The contribution of PACKARD to the war effort is incalculable. That the company didn't survive the 1950's is truly a shame. Their place in history needs to be remembered and honored.
Hi Les, great video! I am a crew on PT658 here in Portland OR. The purpose of the 5M-2500 engine aftercooler was placed on the engine in order to boost the horsepower up to 1850hp. Coupled with the larger diameter of the supercharger wheel and the higher speed of the supercharger give the increase in horsepower. The 4M-2500 has only 1500hp by comparison. One interesting problem that we have discovered with these engines is that we have inadvertently "snapped" 4 of these supercharger drive shafts. They are 1 inch diameter hardened steel splined shafts. What we found out was that when you either slow down or speed up the engine too quickly, the momentum of the supercharger in relation to the crankshaft is too high and the shaft can break very easily. So our new operating method is to slowly accelerate or decelerate when we go fast. We are taking the boat out here on 5-6-7 June 2024 for Portland Rose Festival Fleet Week, so it should be a lot of fun! All of your PT Boat related videos are very well researched and I am a fan. Thanks for these series of excellent videos! Jerry
In the late '50's my father had a Navy buddy who stayed in after WWII. My dad turned down a commission if he reupped. The buddy, Newton by name was still a Chief Machinists Mate and was stationed at Port Hueneme (pronounced "why-a-nee-mee"), halfway up the coast from L.A. to Santa Barbara. Part of the complex was the Point Magoo Naval Air Station. I was about 12 years old and we would visit the Newton family fairly regularly. On one visit, Chief Newton had a really nice surprise for my one year older brother and me. Port Huaneme had a couple of converted PT boats that they used for "coastal patrols" (a totally useless exercise but since when has the military not engaged in useless exercises to play with their toys). To make a long story short, the Chief had arranged for us to "go for a ride". Two things stick in my mind from that experience. First was just how fucking fast that boat was. Second, we got to go down to the "engine room", an extremely cramped space almost fully taken up with those Packard V-12's. That was the loudest sustained noise I had ever heard in my life. I remember it today like almost a physical presence. No wonder so many WWII vets came home with hearing loss!
I worked with a japanese man in the late 70's who's grandfather had been in the japanese navy in ww2, he said they called the american PT boats , the green dragons and most sailors were scared shitless of them. They would seem to appear out of nowhere, you couldn't see them at night except by the wakes, and where so fast you couldn't train you're guns on them fast enough.
My Grandfather worked for Packard Motor Company during WWII building Aircraft Merlin's. I still have his sterling silver lapel pins, a gold 10 year service award and a few of his Micrometers. The man never missed a day of work until he finally retired at 66. He is dearly missed.
My dad was a WW2 PT Boat machinist in the Pacific. He served in the same squadron as Kennedy. The most hazardous naval duty in the war. He had three boats he served on sunk. On one, he was the only survivor. Needless to say, he suffered with PTSD. PT boaters are all heroes.
I worked in a shop that reworked several crankshafts for the Navy they were works of art. Every surface was machined hollow rod and mains stainless steel.
I loved that movie. One of my top 25 movies of all times. Hollywood actors of the 40's and 50's were actual war vets, and they were really credible having lived the real experience.
My grand father Joe Carville was a engine mechanic on these PT boats . He had plenty of stories about his time in pacific. During his service he became friends with JFK as he was a Boston man.
As a PT Boat "Splinter" attending numerous PT reunions with my father, I must thank you for creating this video. I appreciate the effort you put into this.
I once read a story on those PT-boats and their engines. Myth/rumor has it that they were secretly/not-so-secretly tuned/optimized/hot-rodded by some crews because, after a drill at sea, they would sometimes be allowed to race full-throttle back to port, and the fastest boat would get to sea-spray on those in chase. It might just have been a bar story, but I still like the thought of mechanics tinkering to get the very best out of those V12s.
There is that story of PT 109 with JFK that the refueling of the boats was determined by the order of arrival; meaning the first boat in would be the first one refueled. The last PT to arrive for refueling may have a wait time of hours before refueling.
I hadn't heard that one, but it makes good sense. Luckily with superchargers it's not as easy as tampering with a wastegate to bump up the boost, so they're probably only able to tweak timing and mixture settings to optimize operation, which shouldn't harm the engine.
In the late 60's and early 70's these boats would come into our Marina on the Salton Sea from the Naval Target Range and refuel! As a kid, the sound was AMAZING and the size of this boat combined with the speed when they went hammer down as they left impressed me to this day!
As a hardcore IC recip engine man I thank you for posting this and setting the record straight. It was needed and you seem to be just the guy to pull it all together. Good Job !
My grandfather was Bill North vs pres. Packard motor production. A 52 yr old widower in 42.:sent to London then, met a younger pub manager.brought home a war bride! My English grandmother. Thank god for all of them!!!! A crying shame Packard motor ended as a result of all of this.
Very thoroughly and nicely produced. Great, serious information and explanatory work. I live about 8 miles down rt 440 in Bayonne and regularly visit the Boat lift built to put PT boats into the water at the end of the Hackensack and Passaic rivers where the empty into Newark Bay . Thanks
Hubert Scott Payne who owned the British Power Boat Company had converted some R.R.Merlin engines for use in his early MTB's. When he learned that all Merlin engines were to be reserved for aircraft production he went to the USA in search of a replacement. He took plans of his boat designs which were the inspiration for the Elco designs. This steered him towards the Packard engines and he secured some for his company. They were so successful that the British Government entered a Lease Lend contract for the Packard engines for Coastal Forces and were used by Vosper when they lost the supply of the Italian Isotta Fraschini engines they had distribution rights for prior to war being declared.
I remember hearing those three Packard engines on ELCOs first prototype on her second trip down the Thames River out to theSound for Testing what a beautiful Roar will never forget.😊
Battleship Cove is a must see for WWII naval historians! The Higgins was actually in JFK's inaugural parade (PT 109 was actually an ELCO). There is also a PT museum inside the battleship Massachusetts.
Was a harbor security mech in Subic, remember hearing rumors from old timers of security boats that had Packard engines. They said that after Vietnam that they were replaced by PBRs. They said those Packards could scream but were a maintenance nightmares. They still had the engine hoists and boat skids. They even had the old AVGAS tanks, still sealed. I sure would have liked to see them but I did get to work on the PBRs. Lots of fun.
@9:56 - It did not have two plugs per cylinder because of its aero heritage, but because they were required to completely ignite the mixture across a piston face 6.375 inches in diameter. The redundant ignition benefit was just a bonus, as losing spark to one set of plugs would noticeably reduce power output..
Sorry, but in order to be qualified as an aero engine they have to have two full ignition systems. Which is why when you start an 1820 you do a mag test and if the engine stalls on either circuit its a scrub. They probably just kept the system because it would have required a lot of mucking about and new parts (to do it properly) and a loss of power to boot.
Packard did try to implement some form of automatic timing advance/retard in order to simplify operation for the motorman, but it was primitive and didn't work out. They reverted to manual control and that was that. I do believe that running the motor on only one spark plug per cylinder would indeed drop output, considering that ignition advance was as high as 50*BTDC. As someone else pointed out, that shows you how slow flame front propagation was, and chances are good that with only one ignition source that peak cylinder pressure would come so late on the power stroke as to cripple output. Magnetos are a pain to work with, but the advantage is not needed battery power to run ignition coils. Boat builders like ELCO were probably not about to start messing with drop-in units supplied by the anointed Navy supplier.
I spent some time in the engine space aboard PT-658 while underway. It was every bit as awe inspiring as you could imagine. The throttle plates were just barely cracked open, as we were only doing about 15 knots. Conversation in the engine space was impossible, we just stood there with big stupid grins on our faces.
I’m USN ‘61-‘63(reserve). I was a SCUBA diver,collector for the Marine Biology Museum @ Pt. Mugu, California. There are 5 Channel Islands offshore and the Navy (Pacific Missile Range) has a presence on several of them. The Navy still had several WWII PT Boats which were used for mail and supply delivery and we(3 divers,collectors)could beg a ride. Occasionally, usually dropped to dive off a couple of inner tubes and picked up on their way back. Very occasionally we would be able to dive off a “Live Boat”(Opening Day of the lobster season 1963. Two lobsters, just the tails, 12# on the bathroom scales)! These had Packard engines(3).
