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Flood
Insurance Not Necessary!
Provided by Hemmings
Perhaps
one of the quirkiest vehicles ever aimed at the U. S. market was the Amphicar
770 of 1961-67. The brainchild of German Hans Trippel, this road-going,
water-worthy transportation was advertised as a "queer duck"
and "the car that swims," and surprisingly it sold reasonably
decent numbers during the six years that it was available on these shores.
To trace the development of this particularly innovative interpretation
of vehicular transportation, one has to look back to the pre-war years
of the early '30s when Trippel, intrigued by the concept of amphibious
automobiles, began putting his ideas into functional form. It is worth
pointing out that long before Trippel, a host of other inventors and automobile
manufacturers had come up with amphibians - some worked, others did not.
During the Second World War, The U.S. military had the GMC DUKW and Ford
GPA while the Germans had the Volkswagen-derived Schwimmwagen and Trippel's
Schwimboate variations stemming from his mid-'30s designs.
Built with an eye towards cost-effectiveness, many of the
components for the amphibian were outsourced from other manufacturers.
The 1,147cc, 43-hp Triumph Herald four-cylinder engine was the chosen
powerplant. It was coupled to a special Hermes-built transaxle gearbox
that provided four forward gears for on-land operation, and a forward
and reverse gear to turn the dual propellers when in the water. Like the
engine, electrical systems were British, of the Lucas variety, while many
braking and suspension pieces can be traced to Mercedes. In the water,
braking was accomplished by shifting into reverse and accelerating. There
wasn't a conventional rudder and tiller steering system; instead, the
front wheels were used for turning in the water. The body construction,
an outer, underside "hull" attached to a boxed and cross-braced
frame, featured electrically welded seams and displaced enough water as
not to require buoyancy tanks or other flotation devices. The Amphicar
made its first appearance in the U.S. at the 1961 New York International
Auto Show and at the Miami Boat Show. Even if it didn't live up to its
advertised title of "sports car" on land, it was a capable performer
on the water with a top speed of approximately seven knots. A relatively
high freeboard of 21 inches meant that rough water was not a concern.
In fact, two Amphicars piloted by British soldiers crossed the English
Channel! It was not noted for precise maneuvering, thanks to the lack
of a rear-mounted rudder, but the ability to drive into the water with
a showy splash, engage the twin propellers and "swim" away from
the boat launch certainly left many boat owners with jaws agape in envious
wonder.
Initially, the Amphicar met with limited sales success and
also found a niche outside the typical market, as many corporations realized
its potential as a unique promotional vehicle that got plenty of bemused
attention from the public. Subsequently, it appeared in display ads for
a variety of non-automotive products, helping sell everything from candy
bars and Pepsi-Cola to department store wares. Even Lyndon Baines Johnson
owned an Amphicar. Throughout its production span more than 3,000 Amphicars
were built, mainly for the U.S. market. Many would-be owners were no doubt
dissuaded from buying by the fact that it carried a sticker price of over
$3,000 (high for its day) and required regular maintenance that went far
beyond what the average automobile needed. The final insurmountable obstacle
came in the form of U.S. safety mandates. Meeting new bumper requirements
and other safety mandates would have required an extensive and expensive
redesign, the costs of which could not be recouped with the low sales
volume. That situation, combined with the death in 1967 of the Amphicar's
most important supporter, Harold Quandt, led to the cessation of production
in 1968.
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