Another picture from Mike Bunting
https://www.screamandfly.com/attachm...9&d=1730358575
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Another picture from Mike Bunting
https://www.screamandfly.com/attachm...9&d=1730358575
Yrs ago I bought a motor off of Little Barney who’s father started Action boats and we went to a storage unit in Key Largo and there was a small OB vee bottom upside down in the unit and when quizzed about it, he told me it was a 16’ Checkmate that they splashed to build the first Action from.
Not to say they never splashed a Glastron but that’s what I was told of that particular hull.
I knew Barney from before he started up Action. He was at my wedding almost 57 years ago. Action was spun off Banshee Boats. Banshees were basically Glastron hull bottoms with a SK boat deck. Banshees were made as both outboard and inboard jet drive boats. Action was started with the outboard version of the Banshee molds. This was the original Action 16. Barney then built or acquired molds for 13 and 15 foot Checkmates and later another 15 Checkmate with a custom deck mold. I raced the plug boat for the 13' in G class a couple of times. I worked for Action a couple of times. The first time we were building the 16,15 and 13 which we stretched out to a 14' just before I left. The second time Action had changed over to building pretty much Hydrostream based boats and I worked on a couple of those molds. I also got the chance to drive a few of those boats. I was amazed at how easy those boats were drive at speed.
Cleaning out my warehouse this is my dad's old prop box it used to hold 6 propsAttachment 537618
Jim Nerstrom
Jerry Kashmerick,
Thanks for posting those pictures. I still remember our last outing and driving the lower boat, certainly fast, 82mph is what some of the best race boats were doing at the time. The end of our day was somewhat surprising! Take care my friend.
Reverse hydros could be fast in a straight line but would lose all of their speed in the turns on a course running laps. They work extremely well in radio control model racing. (with inboard engines)
Jack Aylsworth
Group expert / All-star contributor
1920’s Racing Champ Helen Hentschel ran Evinrude, Johnson & Lockwood
Helen, a New York native, was a serious competitor running the top performance engines from all three brands in various classes. She is shown here early in her racing career in Miss Circuit Rider powered by a Johnson (photo lower left) for the President's Cup on the Potomac River. She pilots her Evinrude Speeditwin powered Miss RC Century racer (upper right) on Lake Templiner in Germany where she won the Class “B” Outboard Races at an average speed of 28.7 mph. Helen is also shown at the USA International Motor Boat Race with a Johnson TR-40 Racer (photo center) in 1928 and with Lockwood Chief power (photo lower right), also that year.
Timeline – Lockwood was part of the merger of Evinrude and Elto in 1929. Johnson joined OMC in 1935 - so all of Hentschel’s featured racing photos were before the OMC founding. It’s unclear if Helen was sponsored by any of the engine brands, but certainly possible.
https://www.screamandfly.com/attachm...4&d=1730805666
John-Brenda Sheldon
OMC paying me after I left for a patent. Their patent assignment policy was
"$1.00 and other valuable considerations"
https://www.screamandfly.com/attachm...8&d=1730927028
I doubt you was the cause of em going broke!:)
22R
Interesting comment from OMC's Jim Nerstrom who was part of the deal..
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eY-Q4T1WEAMhttps://www.screamandfly.com/attachm...9&d=1731055734
Thanks Hot Boat Magazine.
https://www.screamandfly.com/attachm...8&d=1731143076
No surprise here. The people providing the $$$ get to make the decisions and determine the outcome. F1 boat racing was never going to be as big a show as F1 auto racing. Boat racing was always a novel summer side show for many people. Chances are that if the boat clearly won, the future of F1 boat racing would have been different?