Interesting. In my younger years as a Sea Scout, we had a 1942 Chris Craft Army J boat. At 42 feet, she had anti-aircraft guns on the fore and aft decks. Supposedly, the motor was a left-over Liberty V-12, and after watching this video, I wonder if it was actually a Packard. The semi-planning hull boat was stationed in San Francisco Bay, had six 220-gallon gas tanks, a 23-inch left hand propeller, twin water-cooled brass exhausts tubes, and accommodated 12 sailors. By the time I was affiliated with it, four gas tanks were removed, the motor replaced with a Detroit Diesel 6-71 with a battle governor, and one of the exhaust tubes plugged though still remained. Even with its diesel and 120 mm injectors, she was quite a fast 8-ton boat in Humboldt Bay where she remained until rotted to the point of destruction. I miss those days growing up on the water!
You listen to the engine in some of these old footage when they are idling and you hear the cam through the thru hull exhaust give a gear head a rise in the Levis. These engines were so far ahead of there time
Narration is much clearer, thank you! Those engines were functional art... Have been sharing your channel to my retired Navy friends, men of various talents from boat restoration to museum quality model ship builders.
Packard went bankrupt before I was born, but I miss their presence in the auto industry to this day. They had some excellent engineering in their cars and engines.
There were more changes to the 3A-2500 engine to use them in the PT boats then just water cooled headers and a few other things. After the war when he was interviewed the engineer that made the changes to create what eventually became the 4M-2500 engine used in most of the PT boats during the war claimed it was a "clean sheet" design, that isn't exactly true, it was more of an "overlay" design, ie if you draw the crankshaft, pistons, connecting rods and valve's of the 3A-2500 aircraft engine and then designed the rest of the engine around it then you'd be doing an overlay design. The bore, stroke, connecting rod length center of eye to eye and the cylinder spacing center to center are the same between the 3A-2500 aircraft engine and the marine version and that's about the only things that are the same, the blocks, cylinders and heads are completely different castings and even different designs, the cylinder banks are one piece aluminum with steel cylinder sleeves as opposed to the 3A-2500 engine which were individual forged steel cylinders. The changes were extensive and Packard underestimated the amount of work it would take to do it leading to them losing a considerable amount of money creating the marine version. And yes the after-cooler was to add more power, it would have worked in conjunction with the existing inner-cooler, raising boost levels is possible with higher octane fuels but creating that much more boost creates a significant amount more heat in the compressed air (charge air) of the boost, it's not a linear increase in heat as boost is increased there's a curve in the formula, all the aircraft engine's of WW2 (as far as the Allies are concerned) required better charge cooling as boost was increased which was made possible by higher octane levels, the rise in charge temperature is much greater from 25 lbs of boost to 30 lbs than it is from 20 lbs to 25 lbs, as the higher octane levels gave them the ability to raise boost levels they had to design better charge cooling systems (inner and after coolers) to deal with the increased heat, otherwise even though you've increased boost levels you'd have to richen the air/fuel ratio and retard the timing to control detonation (knock) to the point where most of your power increase from the higher boost is canceled out from what you have to do to deal with the higher charge temperatures.
Could a 4m-2500 be upgraded to a 5m-2500? How much boost pressure did the 4m and 5m develop? Did the octane requirement stay about the same between the 4m and 5m because of the cooler charge temperature on the 5m? I believe the 5m developed 1850 hp.
@@williambikash6645 Don't know, could be they added the after-cooler just to be able to run more boost on the same level octane or could be they added it because octane levels increased and they had to add it to take advantage of the higher octane and could run more boost. As far as boost levels they ran on the engines of those PT boats i don't know what they ran, and I'm not sure if they measured it in psi or inches of mercury, American military aircraft in those days used inches of mercury as their measuring standard so I've no reason to believe the PT boats would use any other measuring standard aside from that, but you never know so I can't say one way or the other with 100% certainty, there's several videos on TH-cam that give tours of PT boats on display in the US, if during the tour you can see the boost guages when they're in the engine room where the guy who ran the engines sits at the controls one should be able to determine which it is if they show the guages close enough, 30 psi of boost is right around 76 inches of mercury so a good look at the number's on the dial face of the guages should answer that question, if the highest number on the guages is around 35 or 40 it'd be psi but if it's 80 or 90 it'd be inches of mercury, which it probably is since US aircraft used that, the British used psi and the Germans used atmospheres for their's (it's abbreviated as ATTA or something like that). As with the aircraft engine's I'm sure these followed suit when it came to HP increases, different cams and other major components that one would typically associate with increasing HP in cars and motorcycles weren't used to increase HP it was always just a matter of increasing boost, either by way of higher octane and better inner/after coolers, the only change in a major engine component in US aircraft engine's that I'm aware of for the sake of increasing power is the engine for the P47M/N engine when it was increased to 2,800 HP at War Emergency Power (WEP), the static compression ratio of the pistons was raised from 6.5:1 to 6.7:1, but those engines also had an improved turbo and after-cooler's also,, previous to that all the HP increases were done without any changes to internal engine components, just increased octane, better turbos and inner/after coolers. As I explained just raising octane itself doesn't allow you to run higher boost levels simply because without cooling your increased boost intake charge that much more to offset the increased temperature in your it the benefits of increased boost are canceled because of having to retard the timing and richen the air/fuel ratio to keep detonation from occurring. In a highly boosted engine like these detonation can shred one of them in seconds if it's bad enough, I ask a pilot once who ran Pratt&Whitney R2800 engines in a cargo plane in the late 80's if you can hear detonation in one like you can in a car and he said you couldn't, that what makes it so dangerous and is why pilots flying aircraft with high boost engines have a chart inside the cockpit that shows timing and fuel settings for boost levels that must be strictly adhered to, if they get into detonation far enough the engine will sputter and power will drop and they know they have a problem but if it's not at that high of a level they'll be tearing the engine apart and not even know it, that's a big problem in places like over the ocean where you're hundreds of miles from land, I hope you're a good swimmer if you don't pay attention to those charts. It's getting increasingly rare these days with cars and motorcycle's due to the advancements in the aluminum pistons are made of but back in the day I had more than one engine brought to me for rebuilding that had holes blown through the tops of the pistons from detonation, mostly these days I'll see damage done to the tops of pistons from it that looks like someone took the ball end of a ball peen hammer and beat on the top of the pistons, but between modern engines having hypereuticic pistons stock from the factory and forged aftermarket pistons in modified engine's I haven't seen a hole blow in a piston from detonation in some years now, but I still occasionally see one on an air cooled motorcycle engine that's got a hole melted through one from the engine developing a massive vacuum leak and the operator not understanding what's going on.
@@dukecraig2402 Thanks for going into so much detail. I help maintain a friend's 20 yo triple engine Fountain speed boat with stock and original 575 hp supercharged 502ci Mercruiser engines. These engines have Roots style blowers with no coolers and develop about 4 lbs boost. They have 2 GM style throttle body injections per engine and block mounted knock sensors. They call for 92 pump octane and we stay out of boost when we use 89 octane in a pinch. The current 502 Mercruiser versions are 600 and 700hp and run on 87 and 89 octane. They use axial flow superchargers without coolers and have modern FI systems and sophisticated electronics ignition systems. The 575s are original and have not been rebuilt. The center engine has never had the valve covers off! They have over 700 hrs and the boat still does 90mph. Factory rated when new was 93 mph which I can't verify. Chevrolet recently released a 632 ci BBC crate engine that developes over 1000 hp na. It has a new design aluminum cylinder heads with 12.5 to 1 cr and runs on street gasoline, 93 octane, I'm amazed!
Nice educational video on Packard V12 engines. I worked on a friends PT boat engines in the 90s. The Packard engines had been replaced with 2) direct drive forward mounted 8v71 Detroits and a single 6-71 with a v-drive in the center, this configuration is the opposite of the description in this video. We ran the boat from NC up to Toronto for a tv movie, "JFK Reckless Youth". This boat was also the Coast Guard boat in the 1991 movie "Sleeping with the Enemy".
One of the things I didn't know when making this video was that the Liberty engine was a cheap and cheerful powerplant for smuggling boats during Prohibition. I wonder who inspired who?
@@LesSharp The current production Florida built Cigarette boats are named after a prohibition era rum runner that was nicknamed Cigarette or was called Cigarette because it was long and thin. I doubt if they lettered the name on the "Cigarette " rum runner !
@@LesSharp Back around 1969 I worked with a boat mechanic in a Ft Lauderdale boat yard who as a young man worked on a Detroit rum runner tuning up the multiple Liberty engines. He was a young man at the time and was paid with hundred dollar bills. He said he didn't know what to do with bills that large. Ernie Riley was quite the character with an Irish glint in his eyes and full of great stories. Also possibly the world's largest leprechaun!
My dad was aboard PT-335 in the South Pacific. While he was away, my mom took me (about age 4) to see a PT at a lake, where we were going to take a ride. We were close to the boat when the engines started up with a roar. It scared the bejeezus out of me, and there was no way I was getting on that darned thing!
