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OK , i think i have waited long enough and there has been a lot of good guesses so the correct answer is , Whirlpool. They built one experimental motor that was raced a few times in California and had some success. However . exec's at Whirlpool decided to stick to the washer and dryer business. I cant help wonder if this motor still exists and what it would be worth!!!
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Sorry Smitty no photos or links. Most of the engine questions came from the book by Peter Hunn titled " The Old Outboard Book ". It is a very good reference when it comes to old outboard motors. It is available on Amazon at different price points.Last edited by racingfan1; 01-06-2017, 05:38 AM.
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I think the first Quincy looper was 1963. That leaves the Quincy - Merc deflector , but it was more a tuners engine than a factory piece. I'm getting closer and closer to Konig but that didn't happen till the second half of the 50's.
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I bought my 1st A- Looper in 1966 in Lakeland from a guy from Buffalo (don't remember his name) who was in and out of alky racing only briefly. It had a quite early block, maybe dating from 1965. At the time I had access to Melvin Cooper's ''brand new'' (latest model) 1967 A Looper block in Bud Wiget's Lakeland shop b4 Melvin was in town to pick it up.
Bud and I measured the porting and determined that no way was I able to duplicate the ''latest'' porting because Chris had changed the porting dimensions in two directions at once between my 1965 (?) cylinders and Melvin's up-to-date new 1967 block. As I recall, the biggest difference was in the 3rd-port (the piston-port) timing, and Melvin's new block had a higher exhaust-port timing than my older block . . . more ''overlap'' between exhaust- and transfer-port timing.
So we ignored the 3rd-port timing difference, and I asked Walt Blankenstein (two doors up East Magnolia Street) to match my exhaust ports to Melvin's. I had modest success with this cylinder block as a new alky racer in the late 1960s. I think that Paul Christner might be able to shed additional light on the Looper changes that were taking place in that middle-late 1960s era when Chris was trying so hard to stay ahead of Koenig development.
I still have that Blankenstein-modified cylinder block down cellar, if anyone is interested, as well as the later exhaust-divided Quincy Looper cylinder block that I acquired (at peril to the family budget) in about 1970
I'll add that I tried hard to make exhaust-expansion chambers work on the A-Looper in the early 1970s. I failed. But Bob Grover succeeded in Vermont with the exhaust--divided newer cylinder blocks and exhaust headers. For awhile, Bob & I were in almost daily telephone ccntact about this ''secret'' project.. Eventually Bob prevailed with what would now be considered a ''mild'' chamber config.
I drove Bob's rig (a Yale pickle-fork hydro) at Thompson, CT a year or two after he sold it. It had more punch than I ever remember from my own Loopers, but he and I were a day late and a dollar short of being able to win with his rig. The day of the cast-iron Koenigs had already arrived with their additional 4-6 mph!Last edited by dwhitford; 01-07-2017, 11:18 PM.
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