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1954
Packard Gray Wolf II
Provided by Hemmings
During
a time when many manufacturers' show/concept cars were little more than
mocked-up packages used to display futuristic innovations and lacked any
type of operable drivetrain, Packard wowed the show crowds with an unusual
looker that also could hold its own out on the road. Initially called
the Gray Wolf II, this show car paid homage to the fiftieth anniversary
of the first Gray Wolf. This was a racer based on Packard's 1903 Model
K, which was powered by a bored and stroke version of the K's four-cylinder
that made it good for 25 hp. Clad in an aerodynamic aluminum body, the
Gray Wolf, in the hands of its designer Charles Schmidt, defeated far
more powerful race machinery in races all around the country, thus bringing
the company fame.
Its smaller size and the fact that it had a narrow tapered
nose without a grille opening (the radiator was actually a series of thin
copper tubes that ran the length of the body sides) likely helped it prevail
over its competitors on the racetrack. Its biggest claim to fame came
in 1904, when it broke the existing land-speed record for the mile at
Ormand/Daytona Beach, Florida, covering the mile in 46.24 seconds with
a top speed of 77.6 mph. That same year, Packard actually offered the
public the chance to buy their own Gray Wolf racers-but at a cost of $10,000
each, there weren't any takers. The Gray Wolf rounded out its two years
of glory with a fourth-place overall finish in the Vanderbilt Cup Race,
an excellent showing considering the international attention focused on
that particular event.
Fifty years later, the Gray Wolf II appeared, and it went
on to do right by its namesake. Powered by Packard's new 359-cu.in. straight-eight,
the II got a helping hand from some unnatural aspiration in the form of
a McCulloch supercharger, a combination that the company claimed was good
for a total of 275 hp, pretty heady power for the day. After making its
initial rounds on the show circuit, it appeared at the Speed Week at Daytona
Beach. In the hands of racer Jim Rathmann, the II did what its progenitor
had done five decades earlier. Rathmann sent the sand flying and recorded
an unofficial speed of 131 mph, and put the car in the record books with
a 110.9-mph one-mile run.
Stylistically it was unusual, and little actually carried
over to future models. The overhanging body line "flap" ahead
of the hood might have been the inspiration of the 1955 cathedral-style
headlight treatment, but in the form displayed on the Gray Wolf II, never
reappeared during the short future the company was to have. Other cues
that did make it into production included the panoramic windshield and
a very similar front bumper treatment, though in the production version,
the bumper guards were positioned on top. Following its exploits at Daytona,
it was renamed the Panther-Daytona.
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