My neighbor served on PT Boats in Mindanao. I was curious about it and asked about the experience. (when I was a kid). He looked at me oddly, and said simply, "it was hot". Then he turned to my father, as though he had asked the question, and said. "they had us fueling them with goddamn jerry cans". Years later, when I was a sailor, I came to appreciate what he'd said.
"It was hot" LMAO! Yeah, filling several thousand gallons by hand when it's 100*F and 100% humidity would absolutely suck. Where I lived, you could see Mindanao on a clear day, so I know.
A message from the UK. My father served in the Royal Navy during WW2 and in particular LCAs (landing craft assault). He did commando raids, was at Dieppe as well as Operations Torch and Husky. He said that the LCAs with Packard engines were not as reliable as those fitted with Rolls Royce. It may have been national bias or experience; both packards in his LCA failed at Dieppe at a crucial moment!
The monkeys have no tails in Zamboanga sung at the very end was a song my uncle sang when stationed in New Guinea during WW2; just died a short time ago at 97. I'm guessing my father did as well, although he never spoke of it; he died more than 37 years ago.
Well I remember reading somewhere RR suggested Packard should get the contract for US built Merlins because they were the only American firm that they had confidence in, due to their prior experience building V12 engines. This certainly implies that Packard were building V12s before they were building Merlins.
Video made me happy. I made a few parts for the guys restoring P.T. 658 in portland or. anyone who wants to see this boat is in for a real treat. It is a small museum of regular guys. One of the finest museums you will ever see as there is also a world war two landing craft museum there also. It is a small operation and they have a phone number listed i am sure on their web site. They are justly proud of the boat and all the unbelievable work they have done, but very few folks show up to view the museum,, so if you just call them they will most likely drop everything and open the museum any time you want. seriously i recommend this museum to any body into world war two history, or that has even been a military veteran. Also i enjoyed the film clip about the monkeys of Zamboanga that had no tails. Zamboanga is one of my favorite ports of call.
In the 1970's there was a complete Packard 2500 PT boat engine on a stand inside the Mechanical Engineering Building at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. I wonder if it is still there.
I think the pt boat idea is underrated. Iran still uses the concept. You could argue they do it out of cost. In this day and age give it some kind of drone and anti drone capability. I think it could have a place in coastal/harbor defense.
They gave less problems than the Merlins in British MTB and MGB the Merlin didn't get on with salt water, post war as the Meteor and V8 Meteorite this was less of an issue they even made a diesel version
Yes they did as the brits received several thousands of the Packard M2500 and the quality of those engines is what brought RR engineers to Packard for the Merlins !! !
Most beautiful vessel ever built. Only an irretrievable deteriorated hull in a Norwegian fjord as the last survivor of all the D's - Dogboats - but there is a Fairmile B awaiting restoration at Hartlepool.
Really fascinating Packard engines. I didn't realize the two outboard engines had V-Drives; whereas the center engine had direct drive. I'm surprised they could be even run on 87 octane gas, which I'm sure was leaded. Also the shaft-drives to the overhead cams are unique. Also, I'm surprised the exposed valve trains of the old Liberty engines didn't gunk up with dirt and debris. I'd guess that a PT boat at WOT consumed at least 150 GPH, maybe more. They were impressive. Great video and quite interesting.
Howdy fellas, very impressive, one of the absolute best TH-cam format docs….. One million thank you’s for this great video. B R A V O …! Well Done …! Top notch .., TOP NOCH …!
I was a commercial fisherman. Years earlier an older friend bought a PT right after the war for tuna jig fishing. When he first got the boat he put a few hundred gallons in the tanks and went joy riding with family and friends. In a few hours the engines started missing and then stopping. The Coast Guard towed him back. One of the coasties had been on PTs during the war and told him the engines burned 50 gallons per hour per engine at speed. He pulled the gas engines and put in 3 war surplus Detroit Diesels.
About five years ago I visited The National World War II Museum in New Orleans, Louisiana. They were restoring a PT boat and I know it was equipped with three Packard engines, all right-hand drive!
Doubt it. Submarines used FM 38 8-1/8 engines. They are 9.3 meters long and weigh 38 tons in 12 cylinder configuration. Each cylinder displaces 17 liters.
This is great thanks. Very clear. I also understood the pt boat and British mtb to be powered by merlin engines. The merlin was used as a tank engine (called Meteor used in comet, centurion etc) and in trucks as well as cut down to a V8 (Meteorite). Oh and yes it was used aircraft lol. Rover eventually swapped with Rolls-Royce its jet engine production for the Meteor.
Baba Ganoush Many of the British MTB's also used the Packard M2500 lend leased from the USA. the M2500 was 50% Larger than a merlin which were needed for aircraft !!!! Just a FYI
The British MTBs were 72' Vosper designs. The vast majority were built in the US- some in Canada. They were powered by the same Packard 3M-2500s mentioned here.
My grandfather ran a Crash Boat ( rare) and was faster than the PT. It was PT boat they took off the torpedoes and third center engine . It ran twins . His boat did S/R for pilots and patrol. Even hauled an army jeep on it speeding around the Philippines.
Awesome and informative! I've subscribed. I watched McHale's Navy as a kid in the 60s and in the 70s dreamed about building a fiberglass PT boat with three supercharged Allison's. I still dream of that until I awake to reality😂
Nevertheless, Packard took over the building of Rolls-Royce Merlin engines for e.g. the P-51 Mustang (as the Allisons had no performance at height). The overall design was good - but the Merlins were more or less hand-built, each one a unique example, and often you could not change parts without modifying them to the particular engine. So Packard reverse-engineered the Merlin, and converted it into metric, and made it suitable for mass production. So they also achieved that parts would fit directly, greatly reducing maintenance costs and time.
There was a old timer in ADAK NAS, who was on PT's then they got transferred to ADAK they still has the island uniform and no winter gear, they took the boats up from the equator to adak , Everybody slept in the engine room to stay warm. Refuel at sea day or night, the war was still on and the enemy subs were still doing their job.
Omg , grampa Mick was stationed at Adak almost got court marshalled for stealing the captain's halftrack and partying at the C O club with some half frozen p Jay's. Gave one his coat cuz they had other gear available on Adak and Mick was always quick to see a need . God bless him .RIP.
71.5ft British Power Boat MkV MGB 3x Packard M-2500 petrol engines Fairmile D MGB 4x Packard M-2500 petrol engines Spitfires of the Sea Motor Gun Boats page
Yeah and the boat lays out beautifully with the wake coming out at about the center of the boat. I have been into wood boats since before I could drive, I'd love to own one of these! For me that is the ultimate wood boat. I could drive around and listen to those engines til I run out of fuel.
Patrol Torpedo boats were not actually "lightning fast". Their main tactic was to slowly creep around at night. A bow wake and churning propellers would be visible even on a very dark night. On the few occasions when a PT boat approached a major surface combatant they would creep forward slowly, being within a mile would be considered very close, they would fire their torpedo (praying to God that grease in the tube didn't flash), and then slowly creep away before the torpedoes hit which was almost never. Pretty quickly the role of the PT boat changed from torpedoing warships to patrolling for Japanese supplies that were pushed overboard and expected to drift to Japanese-controlled beaches. This along with intercepting heavily gunned Japanese light craft which would transport a handful of troops or supplies. Torpedo launchers were landed and additional gunnery was installed. With the hull typically in the water, speed rarely needed, and maintenance facilities non-existent, their hulls quickly picked up beards of moss. 100 octane gas during wartime was also not guaranteed to be available. Bottom line, a brand new PT boat without armament could maybe do 40kt, but put a crew on it, configure it for gun battles with maybe two torpedoes "just in case", give it questionable gas and a moss beard, and even if it could do 30kt, if it were in a combat situation it would be creeping along at night.
It's rather amusing in the 2000s, hearing about a 16 liter v-12 gas engine that makes 800 HP, and cost $20,000 in the 1940s, considering that we get 800hp out of a v-8, 5.7 liter gas engine that cost under $3,000 to build today.
@@keithstudly6071 Average is 500 racing hours between full rebuilds. or the street version only puts out 500 hp and averages 5,000 hours between overhauls. My point was, $20,000 in the 1940s is equal 200,000 in 2020s dollars. With that much money, I could replace my 800hp engine after every race with a brand new one.
@@timhallas4275 Well my point is that the way racing engines and automotive engines in general are rated is very differently from aircraft or marine practice. An aircraft engine is tested for a minimum of 100 hours at it's rated power. That's producing 800 HP on the dyno and held at that power for 100 hours. That's just the start. Automotive practice is just producing the rated power for a few seconds. Automotive engines are rarely producing full power even for 1/2 the time they are running, even if they are being used for racing purposes. The PT boat engines were running between 60 and 100 percent power for their rated 750 hour time between overhaul. To get that kind of service from an automotive engine you would have to de-rate it severely.
