes and modifications to the boat to improve the performance of the old girl in general, particularly performance on the one mile courses which seem to be common on the vintage circuit. Last year the best we were able to see on RPM was about 2800 at 52 inches of manifold. Calculated max speed was in the 130’s at Buffalo with these power numbers. Even so she put on a pretty good show at Buffalo but she appeared heavy and had some difficulty flying as she should.

To make her better, for starters we have replaced the original WW2 oil cooler with a modern San Juan unit which will save about 70 pounds in the nose. We also have removed the alternator system which will reduce the weight in the nose by another twenty pounds. At Chamberlain and Buffalo she was nearly full of fuel which with the one hundred gallon capacity tanks was six hundred pounds of fuel we were lugging around. We will be cutting that amount by half or to about fifty gallons for each session, another 300 pounds out of the hull.

Additionally, due to a leak in the intake system pop off valve we were not able to attain manifold pressure beyond the fifty two inch level at Buffalo This pop off was something someone added sometime in the engines past. It seemed like a good idea so we retained it in 2012 but have now eliminated it returning to the original stock manifold which should raise the blower pressure, torque and horsepower. We know that the Allison is prone to backfires and damage to the blower housing so we will have to be careful to not allow backfires from this point forward.

We also discovered a problem with the intake annulus which was improperly installed causing a mis-direction of the fuel/air mixture in the intake manifolds. We think this contributed to the over rich condition on the starboard cylinder bank as can be seen in the videos as the boat comes off of the turns. We also discovered the gasket under the carburetor had no vent hole for the injector nozzle. We’re not sure what affect that had last year but it certainly affected something and has now been corrected.

The forward half of the cockpit floor has been lowered three inches allowing the throttle pedal to the moved ahead almost a foot. This will make things much more comfortable for the driver and also allow him to sit closer to the wheel which will provide better mechanical advantage and better control thru the arm muscles.

George designed and installed a new mixture setup which incorporates the control stick handle from a military aircraft. The gun trigger function will now activate the starter and one red button will activate the primer system. To have redundancy in the start system we will also retain the original start/mag rotary switch and primer toggle on the panel. A panel toggle switch will allow activation or deactivation of the booster coil function. We will be trying both settings to see how she best fires up out of the water prop unloaded and in water with a load.

This past weekend George and I displayed the boat at the Lincoln, Nebraska boat show. It was a huge success with over twenty thousand attending the 3 day event. That’s an excellent turnout for Lincoln, Nebraska. We had many interested people stopping by to see the boat, view the videos and ask many questions. At one point I counted fifteen people in our booth and four more on the back, bottom side. Many were fascinated with the propeller and its relative small size. I have attached a few shots of the show above for your perusal.

The boat is ready to go and we are thinking about attending the Tavares, Florida event next month. As you can imagine it is an expensive deal to tow down there and back from Nebraska and we are hopeful of some sponsorship to help with those and other costs. If you know of anyone wanting their company name on Miss U.S., have them contact me. We will appreciate it. Hopefully will see at least some of you in Florida in a few weeks.

Best Regards to all,
Jay Armstrong

Miss  U S Lincoln 2013 Boat Show

Miss US Lincoln 2013 Boat Show

Soap Lake Hydroplane Regatta returning

Published on Feb 6, 2013

SOAP LAKE (VIDEO) – While it may be months away, excitement is already building behind a boat race that’s been grounded for the past three decades — the Soap Lake Hydroplane Regatta. Vintage hydroplanes will also be on the schedule and in attendance.

Outboard racing in the 1940s

Hellzapoppin II

Now here’s an interesting Gold Cup boat that has been stored for 50 years & recently acquired by Mike Michaud.

hellzapoppin_side_01Powered by a Ranger 12 cylinder air cooled airplane motor. We put a page together. Read more about this unique boat here.

1976 – talks about Hydroplane racing at an Olympic event

The heck with rowing boats…..GPs…Now that would have been crew.

Olympiad GP-100 is a Jon Staudacher built hydro that is being restored by Harry Holst in Canada. We just posted a media sheet on her on the website in the boats section.

What’s also interesting is a newspaper article which is also posted on his webpage regarding talk of boat racing at the 1976 Montreal Olympic Games.

Anybody remember?

Miss U.S.

First test run of Miss U.S. at the Pepsi Racing Power Cup Challenge in South Dakota on June 16, 2012. Built in 1958, the Lauterbach Unlimited hydro has been fully restored by owner Jay Armstrong. The video shows the pre-race drivers meeting, the launching of Miss U.S., the initial test run and the after race inspection and evaluation. A fun 16 mins worth that should bring back memories of the first shake down runs all restored boat owners enjoy.

After some minor adjustments, Jay and crew shuffle off to Buffalo to run it again with Jack Schafer at the wheel.

….and a quick video after the run at Buffalo. Its a very nice piece showing Jack, and a whole lot of people very happy to have witnessed his run in U-36. Piolt Jack Schafer is a friend of owner Jay Armstrong. Jack has extensive driving experience from the 70’s, 80’s and 90’s.:

 

K&C Hopper Racing Team

Hi Motorheads,

 The initial stage of getting Gas-Hopper back in running order and possibly back on the water this year is under way.

 I have been noodling how to put the Raceboats that have been donated to Kids & Classics Boatshops Museum to highest and best use. The ACBS Toronto Chapter has made Raceboats the theme for their Gravenhurst show this year and we are racing to have Gas-Hopper running by then – at least.

 Also in our fleet we have a Glen L Thunderbolt with a Chevy 348 W engine in it, we have much of the hardware off Hippity Hopper (which was stolen) and a Glen L TNT.

 There may be another Dave boat available – I’ll check on that – it will involve a trip to the US with a flat trailer to get it.

 Here’s my proposition:

I would like to build a bit of a racing fleet around Gas-Hopper to honor Dave Norton who was one very interesting guy!

 It’s likely that Raceboats will attract certain kids to our youth programs that sailing and rowing may not. Dave was really just a kid himself – seems perfect.

 This division or team within our K&C non-profit organization might work together to create the story of Dave in a novel way. The Camper when restored mechanically and externally would house the story and go with the team to events (short straw drives). The boats that are added get done up in team livery.

 Create a website etc to promote both the Dave Story, keep the team in touch, fundraisers, etc

 Your suggestions would be appreciated..Would you consider helping & how – (you might be far from here). How did you know Dave? can you help with his story (which is every other racers story in a sense). Here are a few recent pictures attached:

 

Malcolm Black
Kids & Classics Boatshops MuseumThe Beaumont Mill (865114 Ontario Ltd) 905 873-0141

 Editor’s Note: Stay up to minute with what’s happening at the Kids & Classic Boatshop here: http://kidsnclassicsboatshops.blogspot.com/

Boat Fire

Also great to see a fellow boater helping out.