Amphicar Explained

Amphicar Model 770
Manufacturer:Quandt Group
Production:1960–1965
3,878 built
Model Years:1961–1968
Body Style:two door cabriolet
with boat features
Layout:RR layout
Engine:1147 cc straight-4 (Triumph)
Transmission:4-speed
all-synchromesh manual
Length:1710NaN0
Width:620NaN0
Height:600NaN0
Weight:23240NaN0
Wheelbase:840NaN0[1]
Designer:Hans Trippel

The Amphicar Model 770 is an amphibious automobile which was launched at the 1961 New York Auto Show.[2] It was made in West Germany and marketed from 1961 to 1968, with production ceasing in 1965.

Designed by Hans Trippel, the amphibious vehicle was manufactured by the Quandt Group at Lübeck and at Berlin-Borsigwalde, with a total of 3,878[3] manufactured in a single generation. The name Amphicar is a portmanteau of "amphibious" and "car."

A spiritual descendant of the Volkswagen Schwimmwagen,[4] and the Trippel SG6, the Amphicar offered only modest performance compared to most contemporary boats or cars, featured navigation lights and flag as mandated by the US Coast Guard - and after operation in water, required greasing at 13 points, one of which required removal of the rear seat.

In 2014, the publication Petrolicious described the Amphicar as "good for one thing: fun. It’s not quick or flashy, but it’s iconic, unique and friendly. What more could you ask from a vintage car? The Amphicar might not make any sense and that’s precisely why it’s so wonderful."[5]

Product description (1966 Amphicar Model 770)

Engine: Triumph four-cylinder engine of 1147 cc, 8:1 compression ratio, rated at 43 bhp

Chassis/body

Overall length14.250 ft (4.343 m)
Overall width5.083 ft (1.549 m)
Height5.000 ft (1.524 m)
Turning circle36.833 ft (9.398 m)
Wheelbase7.000 ft (2.134 m)
Front track4.000 ft (1.219 m)
Rear track4.083 ft (1.245 m)
Fuel tank capacity10.5 imperial gallons (13.125 U.S. gallons; 49.7 litres)
Empty weight2,315 lb (1050 kg) (includes fuel and oil)
Appearance

Front undersurface is slightly pointed and sharply cut away below. The wheels are set low, so that the vehicle stands well above ground level when on dry land. Front and rear bumpers are placed low on the body panels (but fairly high in relation to dry ground). The one-piece windshield is curved. The foldable top causes the body style to be classified as cabriolet. Its water propulsion is provided by twin propellers mounted under the rear bumper.[6] The Amphicar is made of mild steel.

Powertrain

The Amphicar's engine was mounted at the rear of the craft, driving the rear wheels through a 4-speed manual transmission. For use in the water, the same engine drove a pair of reversible propellers at the rear, with a second gear lever engaging forward or reverse drive. Once in the water, the main gear lever would normally be left in neutral. By engaging first gear as well as drive to the propellers when approaching a boat ramp, the Amphicar could drive itself out of the water.[7]

Performance

The powerplant was the 1147 cc (69 in³) Standard SC engine from the British Triumph Herald 1200. Many engines were tried in prototypes, but the Triumph engine was "state of the art" in 1961 and it had the necessary combination of performance, weight, cool running, and reliability. Updated versions of this engine remained in production in the Triumph Spitfire until 1980. The Amphicar engine had a power output of 43 hp (32 kW) at 4750 rpm, slightly more than the Triumph Herald due to a shorter exhaust.[8] Designated the "Model 770", the Amphicar could achieve speeds of 7 knots in the water and 70 mph (110 km/h) on land. Later versions of the engine displaced 1296 cc and 1493 cc and produced up to 75bhp.In water as well as on land, the Amphicar is steered with the front wheels, making it less maneuverable than a conventional boat.[9]

In popular culture

1967 Yukon River Flotilla
Date:7–16 August 1967
Duration:Ten Days & 460 miles
Venue:Whitehorse, YT to Dawson, YT
Location:Yukon Territory Canada
Type:54 Watercraft Flotilla
Organizers:Yukon Fish and Game Association & Alaska Purchase Centennial Commission
Participants:153 people, 108 adults, 45 children, and nine dogs in 54 watercraft including four Amphicars

In June, 1965, two Amphicars successfully navigated the Yukon River in Alaska.[10] [11]

In September, 1965, two Amphicars crossed the English Channel[12] [13]

In August, 1967, four Amphicars participated in the 1967 Yukon River Flotilla a joint Alaska-Yukon Centennial project commemorating the memory of the rugged Klondike gold-seekers who sailed down the Yukon River in 1898.[14]

Lea Edgar wrote in BC Shipping News - October 2018: “One more local story regarding the Amphicar is that of the 1967 Yukon River Flotilla. A 10-day, 460-mile trip from Whitehorse down river to Dawson City was planned as a joint Alaska-Yukon Centennial project. Fifty-four craft were used, of those, four were Amphicars. The owners of the Amphicars were all Americans from Alaska. On August 16, the flotilla, including the Amphicars, made it to Dawson City where Discovery Day celebrations were in full swing.”[15] [16]

An Amphicar was restored in season 11, episode seven of the television show Wheeler Dealers. The car was purchased in the United States for $35,000 and shipped to the UK. Its lower bodywork proved to be in poor condition and required complete soda blasting back to clean metal before welding of replacement panel sections. After a test drive in the Thames at Windsor, the restored vehicle was sold for £35,200 at a profit of £4,600 (at that time's exchange rate).