@@keithstudly6071 A NASCAR Stock car engine must produce 800 -1000 hp for up to 3 hours of the most punishing use in any form of racing. The aircraft engines of the 1940s were designed to produce a huge amount of torque. That is why they averaged over 12 liters displacement and operated under 3,500 rpm. Their hp ratings were meaningless. You are comparing apples to oranges. I had a 7.5 liter v8 that ran on 85 octane pump gas, and was able to consistently put out over 500 hp, under the hood of a truck that hauled 50 tons for 100,000 miles before it's first overhaul. With a supercharger this same engine could produce over 900 hp for the same duration.
@@timhallas4275 A Pratt-Whitney R-2800C was RATED for 2200 HP but had been tested to 3600 HP for 200 hours of continuous dyno running at 3600 HP. This is the difference between the power an engine can produce and the RATED power of an engine for aviation or marine use. The Packard was RATED for 800 HP for 750 hours continuous load. It likely could have done better for shorter periods of time but that wasn't what the contract the navy gave Packard asked for. They built and tested to meet the requirements of the contract. While your thinking about boat engines consider the load on the crankshaft a boat engine gets when they hit a wave and the prop comes out of the water and runs free for 1 or two seconds and then slams back into the water. Boat engine lower ends see stress that very few applications see.
in 1974 I had a mechanical engineering professor at the University of Maryland that had served in WWII on PT boats. He and a couple of other Naval Academy graduate Ensigns who thought they were engineers attempted an engine rebuild. It ran for about half an hour.
LOL. That sounds about right. Probably very difficult to find any parts for one, even if you did know how to assemble and tune it. There is no information at all in the manuals supplied to the crews on how to overhaul anything below the valve assemblies atop the cylinders. They said if the rings were worn enough to need replacing, everything below the piston crowns would need replacing as well, so don't bother.
I'd be interested in finding out if these were cast iron block and heads, or of aluminum. Most all salt-water marine engines are cast iron, because the salt water corrodes aluminum very quickly. If they were aluminum they's still weigh around 2500 pounds, but if they were cast iron they'd weigh over 5000 pounds each. A 77-ft PT boat with 3 cast iron engines would be so heavy that the stern would be squatting so low as to be taking in water over the gunnels when docked.
the WW1 surplus motors made fine rumrunner boat motors, boat building yards would be building boats for the coast guard, on the other side of the yard they would be building faster boats for rumrunners
All the M2500 marine engines were supercharged, and he talked about them and the improvements, were YOU not paying attention ??? Listening but NOT hearing ????
@@wilburfinnigan2142 U could have not been a keyboard warrior and not been condescending. Your very well aware in person you'd catch a palm across your chops. Point is don't be a dick. Don't type what u wouldn't say to someone in person.
I have a little semi- inside information. Many of the Rolls-Royce/Packard Merlin aircraft engines were built by the GM. Chevrolet engine plant in Flint. My grandfather was a machinist turned inspector. When the Packard inspectors visited they were astonished by how fast and accurate Chevy was. They got better piston - cylinder interchabilityvthan Packard could. Even though Chevrolet was a cheep production line car and Packard a hand made luxury car. My grandfather told them that that was why. Packard could afford to hand fit each piston and cylinder so there was very little interchangability. Chevrolet had less margin and couldn't afford to hand fit that many cylinders. The machininy had to be much more precise to keep down costs. There was a secret assembly line hidden between two other lines at the Flint plant. No one not working on it or supervising it knew what it made. Rumer said Norden bomb sights but my Grandfather never knew and either will I.
I always wondered 'why ' the Allison V-1650 Engines were not used in PT Boats, or the earlier "Condor' motors not used, when Packhard's version of the RR Merlins were in such high demand.
Well, the Condor only made 650hp, so you'd need about six of those to push the boat at 45kts. I didn't know Allison made a V-1650 engine. The V-1710 of course we are all familiar with, but was already a bit long in the tooth by 1938, and as you say, the Packhard V-1650 Merlin was fully ordered out for aircraft use. It is not a trivial matter to employ an aero engine in a marine application.
There is a book that exposes some of Britain's little secrets for example, the famous Imperial Chemicals Company ICI was founded by a German and another is that either Mr. Rolls or Mr. Royce returned from America holding up blue prints and proclaiming "this is our next engine (Merlin) " or words to that effect but I have never seen this story repeated anywhere else. The book does exist and in all probability still in the family home amongst the hundreds and hundreds of books.
@@keithstudly6071 Yes I agree, it is a good story and I will add not to be dismissed. The gestation of the Merlin is longer than some think and may go back as far as just after WWI, the time-line is there allowing time for Mr. Royce to bring back plans from America. If you liked that story here's another from an English writer (it might have been L.J.K. Setright) who went on to say that the Merlin would not have been ready for WWII had it not been for a Frenchman by the name of Jacques Schneider and the famous Schneider Trophy that Britain won outright with RR V12s. That book I don't have because it and other valuable books were given away without my consent.
When I was a young boy in the late 60s early 70s they had old PT boats in NJ that they would give you rides on, very fast and you would be drenched after you were done!
The contribution of PACKARD to the war effort is incalculable. That the company didn't survive the 1950's is truly a shame. Their place in history needs to be remembered and honored.
Hi Les, great video! I am a crew on PT658 here in Portland OR. The purpose of the 5M-2500 engine aftercooler was placed on the engine in order to boost the horsepower up to 1850hp. Coupled with the larger diameter of the supercharger wheel and the higher speed of the supercharger give the increase in horsepower. The 4M-2500 has only 1500hp by comparison. One interesting problem that we have discovered with these engines is that we have inadvertently "snapped" 4 of these supercharger drive shafts. They are 1 inch diameter hardened steel splined shafts. What we found out was that when you either slow down or speed up the engine too quickly, the momentum of the supercharger in relation to the crankshaft is too high and the shaft can break very easily. So our new operating method is to slowly accelerate or decelerate when we go fast. We are taking the boat out here on 5-6-7 June 2024 for Portland Rose Festival Fleet Week, so it should be a lot of fun! All of your PT Boat related videos are very well researched and I am a fan. Thanks for these series of excellent videos! Jerry
In the late '50's my father had a Navy buddy who stayed in after WWII. My dad turned down a commission if he reupped. The buddy, Newton by name was still a Chief Machinists Mate and was stationed at Port Hueneme (pronounced "why-a-nee-mee"), halfway up the coast from L.A. to Santa Barbara. Part of the complex was the Point Magoo Naval Air Station. I was about 12 years old and we would visit the Newton family fairly regularly. On one visit, Chief Newton had a really nice surprise for my one year older brother and me. Port Huaneme had a couple of converted PT boats that they used for "coastal patrols" (a totally useless exercise but since when has the military not engaged in useless exercises to play with their toys). To make a long story short, the Chief had arranged for us to "go for a ride". Two things stick in my mind from that experience. First was just how fucking fast that boat was. Second, we got to go down to the "engine room", an extremely cramped space almost fully taken up with those Packard V-12's. That was the loudest sustained noise I had ever heard in my life. I remember it today like almost a physical presence. No wonder so many WWII vets came home with hearing loss!
Cool story and experience.
I worked with a japanese man in the late 70's who's grandfather had been in the japanese navy in ww2, he said they called the american PT boats , the green dragons and most sailors were scared shitless of them. They would seem to appear out of nowhere, you couldn't see them at night except by the wakes, and where so fast you couldn't train you're guns on them fast enough.
🇺🇸💪
My Grandfather worked for Packard Motor Company during WWII building Aircraft Merlin's. I still have his sterling silver lapel pins, a gold 10 year service award and a few of his Micrometers. The man never missed a day of work until he finally retired at 66. He is dearly missed.
My dad was a WW2 PT Boat machinist in the Pacific. He served in the same squadron as Kennedy. The most hazardous naval duty in the war. He had three boats he served on sunk. On one, he was the only survivor. Needless to say, he suffered with PTSD. PT boaters are all heroes.
I worked in a shop that reworked several crankshafts for the Navy they were works of art. Every surface was machined hollow rod and mains stainless steel.
In the clips from "They Were Expendable" we see Robert Montgomery, who was an actual PT boat sailor/veteran.
I loved that movie. One of my top 25 movies of all times. Hollywood actors of the 40's and 50's were actual war vets, and they were really credible having lived the real experience.
Robert Montgomery was also the father of Elizabeth Montgomery (Bewitched).
My grand father Joe Carville was a engine mechanic on these PT boats . He had plenty of stories about his time in pacific. During his service he became friends with JFK as he was a Boston man.
From what I read the engines required quite a bit of maintenance. Great to hear he shared the stories with you.
