The other
"propeller" shafts to the front and rear axles are enclosed
in water proof tubes, sealed by flexible gaiters to the hull and to
the differentials to allow normal suspension movement. These and other
modification pushed the weight up to 1600kg (3600lbs). The cockpit has
more control levers than you can poke a stick at: 2WD/4WD, hi-range/
lo-range, capstan winch (on the bows), rudder and propeller.
The Seep's
intended use was to ferry soldiers to and from ships off-shore, to
trundle up the beach and continue inland. They were not very
successful. It had been planned to build 12,000 of them (Clayton '82)
but only 5,000 were produced (Carlin '89), all by Ford. It is reported
that many of the Jeeps that were used in battle sank if there were any
significant waves at all. Nevertheless, a highly modified amphibious
Jeep called `Half-Safe' crossed the Atlantic ocean in 1950 and
continued on to circle the world -
L. Allison
Ford GPA Specifications
- Amphibious, 2+2 seats, no doors,
safety life jackets?
- Loa 15' 2", width 64"
weight 3650lbs (unladen!)
- 2199cc petrol, 4 cyls, 2 valves/cyl
side-valve
- power 60bhp at 3600rpm
- Transmission 3 speed, 2 speed
transfer case part-time 4WD, propeller driven from PTO
- Suspension live-axle-leaf/
live-axle-leaf, brakes drum/drum
- Tyres 6.00x16, fuel tank 12
gallons
Half Safe (another
mad Aussie?)
Frederick Benjamin (Ben) Carlin
(1912-1981) was born in Northam, Western Australia. He had seen
amphibious Jeeps in India during the war and decided that one could
drive, and swim, around the world. After the war he fetched up in
America and determined to buy a Jeep and to make such a trip. He also
married Elinore, an American, who despite being highly susceptible to
sea-sickness set out with him.
They had considerable trouble in
obtaining an amphibious Jeep, a 1942 Ford GPA number 1239, and in
making it serviceable, or at least `Half Safe'. A more boat-like bow
was added, as well as a cabin, and an under-belly fuel tank that could
be jettisoned when empty. Standard Jeeps were open and many of them
had sunk but the addition of a cabin kept the water out and made up
for the low freeboard.
The first leg of the world trip was
the crossing of the Atlantic, leaving from Halifax, Nova Scotia. The
initial attempt, in 1949, ended ignominiously with rescue after a
propeller-shaft bearing failed; an amphibious Jeep has a real
propeller-shaft of course. The second attempt, leaving in July 1950,
was successful although full of interest and incident as recounted in
Ben Carlin's first book. They stopped en-route at the Azores, Madeira
and the Canary Isles before landing at Cape Juby in Morocco.
The book leaves the Jeep in England
and in need of much work. The effects of corrosion had to be repaired
and the superstructure was improved. The book must have provided much
needed finance because the rest of the trip was completed not in
luxury but with fewer worries about money.
The Carlins and the Jeep made the
crossing to France on 22 April 1955. Their route took them through
Europe, Iraq, Persia, Pakistan and India.
They shipped the Jeep from Calcutta
to Perth so that they could tour Australia, including a visit to
Guildford Grammar, Ben Carlin's old school. The Jeep was then returned
to Calcutta so that it could resume the circumnavigation on its own
wheels and hull. Elinore returned to the US at this point and Ben
Carlin continued with various adventurers.
The Jeep sailed to Burma and drove
overland to Thailand Cambodia and Vietnam. It then sailed to Japan via
Hong Kong, Taiwan and Okinawa. Leaving Japan, it set out on the last
long ocean leg - to the Aleutian Islands (7 July 1957) and Alaska. On
13 May 1958 the Jeep finally drove into Montreal where the project had
started. It had covered "9,600 nautical miles by water and 39,000
miles overland" by Carlin's reckoning. The book of the second
half of the trip was not published until 1989 after Carlin's death in
1981.
Half Safe now resides at Guildford
Grammar school. The Jeep has been restored and is on-show in a special
glass-walled garage where visitors can look and wonder - L. Allison
http://www.csse.monash.edu.au/~lloyd/4/Ford/GPA/
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