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No Interest
06-30-2012, 10:47 PM
A friend of mine just pulled these two boats out of barn in Oregon. I was told the doors had not been opened in over 40 years. The top one is a Jacoby the bottom one is a mystery. Also included was a very nice kg9Q and a couple boxes of props.

I think they were raced in Washington?

Allen J. Lang
07-01-2012, 07:49 AM
The runabout a Phantom hull?

Ron Hill
07-01-2012, 12:33 PM
Phantoms were built , I think, by a guy named Shirley. That was his last name. When you could get a Shirley, Wilbur McDonald started building them. These are true classic Phantoms.

Leonard Keller, again I will say, I think, started called Gerry Walin "The Phantom" when he started breaking all kinds of kilo records, with strange stuff that no one would see until the kilos.

No Interest
07-01-2012, 01:29 PM
The turn fin does say Shirley on it. I think both boats fins are identical.

Ron Hill
07-01-2012, 02:11 PM
Thursday, May 1, 2003 - Page updated at 12:00 AM
http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/art/ui/article_email.gif E-mail article (http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/cgi-bin/EMailStory.pl?slug=uw28&date=20040428) http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/art/ui/article_print.gifPrint
Classic racers add pizazz to Seattle's Opening Day boat parade

By Brian J. Cantwell (http://search.nwsource.com/search?sort=date&from=ST&byline=%20Brian%20J.%20Cantwell%20)
Northwest Weekend editor

When Bob Haynes yanks the starting cord — once, sometimes twice, often way more than that — and the spark finally ignites the gas inside his antique Evinrude Speeditwin, it gives a whole new meaning to get-up-and-go.
The silvery, showroom-finish outboard propels Haynes' 1940 racing runabout with all the subtlety of a small nuclear device.
Thing is, the 22.5-horse outboard has no neutral. So when the whip cracks and those ponies dig in and start trying to haul the mail to Dodge — or Duvall, anyway — the bronze prop whips the water of Lake Sammamish, the bow of the 13-foot boat leaps toward the sky and Haynes is kneeling and bobbing on his way down the lake.
There's not much more to say: That boat got up and went.
With growls and pops echoing off willowy marshes and lakeside mini-mansions, the opposed-firing, 30-cubic-inch outboard sounds like a waterborne Harley-Davidson — though maybe an octave higher.
Listen for Haynes' boat, named Phantom, and a sister "ship" on Opening Day of boating season Saturday in Seattle. If you're an Opening Day regular accustomed to queenly waves and white-gloved salutes along Montlake Cut, you better hold on to your corgi. These puppies were born off-leash.
Gleaming glory
"Off to the Races" is the theme for the 2003 Opening Day boat parade, and along with some retired hydroplanes from Seafairs past, stars of the show will include Haynes' boat and a similar runabout, Shazam, both built in the Northwest in the 1940s and veterans of the day when such boats regularly raced on Sammamish Slough and Green Lake.
Too much noise and too many people put an end to those races by the late 1970s. But these race boats survive in gleaming glory, thanks to a few fans of the tradition, and many coats of varnish.
"I've put on 22 or 23 coats right now," Shazam's owner, Fred Bush, said two weeks ago outside his West Seattle workshop, "and I've sanded off about 21!" That's how you build a diamond sheen.
There's not a lot to these boats. Just four feet wide, flat-bottomed with a skeg to help in cornering and a bow like a snub-nosed bullet, they were simply built for speed, weighing only 120 to 170 pounds and powered by a 120-pound outboard. You want light? Shazam's aft decking is 3-millimeter mahogany plywood, less than the thickness of two Lincoln pennies. To compound the featherweight, both runabouts' foredecks aren't wood at all, but aviation cloth glued atop a spruce frame.
The cockpit has room for only one person, who kneels with feet wedged into wooden chocks behind him.
"You don't ride in these boats, it's more like you wear them," observed Barbara Carper of the Antique and Classic Boat Society.
These days, Haynes doesn't run his boat anywhere near the patella-pummeling 60 mph that it can do with the 40-horse Mercury outboard that he sometimes subs for the Speeditwin. He's trying to preserve what he believes is the last boat afloat of the 25 or so of its class designed and built by Charles Shirley of Lafayette, Ore.
The boats were never meant to last this long, said Bush, whose boat was built in the late '40s by another Oregonian, named McDonald, who built about six boats based on Shirley's design. In the past three months, Bush has spent some 200 hours completely replacing Shazam's hull and decking, plus some cracked ribs in its bow.
"The boats were only made to race three or four seasons, then they burned them," he said.
'He'll buy anything shiny'
That 60 mph might not impress Seattle hydroplane fans accustomed to 100-mph-plus "thunderboats," but it's all relative to size.
Compared with a hydro, "These are a little trickier to learn; they don't have the training wheels," Haynes said, joking about the hydroplane's outer sponsons.
In the 1940s, the Phantom-style boats with outboards like the Evinrude held international speed records for "C Service" class.
Haynes, 63, of Renton, a business development specialist for Cooper Wiring Devices, came to boat racing from an earlier interest in desert motorcycle racing. He bought Phantom in 1985.
Bush, 57, is a semi-retired sign artist whose specialty has been emblazoning names on boats all over Puget Sound. He is an expert in applying gold leaf like that on Shazam (which until recently was named Thunderbolt). Photos of past boat projects and auto restorations plaster the wall of his workshop. A restored 1964 Cadillac fills his garage.
"Like my wife says, 'He'll buy anything if it's shiny!' " Bush said with a small grin.
These racing boats are shiny right down to their three-spoke steering wheels, wrapped by a steering cable that feeds back through burnished nickel-zinc eyelets to a block on each side, connected by heavy springs to gleaming metal arms on either side of the engine. Elegant in their simplicity, down to the polished "dead-man's throttle" that stops the engine if the driver is tossed overboard, an important consideration in boats that spend as much time in the air as in the water.
Fred Bush says he also wears a safety tether attached to a kill switch, to ensure that the boat doesn't keep zooming along without him. For observers at Saturday's Opening Day parade, that might offer some comfort.
Bush quotes his boat's previous owner: "You may not care, but the people on the beach will appreciate it!"