As a PT Boat "Splinter" attending numerous PT reunions with my father, I must thank you for creating this video. I appreciate the effort you put into this.
I once read a story on those PT-boats and their engines. Myth/rumor has it that they were secretly/not-so-secretly tuned/optimized/hot-rodded by some crews because, after a drill at sea, they would sometimes be allowed to race full-throttle back to port, and the fastest boat would get to sea-spray on those in chase.
It might just have been a bar story, but I still like the thought of mechanics tinkering to get the very best out of those V12s.
There is that story of PT 109 with JFK that the refueling of the boats was determined by the order of arrival; meaning the first boat in would be the first one refueled. The last PT to arrive for refueling may have a wait time of hours before refueling.
I hadn't heard that one, but it makes good sense. Luckily with superchargers it's not as easy as tampering with a wastegate to bump up the boost, so they're probably only able to tweak timing and mixture settings to optimize operation, which shouldn't harm the engine.
In the late 60's and early 70's these boats would come into our Marina on the Salton Sea from the Naval Target Range and refuel! As a kid, the sound was AMAZING and the size of this boat combined with the speed when they went hammer down as they left impressed me to this day!
As a hardcore IC recip engine man I thank you for posting this and setting the record straight. It was needed and you seem to be just the guy to pull it all together. Good Job !
50 degree ignition advance indicates slow burning fuel and not a lot of combustion turbulence. Still a glouriosly smooth engine with a great sound.
My grandfather was Bill North vs pres. Packard motor production. A 52 yr old widower in 42.:sent to London then, met a younger pub manager.brought home a war bride! My English grandmother. Thank god for all of them!!!! A crying shame Packard motor ended as a result of all of this.
Very thoroughly and nicely produced. Great, serious information and explanatory work. I live about 8 miles down rt 440 in Bayonne and regularly visit the Boat lift built to put PT boats into the water at the end of the Hackensack and Passaic rivers where the empty into Newark Bay .
Thanks
Hubert Scott Payne who owned the British Power Boat Company had converted some R.R.Merlin engines for use in his early MTB's. When he learned that all Merlin engines were to be reserved for aircraft production he went to the USA in search of a replacement. He took plans of his boat designs which were the inspiration for the Elco designs. This steered him towards the Packard engines and he secured some for his company. They were so successful that the British Government entered a Lease Lend contract for the Packard engines for Coastal Forces and were used by Vosper when they lost the supply of the Italian Isotta Fraschini engines they had distribution rights for prior to war being declared.
I remember hearing those three Packard engines on ELCOs first prototype on her second trip down the Thames River out to theSound for Testing what a beautiful Roar will never forget.😊
Nice.
Saw one on display at Battleship Cove in Fall River, Massachusetts. Very cool. Also 2 fully restored PT boats are on display there.
Battleship Cove is a must see for WWII naval historians! The Higgins was actually in JFK's inaugural parade (PT 109 was actually an ELCO).
There is also a PT museum inside the battleship Massachusetts.
OMG "They Were Expendable" is THE movie for this outstanding engine.
Was a harbor security mech in Subic, remember hearing rumors from old timers of security boats that had Packard engines. They said that after Vietnam that they were replaced by PBRs. They said those Packards could scream but were a maintenance nightmares. They still had the engine hoists and boat skids. They even had the old AVGAS tanks, still sealed. I sure would have liked to see them but I did get to work on the PBRs. Lots of fun.
@9:56 - It did not have two plugs per cylinder because of its aero heritage, but because they were required to completely ignite the mixture across a piston face 6.375 inches in diameter. The redundant ignition benefit was just a bonus, as losing spark to one set of plugs would noticeably reduce power output..
Sorry, but in order to be qualified as an aero engine they have to have two full ignition systems. Which is why when you start an 1820 you do a mag test and if the engine stalls on either circuit its a scrub.
They probably just kept the system because it would have required a lot of mucking about and new parts (to do it properly) and a loss of power to boot.
Packard did try to implement some form of automatic timing advance/retard in order to simplify operation for the motorman, but it was primitive and didn't work out. They reverted to manual control and that was that. I do believe that running the motor on only one spark plug per cylinder would indeed drop output, considering that ignition advance was as high as 50*BTDC. As someone else pointed out, that shows you how slow flame front propagation was, and chances are good that with only one ignition source that peak cylinder pressure would come so late on the power stroke as to cripple output. Magnetos are a pain to work with, but the advantage is not needed battery power to run ignition coils. Boat builders like ELCO were probably not about to start messing with drop-in units supplied by the anointed Navy supplier.
I spent some time in the engine space aboard PT-658 while underway. It was every bit as awe inspiring as you could imagine. The throttle plates were just barely cracked open, as we were only doing about 15 knots. Conversation in the engine space was impossible, we just stood there with big stupid grins on our faces.
I’m USN ‘61-‘63(reserve). I was a SCUBA diver,collector for the Marine Biology Museum @ Pt. Mugu, California. There are 5 Channel Islands offshore and the Navy (Pacific Missile Range) has a presence on several of them. The Navy still had several WWII PT Boats which were used for mail and supply delivery and we(3 divers,collectors)could beg a ride. Occasionally, usually dropped to dive off a couple of inner tubes and picked up on their way back. Very occasionally we would be able to dive off a “Live Boat”(Opening Day of the lobster season 1963. Two lobsters, just the tails, 12# on the bathroom scales)! These had Packard engines(3).
I'm also a diver and can only imagine the grins you'd be wearing while diving off a PT boat!
Much better audio, thank you. A good documentary on an interesting subject.
Glad you enjoyed it
Brad Taylor ,Hi cousin ! Small world lol.
Yes this version was much easier to follow audio wise and appreciated your efforts~!
Glad to hear that!
Interesting. In my younger years as a Sea Scout, we had a 1942 Chris Craft Army J boat. At 42 feet, she had anti-aircraft guns on the fore and aft decks. Supposedly, the motor was a left-over Liberty V-12, and after watching this video, I wonder if it was actually a Packard. The semi-planning hull boat was stationed in San Francisco Bay, had six 220-gallon gas tanks, a 23-inch left hand propeller, twin water-cooled brass exhausts tubes, and accommodated 12 sailors. By the time I was affiliated with it, four gas tanks were removed, the motor replaced with a Detroit Diesel 6-71 with a battle governor, and one of the exhaust tubes plugged though still remained. Even with its diesel and 120 mm injectors, she was quite a fast 8-ton boat in Humboldt Bay where she remained until rotted to the point of destruction. I miss those days growing up on the water!
You listen to the engine in some of these old footage when they are idling and you hear the cam through the thru hull exhaust give a gear head a rise in the Levis. These engines were so far ahead of there time
Narration is much clearer, thank you! Those engines were functional art... Have been sharing your channel to my retired Navy friends, men of various talents from boat restoration to museum quality model ship builders.
Thank you so much! If you guys have any photos to share I’d love to see them!
@@LesSharp I'll have to ask Dave, he might have some personal Vietnam era PT boat pictures.
My grandfather worked at Packard in Detroit, from 1925, until his retirement in 1952
Packard went bankrupt before I was born, but I miss their presence in the auto industry to this day. They had some excellent engineering in their cars and engines.
Once upon a time, when Pride ran through the blood of all Americans.
You misgendered me!!!!! lol.
No God, no unity, no future.
Not only pride, but a belief in the common good. Where our differences don't make us enemies. PEACE ✌️
From a time when schools taught pride and love of America.
There were more changes to the 3A-2500 engine to use them in the PT boats then just water cooled headers and a few other things.
After the war when he was interviewed the engineer that made the changes to create what eventually became the 4M-2500 engine used in most of the PT boats during the war claimed it was a "clean sheet" design, that isn't exactly true, it was more of an "overlay" design, ie if you draw the crankshaft, pistons, connecting rods and valve's of the 3A-2500 aircraft engine and then designed the rest of the engine around it then you'd be doing an overlay design.
The bore, stroke, connecting rod length center of eye to eye and the cylinder spacing center to center are the same between the 3A-2500 aircraft engine and the marine version and that's about the only things that are the same, the blocks, cylinders and heads are completely different castings and even different designs, the cylinder banks are one piece aluminum with steel cylinder sleeves as opposed to the 3A-2500 engine which were individual forged steel cylinders.
The changes were extensive and Packard underestimated the amount of work it would take to do it leading to them losing a considerable amount of money creating the marine version.