Amphicars appear in the films Rotten to the Core (1965), The Sandwich Man (1966), The President's Analyst (1967), Inspector Clouseau (1968), The Laughing Woman (1969), Savannah Smiles (1982), and Pontiac Moon (1994), and in episode five of season four of The Avengers ("Castle De'ath", 1965). It also appears in the TV movie All the Way (2016).

US President Lyndon B. Johnson owned an Amphicar. Johnson, a known practical joker, was said to enjoy frightening visitors at his Johnson City, Texas, ranch by driving them downhill in his Amphicar, directly into his property's lake, all the while shouting that he had malfunctioning brakes.[17] [18]

In a fifth-season episode of The Simpsons, an antique filmstrip touts Springfield's famous "aqua-car" factory, showing Amphicars rolling off an assembly line and into the water.

The Amphicar was featured in Visiting... with Huell Howser, episode 733.[19]

History

Production started in late 1960. By the end of 1963, complete production was stopped.[20] From 1963 to 1965 cars were assembled from shells and parts inventory built up in anticipation of sales of 25,000[21] units, with the last new build units assembled in 1965. Cars were titled in the year they actually sold rather than when they were produced, e.g. an unsold Amphicar assembled in 1963 or 1965 could be titled as 1967 or 1968 if that was when it was first sold. Although the inventory could not be sold in the U.S. in the 1968 model year or later due to new environmental and USDOT emissions and safety equipment standards, they were available in other countries into 1968. The remaining inventory of unused parts was eventually purchased by Hugh Gordon of Santa Fe Springs, California.[22]

Most Amphicars were sold in the United States. Cars were sold in the United Kingdom from 1964. Total production was 3,878 vehicles, of which only 97 were right-hand drive. Some were used in the Berlin police department and others were fitted for rescue operations.[23]

Amphicar shows and rides

Amphicar owners regularly convene during the spring, summer, and fall at various locations nationwide for "swim-ins",[24] the largest of which is held at Grand Lake St. Marys State Park, Ohio.[25]

In 2015, the Boathouse at Walt Disney World's Disney Springs in Orlando, Florida, began offering public Amphicar rides to visitors, charging $125 per ride for groups of up to three. Disney heavily re-engineered and enhanced the eight Amphicars of various original colors[26] in its fleet for safety, reliability, and comfort.[27]

See also

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Cardew , Basil . Daily Express Review of the 1966 Motor Show . 1966 . Beaverbrook Newspapers Ltd . London .
  2. Web site: The Amphicar 770 is a Car No One Understands, Everyone Loves . Petrolicious.com . January 8, 2014 .
  3. Web site: History of the Amphicar - International Amphicar Owners Club (IAOC) . 2023-02-08 . www.amphicar.com.
  4. Neil . Dan . September 4, 2007 . The 50 Worst Cars of All Time: 1961 Amphicar . . dead . 2009-04-22 . https://web.archive.org/web/20071015024958/http://www.time.com/time/specials/2007/article/0,28804,1658545_1658498_1657832,00.html . October 15, 2007.
  5. Web site: Productions . Petrolicious . 2014-01-07 . The Amphicar 770 is a Car No One Understands, Everyone Loves . 2023-02-17 . Petrolicious . en.
  6. A. L. Manwaring, The Observer's Book of Automobiles (12th ed. 1966), Library of Congress catalog card 62-9807, p. 38
  7. Web site: Amphicar 'Start Here' . Amphicars . 2015-05-04.
  8. Web site: March 13, 2021 . Increase Horsepower: How to Let Exhaust Exit More Easily . DIY Home Improvement Information DoItYourself.com . https://web.archive.org/web/20210418122818/https://www.doityourself.com/stry/increase-horsepower-how-to-let-exhaust-exit-more-easily . April 18, 2021.
  9. Book: Davis , Tony . Extra Lemon ! . Bantam . Sydney . 147 . 1-86325-550-8 . 2005.
  10. Automobile quarterly, Volume 35, Issue 1
  11. Web site: Stewart . Oro . The Yukon Adventure! June 15th, 1965 .
  12. Dec 10 1965 Autocar magazine
  13. Web site: CARS AHOY by Capt. Peter Tappenden and Capt. M.B.Bailey .
  14. Web site: Wearley . Gary . May 27, 2023 . Yukon Flotilla, 1967 . ExploreNorth.
  15. Book: Edgar, Lea . BC Shipping News . 2018 . 19.
  16. Book: Firth, John . River time : racing the ghosts of the Klondike rush . 2004 . Edmonton : NeWest Press . Internet Archive . 978-1-896300-66-5.
  17. Web site: Smolkin . Rachel . Williams . Brenna . 2015-10-01 . How LBJ scared visitors at his ranch . 2021-04-09 . www.cnn.com . en-US.
  18. http://mentalfloss.com/article/18463/lbj-president-who-marked-his-territory LBJ: The President Who Marked His Territory – Mental Floss
  19. Web site: Water Car – Visiting (733) – Huell Howser Archives at Chapman University .
  20. Web site: Specialty Amphicars - International Amphicar Owners Club (IAOC) . 2023-02-08 . www.amphicar.com.
  21. Kubisch
  22. "History Of The Amphicar", International Amphicar Owners’ Club
  23. Web site: Specialty Amphicars - International Amphicar Owners Club (IAOC) . 2023-02-09 . www.amphicar.com.
  24. Web site: Swim-in Calendar – www.amphicar.com . 2018-07-24 . amphicar.com . en-US.
  25. News: Amphicar Owners Club set 50th Anniversary Swim-in - Old Cars Weekly. 2018-02-27. Old Cars Weekly. 2018-07-24. en-US.
  26. News: The Story Behind the Disney Springs Amphicars. 2018-07-24.
  27. Web site: Up close with the Amphicars of Disney Springs. hemmings.com. 2018-07-24.