No Interest
07-01-2012, 02:44 PM
Thanks for all the info Ron. This old stuff sure is cool and fun. Its like a real live treasure hunt. Ian Kramer

Master Oil Racing Team
07-01-2012, 06:24 PM
That is very interesting Ron. Thanks.

seacow
07-15-2012, 10:01 AM
Phantoms were built , I think, by a guy named Shirley. That was his last name. When you could get a Shirley, Wilbur McDonald started building them. These are true classic Phantoms.

Leonard Keller, again I will say, I think, started called Gerry Walin "The Phantom" when he started breaking all kinds of kilo records, with strange stuff that no one would see until the kilos.

The name of the boat is a Fantom. I had the last "new" one. It was never in the water when I purchased it. Mine was an F Racing Runabout that hung on the wall in Shirey's hardware store in Oregon. He had a shop behind the store where he made these wonderful boats. I never weighed it but it was extremely heavy. Two of use strained carrying it without the motor. Unlike the C boat, the F boat had a wood front deck. This was because when you turned it in a race, the "riding mechanic" had to get out on the deck and shift his weight to make this boat turn well.

I first saw them run in C service runabouts at a alky race at Lake Maxinkukee and I did not know what they were. Then saw three of them race against several others including Desilvas in 1958 at Lake Merced, San Francisco when the 460 was still the engine for FRR. I fell in love with them. I still think this was a fantastic looking boat. Some of you may recall that in earlier years there was a fad where boat builders were trying primitive aerodynamics. This craft as many others has a side profile that looks like the side profile of an airplane wing..fat in front and tapered aft.

I finally sold the boat to a collector on Whidby Island WA after trying in vain for 4 years to find a 4-60 to run on it. I miss just looking at bit.

oldalkydriver
07-20-2012, 04:44 AM
Chuck Parsons had a Fantom in the middle 50's. Chuck allowed John Toprahanian and my dad (Bob Jackson) to measure every detail of the boat. We built the copy, John called it Facsimale, in our back yard. I think Chuck might have regretted it for a couple years. Soon after the boat was finished, my dad started winning almost every race they entered. Somewhere in BRF post, there is a picture of the boat semi-finished. We had the 4th of July race at Lodi. First race out of the box for the boat and it won. Someone had a post for guessing what, when & where. I ansered several times, but they had it listed under another driver. However it clearly shows my dad & lenoard Collins riding deck. Great boat design and it handled the 460 great.

Mark75H
07-20-2012, 06:50 PM
Great boats, great info, great thread. Many thanks to all

seacow
08-04-2012, 05:41 AM
I think this Fantom is a reproduction but a good photo anyway

smittythewelder
08-04-2012, 12:13 PM
FWIW, Walin was "Fantum", with a u; had the name on some of his boats.