And yes the after-cooler was to add more power, it would have worked in conjunction with the existing inner-cooler, raising boost levels is possible with higher octane fuels but creating that much more boost creates a significant amount more heat in the compressed air (charge air) of the boost, it's not a linear increase in heat as boost is increased there's a curve in the formula, all the aircraft engine's of WW2 (as far as the Allies are concerned) required better charge cooling as boost was increased which was made possible by higher octane levels, the rise in charge temperature is much greater from 25 lbs of boost to 30 lbs than it is from 20 lbs to 25 lbs, as the higher octane levels gave them the ability to raise boost levels they had to design better charge cooling systems (inner and after coolers) to deal with the increased heat, otherwise even though you've increased boost levels you'd have to richen the air/fuel ratio and retard the timing to control detonation (knock) to the point where most of your power increase from the higher boost is canceled out from what you have to do to deal with the higher charge temperatures.
Thanks very much for filling in that detail!
@@LesSharp
Re-read my post, I just edited it adding some information about the after-cooler added onto the late war engines.
Could a 4m-2500 be upgraded to a 5m-2500? How much boost pressure did the 4m and 5m develop? Did the octane requirement stay about the same between the 4m and 5m because of the cooler charge temperature on the 5m? I believe the 5m developed 1850 hp.
@@williambikash6645
Don't know, could be they added the after-cooler just to be able to run more boost on the same level octane or could be they added it because octane levels increased and they had to add it to take advantage of the higher octane and could run more boost.
As far as boost levels they ran on the engines of those PT boats i don't know what they ran, and I'm not sure if they measured it in psi or inches of mercury, American military aircraft in those days used inches of mercury as their measuring standard so I've no reason to believe the PT boats would use any other measuring standard aside from that, but you never know so I can't say one way or the other with 100% certainty, there's several videos on TH-cam that give tours of PT boats on display in the US, if during the tour you can see the boost guages when they're in the engine room where the guy who ran the engines sits at the controls one should be able to determine which it is if they show the guages close enough, 30 psi of boost is right around 76 inches of mercury so a good look at the number's on the dial face of the guages should answer that question, if the highest number on the guages is around 35 or 40 it'd be psi but if it's 80 or 90 it'd be inches of mercury, which it probably is since US aircraft used that, the British used psi and the Germans used atmospheres for their's (it's abbreviated as ATTA or something like that).
As with the aircraft engine's I'm sure these followed suit when it came to HP increases, different cams and other major components that one would typically associate with increasing HP in cars and motorcycles weren't used to increase HP it was always just a matter of increasing boost, either by way of higher octane and better inner/after coolers, the only change in a major engine component in US aircraft engine's that I'm aware of for the sake of increasing power is the engine for the P47M/N engine when it was increased to 2,800 HP at War Emergency Power (WEP), the static compression ratio of the pistons was raised from 6.5:1 to 6.7:1, but those engines also had an improved turbo and after-cooler's also,, previous to that all the HP increases were done without any changes to internal engine components, just increased octane, better turbos and inner/after coolers.
As I explained just raising octane itself doesn't allow you to run higher boost levels simply because without cooling your increased boost intake charge that much more to offset the increased temperature in your it the benefits of increased boost are canceled because of having to retard the timing and richen the air/fuel ratio to keep detonation from occurring.
In a highly boosted engine like these detonation can shred one of them in seconds if it's bad enough, I ask a pilot once who ran Pratt&Whitney R2800 engines in a cargo plane in the late 80's if you can hear detonation in one like you can in a car and he said you couldn't, that what makes it so dangerous and is why pilots flying aircraft with high boost engines have a chart inside the cockpit that shows timing and fuel settings for boost levels that must be strictly adhered to, if they get into detonation far enough the engine will sputter and power will drop and they know they have a problem but if it's not at that high of a level they'll be tearing the engine apart and not even know it, that's a big problem in places like over the ocean where you're hundreds of miles from land, I hope you're a good swimmer if you don't pay attention to those charts.
It's getting increasingly rare these days with cars and motorcycle's due to the advancements in the aluminum pistons are made of but back in the day I had more than one engine brought to me for rebuilding that had holes blown through the tops of the pistons from detonation, mostly these days I'll see damage done to the tops of pistons from it that looks like someone took the ball end of a ball peen hammer and beat on the top of the pistons, but between modern engines having hypereuticic pistons stock from the factory and forged aftermarket pistons in modified engine's I haven't seen a hole blow in a piston from detonation in some years now, but I still occasionally see one on an air cooled motorcycle engine that's got a hole melted through one from the engine developing a massive vacuum leak and the operator not understanding what's going on.
@@dukecraig2402 Thanks for going into so much detail. I help maintain a friend's 20 yo triple engine Fountain speed boat with stock and original 575 hp supercharged 502ci Mercruiser engines. These engines have Roots style blowers with no coolers and develop about 4 lbs boost. They have 2 GM style throttle body injections per engine and block mounted knock sensors. They call for 92 pump octane and we stay out of boost when we use 89 octane in a pinch. The current 502 Mercruiser versions are 600 and 700hp and run on 87 and 89 octane.
They use axial flow superchargers without coolers and have modern FI systems and sophisticated electronics ignition systems. The 575s are original and have not been rebuilt. The center engine has never had the valve covers off! They have over 700 hrs and the boat still does 90mph. Factory rated when new was 93 mph which I can't verify. Chevrolet recently released a 632 ci BBC crate engine that developes over 1000 hp na. It has a new design aluminum cylinder heads with 12.5 to 1 cr and runs on street gasoline, 93 octane, I'm amazed!
*Would have been nice to hear some of that legendary droning sound...*
Nice educational video on Packard V12 engines. I worked on a friends PT boat engines in the 90s. The Packard engines had been replaced with 2) direct drive forward mounted 8v71 Detroits and a single 6-71 with a v-drive in the center, this configuration is the opposite of the description in this video. We ran the boat from NC up to Toronto for a tv movie, "JFK Reckless Youth". This boat was also the Coast Guard boat in the 1991 movie "Sleeping with the Enemy".
I just saw the Miss America X being towed on a trailer near Lake St. Clair in MI. A direct connection to the PT engines.
One of the things I didn't know when making this video was that the Liberty engine was a cheap and cheerful powerplant for smuggling boats during Prohibition. I wonder who inspired who?
@@LesSharp The current production Florida built Cigarette boats are named after a prohibition era rum runner that was nicknamed Cigarette or was called Cigarette because it was long and thin. I doubt if they lettered the name on the "Cigarette " rum runner !
@@LesSharp
Back around 1969 I worked with a boat mechanic in a Ft Lauderdale boat yard who as a young man worked on a Detroit rum runner
tuning up the multiple Liberty engines. He was a young man at the time and was paid with hundred dollar bills. He said he didn't know what to do with bills that large.
Ernie Riley was quite the character with an Irish glint in his eyes and full of great stories. Also possibly the world's largest leprechaun!
Great video and these engines were something else....legendary in their power and craftmanship!
My dad was aboard PT-335 in the South Pacific. While he was away, my mom took me (about age 4) to see a PT at a lake, where we were going to take a ride. We were close to the boat when the engines started up with a roar. It scared the bejeezus out of me, and there was no way I was getting on that darned thing!
My neighbor served on PT Boats in Mindanao. I was curious about it and asked about the experience. (when I was a kid). He looked at me oddly, and said simply, "it was hot". Then he turned to my father, as though he had asked the question, and said. "they had us fueling them with goddamn jerry cans". Years later, when I was a sailor, I came to appreciate what he'd said.
"It was hot" LMAO! Yeah, filling several thousand gallons by hand when it's 100*F and 100% humidity would absolutely suck. Where I lived, you could see Mindanao on a clear day, so I know.
A message from the UK. My father served in the Royal Navy during WW2 and in particular LCAs (landing craft assault). He did commando raids, was at Dieppe as well as Operations Torch and Husky. He said that the LCAs with Packard engines were not as reliable as those fitted with Rolls Royce. It may have been national bias or experience; both packards in his LCA failed at Dieppe at a crucial moment!
There was one of those engines at pounds shipping Portsmouth in the shed I saw it in 2006
The monkeys have no tails in Zamboanga sung at the very end was a song my uncle sang when stationed in New Guinea during WW2; just died a short time ago at 97. I'm guessing my father did as well, although he never spoke of it; he died more than 37 years ago.
Sorry for your loss of him....l am in my 80's....
Shoe🇺🇸
Well I remember reading somewhere RR suggested Packard should get the contract for US built Merlins because they were the only American firm that they had confidence in, due to their prior experience building V12 engines. This certainly implies that Packard were building V12s before they were building Merlins.
My father was a PT driver known as the river rat in Vietnam three month before he retired.
Dad was MoMate PT 156 plank owner. Miss him very much.
Video made me happy. I made a few parts for the guys restoring P.T. 658 in portland or. anyone who wants to see this boat is in for a real treat. It is a small museum of regular guys. One of the finest museums you will ever see as there is also a world war two landing craft museum there also. It is a small operation and they have a phone number listed i am sure on their web site. They are justly proud of the boat and all the unbelievable work they have done, but very few folks show up to view the museum,, so if you just call them they will most likely drop everything and open the museum any time you want. seriously i recommend this museum to any body into world war two history, or that has even been a military veteran. Also i enjoyed the film clip about the monkeys of Zamboanga that had no tails. Zamboanga is one of my favorite ports of call.
I know a guy that is an antique boat restorer that has one of these Packard marine engines. Next time I'm there I will ask more about it!
In the 1970's there was a complete Packard 2500 PT boat engine on a stand inside the Mechanical Engineering Building at Cal Poly San Luis Obispo. I wonder if it is still there.
I think the pt boat idea is underrated. Iran still uses the concept. You could argue they do it out of cost. In this day and age give it some kind of drone and anti drone capability. I think it could have a place in coastal/harbor defense.
The Liberty 12 was also used in British tanks during WW2, the early A13 cruiser tank and Crusader tank.
Yes they were until the UK got their meteor engines up and running!!!
I sure wish more of these great boats were around. Would enjoy piloting one of these which are over twice as long as our current Trojan (1980).
These engines were also used by the Brits in their PT boats . They were also used in the air sea rescue launches .
They gave less problems than the Merlins in British MTB and MGB the Merlin didn't get on with salt water, post war as the Meteor and V8 Meteorite this was less of an issue they even made a diesel version
Yes they did as the brits received several thousands of the Packard M2500 and the quality of those engines is what brought RR engineers to Packard for the Merlins !! !
@@andrewwmacfadyen6958 And they were a lot mor powerful !!!
These engines also powered British Fairmile D MTB's (Motor Torpedo Boats) and MGB's (Motor Gun Boats).
Absolutely !!! Via lend lease !!
Most beautiful vessel ever built. Only an irretrievable deteriorated hull in a Norwegian fjord as the last survivor of all the D's - Dogboats - but there is a Fairmile B awaiting restoration at Hartlepool.
Really fascinating Packard engines. I didn't realize the two outboard engines had V-Drives; whereas the center engine had direct drive. I'm surprised they could be even run on 87 octane gas, which I'm sure was leaded. Also the shaft-drives to the overhead cams are unique. Also, I'm surprised the exposed valve trains of the old Liberty engines didn't gunk up with dirt and debris. I'd guess that a PT boat at WOT consumed at least 150 GPH, maybe more. They were impressive. Great video and quite interesting.
I believe the fuel they used was 100 octane aviation fuel
You are correct.
The shaft drive to the overhead cam was NOT unique as the Allison and RR used a similiar system !!!
Yes try 500GPH at WOT Thirsty engines
The Packard museum in Warren Ohio has a new never used Packard PT boat engine on display..
A great video that I will reference when folks on aviation pages keep referring to this as the Merlin!
Please do!
They won't hear any different, either. It was made by Packard and it's a V-12, it's a Merlin.
McHales navy, I was a kid then and loved that show mainly because of pt boats, the engines sound beautiful, plus JFK was on a pt boat.
Howdy fellas, very impressive, one of the absolute best TH-cam format docs…..
One million thank you’s for this great video.
B R A V O …! Well Done …!
Top notch .., TOP NOCH …!
Great story.
The Pacific War in my mind at sea was won on the backs on the Enterprise and the Pt’s.
Submarines
@@LesSharp Them too.
Fabulous history lesson and film clips ! Thank you !
Ward Bond there at the end...fascinating video.
From They Were Expendable..
I was a commercial fisherman. Years earlier an older friend bought a PT right after the war for tuna jig fishing. When he first got the boat he put a few hundred gallons in the tanks and went joy riding with family and friends. In a few hours the engines started missing and then stopping. The Coast Guard towed him back. One of the coasties had been on PTs during the war and told him the engines burned 50 gallons per hour per engine at speed. He pulled the gas engines and put in 3 war surplus Detroit Diesels.
About five years ago I visited The National World War II Museum in New Orleans, Louisiana. They were restoring a PT boat and I know it was equipped with three Packard engines, all right-hand drive!
In the 70s, I went to a truck and tractor pull in Kansas City, and one of the tractors had a submarine engine on it, wow did it roar and pull.
Doubt it. Submarines used FM 38 8-1/8 engines. They are 9.3 meters long and weigh 38 tons in 12 cylinder configuration. Each cylinder displaces 17 liters.
Really interesting film , thank you !
This is great thanks. Very clear. I also understood the pt boat and British mtb to be powered by merlin engines. The merlin was used as a tank engine (called Meteor used in comet, centurion etc) and in trucks as well as cut down to a V8 (Meteorite). Oh and yes it was used aircraft lol. Rover eventually swapped with Rolls-Royce its jet engine production for the Meteor.
Baba Ganoush Many of the British MTB's also used the Packard M2500 lend leased from the USA. the M2500 was 50% Larger than a merlin which were needed for aircraft !!!! Just a FYI
The British MTBs were 72' Vosper designs. The vast majority were built in the US- some in Canada. They were powered by the same Packard 3M-2500s mentioned here.
Also the Fairmiles, the Fairmile D or Dogboat was 115' long.
The meteor is an engine that dosnt meet areo standards and were downgraded from aircraft use.
My grandfather ran a Crash Boat ( rare) and was faster than the PT. It was PT boat they took off the torpedoes and third center engine . It ran twins . His boat did S/R for pilots and patrol. Even hauled an army jeep on it speeding around the Philippines.
Awesome and informative! I've subscribed.
I watched McHale's Navy as a kid in the 60s and in the 70s dreamed about building a fiberglass PT boat with three supercharged Allison's. I still dream of that until I awake to reality😂
I hope you come into an unexpected and ma$$ive windfall and get to build your PT!
⚓Fair winds & following seas!
My neighbor says he served on PT 73 during the war to end all wars.
World War One?
@@JesseWright68 yeah he's crazy 🤪
This stuff tickles my fancy way cool I'm 43 and I just love this knowledge!!!!
A friends dad has one of these engines in a pulling tractor. You can feel it in your chest when it's pulling at full power.
A lot of tractor pull tractors had Packard motors in them in the 80s. They were always my favorite.
@@bigredc222 same guy had one with the Allison v12 and one with 3 5.3l in a row
@@jrsgarage7623 Now that I think about it, the tractors I saw had Allison engines, not Packard.
@@bigredc222 the Allison had a Holley four barrel that was huge
@@bigredc222 I think the Allison came outta airplanes and the Packard was the pt boat motors
Considered an amazing feat. While I agree somewhat, a 750 hrs life span with a very high cost does not seem very good.
Nevertheless, Packard took over the building of Rolls-Royce Merlin engines for e.g. the P-51 Mustang (as the Allisons had no performance at height).
The overall design was good - but the Merlins were more or less hand-built, each one a unique example, and often you could not change parts without modifying them to the particular engine.
So Packard reverse-engineered the Merlin, and converted it into metric, and made it suitable for mass production.
So they also achieved that parts would fit directly, greatly reducing maintenance costs and time.
Thanks for the content. Nice work.
One of these engines is on display at America's Packard Museum in Dayton, Ohio.
Thanks!
I’m going to Portland in a few weeks, going to look for PT658!
Jealous. Try to run into @Jerry Gilmartin. He knows more about these engines than just about anyone!
I will!
We’re going tomorrow or Monday, need to call them but we’re in Ptown!
Hopefully we can take pictures!
My father worked at Packard machining harmonic balancers for these engines before he went into the Army in WWII.
There was a old timer in ADAK NAS, who was on PT's then they got transferred to ADAK they still has the island uniform and no winter gear, they took the boats up from the equator to adak , Everybody slept in the engine room to stay warm. Refuel at sea day or night, the war was still on and the enemy subs were still doing their job.
Omg , grampa Mick was stationed at Adak almost got court marshalled for stealing the captain's halftrack and partying at the C O club with some half frozen p Jay's. Gave one his coat cuz they had other gear available on Adak and Mick was always quick to see a need . God bless him .RIP.
71.5ft British Power Boat MkV MGB 3x Packard M-2500 petrol engines
Fairmile D MGB 4x Packard M-2500 petrol engines
Spitfires of the Sea Motor Gun Boats page
Thanks for that! The Huckins PT also had four Packards and swilled gas like there was no tomorrow.
@@LesSharp No trouble
Is there any better sound on Earth than Cmdr Quintin McCale's PT-73 engine?
Yeah and the boat lays out beautifully with the wake coming out at about the center of the boat. I have been into wood boats since before I could drive, I'd love to own one of these! For me that is the ultimate wood boat. I could drive around and listen to those engines til I run out of fuel.
@@tjohnson9051 You would be a Platinum Level customer at the fuel barge. ;)
Funny you ask ;)
I wish someone would mention about the Pacard Diesels. V16 used on US NAVY MINE SWEEPERS MSO’s. Aluminum block.
One of my overall favorite movies.
PT-109 movie was filmed in the Florida Keyes
Patrol Torpedo boats were not actually "lightning fast".
Their main tactic was to slowly creep around at night. A bow wake and churning propellers would be visible even on a very dark night. On the few occasions when a PT boat approached a major surface combatant they would creep forward slowly, being within a mile would be considered very close, they would fire their torpedo (praying to God that grease in the tube didn't flash), and then slowly creep away before the torpedoes hit which was almost never.
Pretty quickly the role of the PT boat changed from torpedoing warships to patrolling for Japanese supplies that were pushed overboard and expected to drift to Japanese-controlled beaches. This along with intercepting heavily gunned Japanese light craft which would transport a handful of troops or supplies. Torpedo launchers were landed and additional gunnery was installed.
With the hull typically in the water, speed rarely needed, and maintenance facilities non-existent, their hulls quickly picked up beards of moss. 100 octane gas during wartime was also not guaranteed to be available. Bottom line, a brand new PT boat without armament could maybe do 40kt, but put a crew on it, configure it for gun battles with maybe two torpedoes "just in case", give it questionable gas and a moss beard, and even if it could do 30kt, if it were in a combat situation it would be creeping along at night.
McHale's Navy taught me everything I need to know, or so I thought.
It's rather amusing in the 2000s, hearing about a 16 liter v-12 gas engine that makes 800 HP, and cost $20,000 in the 1940s, considering that we get 800hp out of a v-8, 5.7 liter gas engine that cost under $3,000 to build today.
How many hours will it run while producing 800HP?
@@keithstudly6071 Average is 500 racing hours between full rebuilds. or the street version only puts out 500 hp and averages 5,000 hours between overhauls. My point was, $20,000 in the 1940s is equal 200,000 in 2020s dollars. With that much money, I could replace my 800hp engine after every race with a brand new one.
@@timhallas4275 Well my point is that the way racing engines and automotive engines in general are rated is very differently from aircraft or marine practice. An aircraft engine is tested for a minimum of 100 hours at it's rated power. That's producing 800 HP on the dyno and held at that power for 100 hours. That's just the start. Automotive practice is just producing the rated power for a few seconds. Automotive engines are rarely producing full power even for 1/2 the time they are running, even if they are being used for racing purposes. The PT boat engines were running between 60 and 100 percent power for their rated 750 hour time between overhaul. To get that kind of service from an automotive engine you would have to de-rate it severely.
@@keithstudly6071 A NASCAR Stock car engine must produce 800 -1000 hp for up to 3 hours of the most punishing use in any form of racing. The aircraft engines of the 1940s were designed to produce a huge amount of torque. That is why they averaged over 12 liters displacement and operated under 3,500 rpm. Their hp ratings were meaningless. You are comparing apples to oranges. I had a 7.5 liter v8 that ran on 85 octane pump gas, and was able to consistently put out over 500 hp, under the hood of a truck that hauled 50 tons for 100,000 miles before it's first overhaul. With a supercharger this same engine could produce over 900 hp for the same duration.
@@timhallas4275 A Pratt-Whitney R-2800C was RATED for 2200 HP but had been tested to 3600 HP for 200 hours of continuous dyno running at 3600 HP. This is the difference between the power an engine can produce and the RATED power of an engine for aviation or marine use. The Packard was RATED for 800 HP for 750 hours continuous load. It likely could have done better for shorter periods of time but that wasn't what the contract the navy gave Packard asked for. They built and tested to meet the requirements of the contract. While your thinking about boat engines consider the load on the crankshaft a boat engine gets when they hit a wave and the prop comes out of the water and runs free for 1 or two seconds and then slams back into the water. Boat engine lower ends see stress that very few applications see.
in 1974 I had a mechanical engineering professor at the University of Maryland that had served in WWII on PT boats. He and a couple of other Naval Academy graduate Ensigns who thought they were engineers attempted an engine rebuild. It ran for about half an hour.
LOL. That sounds about right. Probably very difficult to find any parts for one, even if you did know how to assemble and tune it. There is no information at all in the manuals supplied to the crews on how to overhaul anything below the valve assemblies atop the cylinders. They said if the rings were worn enough to need replacing, everything below the piston crowns would need replacing as well, so don't bother.
He said that it wasn't until years later what the limited information they had actually meant.@@LesSharp
That right there is the difference between education and experience!
Great engines!
There is a bunch of these engines on display in Kingston NY
I'd be interested in finding out if these were cast iron block and heads, or of aluminum. Most all salt-water marine engines are cast iron, because the salt water corrodes aluminum very quickly. If they were aluminum they's still weigh around 2500 pounds, but if they were cast iron they'd weigh over 5000 pounds each. A 77-ft PT boat with 3 cast iron engines would be so heavy that the stern would be squatting so low as to be taking in water over the gunnels when docked.
Bob Konradi You also were not listening as it was covered aluminum heads and crankcase with steel cylinders !!! DUUUHH!!!!
@@wilburfinnigan2142 Sorry, I just missed the info. Thanks for the info.
Thanks excellent video...
Shoe🇺🇸
the WW1 surplus motors made fine rumrunner boat motors, boat building yards would be building boats for the coast guard, on the other side of the yard they would be building faster boats for rumrunners
That one engine they were installing looked like it was supercharged. Like an early procharger type.
They were supercharged.
All the M2500 marine engines were supercharged, and he talked about them and the improvements, were YOU not paying attention ??? Listening but NOT hearing ????
@@wilburfinnigan2142 U could have not been a keyboard warrior and not been condescending. Your very well aware in person you'd catch a palm across your chops. Point is don't be a dick. Don't type what u wouldn't say to someone in person.
Thank you for saying that much more politely than I would have.
@@LesSharpSometimes I dont
I was on 3 ships but would have loved this, as an MM2 it was a possibility.
I have a little semi- inside information.
Many of the Rolls-Royce/Packard Merlin aircraft engines were built by the GM. Chevrolet engine plant in Flint. My grandfather was a machinist turned inspector. When the Packard inspectors visited they were astonished by how fast and accurate Chevy was. They got better piston - cylinder interchabilityvthan Packard could. Even though Chevrolet was a cheep production line car and Packard a hand made luxury car. My grandfather told them that that was why. Packard could afford to hand fit each piston and cylinder so there was very little interchangability. Chevrolet had less margin and couldn't afford to hand fit that many cylinders. The machininy had to be much more precise to keep down costs.
There was a secret assembly line hidden between two other lines at the Flint plant. No one not working on it or supervising it knew what it made. Rumer said Norden bomb sights but my Grandfather never knew and either will I.
I always wondered 'why ' the Allison V-1650 Engines were not used in PT Boats, or the earlier "Condor' motors not used, when Packhard's version of the RR Merlins were in such high demand.
Well, the Condor only made 650hp, so you'd need about six of those to push the boat at 45kts. I didn't know Allison made a V-1650 engine. The V-1710 of course we are all familiar with, but was already a bit long in the tooth by 1938, and as you say, the Packhard V-1650 Merlin was fully ordered out for aircraft use. It is not a trivial matter to employ an aero engine in a marine application.
The Morse code at the beginning says history on location.
Great video thanks for sharing
There is a book that exposes some of Britain's little secrets for example, the famous Imperial Chemicals Company ICI was founded by a German and another is that either Mr. Rolls or Mr. Royce returned from America holding up blue prints and proclaiming "this is our next engine (Merlin) " or words to that effect but I have never seen this story repeated anywhere else. The book does exist and in all probability still in the family home amongst the hundreds and hundreds of books.
Rolls died in 1910. Royce died in 1933 and the first Merlin was running in 1935. Good story!
@@keithstudly6071 Yes I agree, it is a good story and I will add not to be dismissed. The gestation of the Merlin is longer than some think and may go back as far as just after WWI, the time-line is there allowing time for Mr. Royce to bring back plans from America. If you liked that story here's another from an English writer (it might have been L.J.K. Setright) who went on to say that the Merlin would not have been ready for WWII had it not been for a Frenchman by the name of Jacques Schneider and the famous Schneider Trophy that Britain won outright with RR V12s. That book I don't have because it and other valuable books were given away without my consent.
Build modern motor torpedo boats armed with 2 torpedoes and multiple anti aircraft missiles. Build them in hundreds if not thousands.
When I was a young boy in the late 60s early 70s they had old PT boats in NJ that they would give you rides on, very fast and you would be drenched after you were done!
Amazing job. Thanks.