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TRAMONTANA 1962 |
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Named after one of the strong Mediterranean winds, that sweeps down
from the northern mountains at a moments notice, Tramontana
certainly lived up to her name. She was the largest at 42ft and the
most powerful, with twin Italian CRM petrol engines rated at a total
of 2308hp, entry in the 1962 Cowes Torquay race and a beautiful
beast too in her Mid green and white racing colours. Designed by
Peter Du Cane, in mini MTB style, built by the all powerful Vosper's
in
the Portchester yard
this was Stockbroker Dick Wilkins patriotic foray
into powerboat racing to make sure the Beaverbrook Trophy stayed in
Britain. She was commissioned from Vosper's at the boat show on New
Years day and was completed 8 months later! Mr Wilkins was enticed
into the sport by Tommy Sopwith winner of the first race in 1961, he
had been Tommy’s backer and patron in his sports car racing days and
although the owner of Tramontana left the driving to the team of
Jeffrey Quill (please see obituary below) and Don Robertson. |
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Tramontana |
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Jeffrey
Quill is on left on foredeck with D. Robertson on the right. Sam
Hutchings who built her is in white overalls on the stern. Peter Du
Cane's Motor Yacht `Sea Victory` an old Fairmile MTB is in
background. Picture taken in Camber Docks, Portsmouth.
Courtesy Graham Stevens. |
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During her testing Tramontana was first seen with a full framed
windscreen and open cockpit, she was setting some incredibly fast
times in the Solent, hardly surprising with that power bay. Other
competitors had already noted her performance and were questioning
the rules that allowed such a monster! As testing continued so did
the design enhancement and she appeared race week with the screen
topped with a full wheelhouse and a mast atop it in Naval style
looking every inch the winner before the race had even started.
Whereas most of the entries in the race were now of a Deep V design
she followed standard hard chine route with a bluff bow, fine foot
to cut through the water and a sweeping chine back to the shallow 6%
at the transom, she looked every inch an offspring of the Brave
Class patrol boats that policed the race in those days. The other
distinctive feature were her exhaust pods, exiting both sides of the
stern flanks, a design years ahead in its style but soon to be seen
on many 70’s motor yachts. |
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The
1962 Cowes Torquay ran on a new lengthened course of 170miles and
had attracted a fleet of 41 craft which considering this was only
the second running of the race proved beyond a doubt that the new
sport was a big hit with competitors and spectators alike. The race
now running on the Bank Holiday weekend was rough, so it was no
surprise that it favoured the bigger boats and by Portland Bill at
the halfway stage it was the mighty Tramontana that lead, she set
off across Lyme Bay in first place to the cheers of the crew aboard
the Vosper experimental Patrol boat Ferocity that was accompanying
the race. |
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Behind her came 2 Americans Sam Griffith in Blue Moppie and little
Yo Yo driven by Jim Wynn repeating his previous years performance.
Moppie took advantage of the flattened seas of the wake left behind
the leaders 13 ton bulk but still found the going extremely bumpy,
god knows how 3rd place Yo Yo coped! Tramontana took the
rough Lyme crossing as stately as a Duchess crossing a puddle, never
faltering once, to finish in 5hrs 10 minutes at a shade under 37mph,
due to the size and thirst of the engines a total of 650galls were
consumed on the trip at a cost in old money of about £450.00 in
today’s £3250.00 approx. Only 17 other boats finished of which one
Ultima Dea driven by Gianni Agnelli was disqualified for missing the
Bournemouth mark. |
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Tramontana’s victory, proved to those who questioned her
eligibility, that the rules needed changing and we never saw her
like again. She was sold late in 62 to Gianni Agnelli the Fiat boss
and with new spray rails fitted to her hull, was shipped Genoa
Italy. |
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Tramontana was last seen in 1990 a few mile's
south of Anzio, in Italy. Above are some pictures of the sorry
sight. |
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Since posting this article further information
and pictures have been supplied to the author. Tramontana still sits
decaying in Anzio, Italy and here are the images of her taken this
year (2007). |
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Photos courtesy Giacomo
Vitali,webmaster of
www.amalficoastcharter.com |
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OBITUARY:Jeffrey Quill |
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March 5th 1996 marked the diamond jubilee of the
first flight of the immortal Supermarine Spitfire, from Eastleigh
aerodrome, Southampton. Jeffrey Quill, the second man to fly the
aircraft (after Vickers' chief test pilot, "Mutt" Summers), who took
over as chief test pilot and later test-flew every mark of Spitfire,
and whose name will for ever be linked with R.J. Mitchell's
masterpiece, died last month. As President of the Spitfire Society,
which is closely involved with the celebrations, Quill had been
looking forward to the event. |
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Quill was born at Littlehampton in Sussex in
1913, the youngest of five children. In 1926 he began his secondary
education at Lancing College, which overlooks Shoreham aerodrome.
The constant aerial activity overhead quickened the already
air-minded Quill's resolve to take a non-commissioned career in the
Royal Air Force long before he left Lancing in 1931. |
At 181/2 Quill was
accepted into the RAF as an Acting Pilot
Officer. He learned to fly on Avro Tutor
biplanes and went solo in the remarkably
short time of 5 hours 20 minutes (9 hours
being regarded as the norm). He graduated on
to Siskin IIIA advanced trainers, and his
flying ability was assessed as
"exceptional". In September 1932 he joined
No 17 Squadron RAF at Upavon, where he began
flying Bristol Bulldog fighters. He flew as
often as possible in order to familiarise
himself with the aeroplane, practising
aerobatics and flying in cloud. He wrote
later,
"Unless aerobatics
were practised
assiduously to the
point where one was
familiar with every
conceivable
combination of speed
and altitude of
which the aircraft
was capable, one was
not master of the
aeroplane. Therefore
a day would come
when the aeroplane
decided that it was
in charge instead of
the pilot, and that
would be the last
day. I never had
cause to modify that
view, and I kept my
aerobatics well
honed to the day of
my last flight as a
pilot."
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This discipline was to
stand Quill in good stead for his future
career as a test pilot.
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While still at Lancing
Quill had attended the famous RAF Display at
Hendon, never perhaps dreaming that he would
soon participate. He did so on 24 June 1933,
taking part in a mock bombing attack.
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Quill's aptitude and penchant for flying in all
weathers suited his posting to the Meteorological Flight at Duxford.
There, flying open-cockpit Siskins, the unit made twice- daily
scheduled flights (except on Sundays) up to 25,000ft to collect data
for weather reports. After Quill took command of the flight in
November 1934 he and his team managed to fly every "slot" for a
whole year, regardless of "unflyable" weather, without missing a
flight. For this achievement Quill was awarded the Air Force Cross.
On one occasion, when letting down through cloud, his Siskin hit the
ground very hard but in perfect landing attitude, bounced over a
hedge and overturned, pushing Quill's head forward on to the cockpit
coaming (its raised border). Had he not already received a broken
nose from a boxing accident he would have qualified for the "Siskin
nose" - a characteristic of many pilots of the period. |
In January 1936 Quill
joined Vickers (Aviation) Ltd as assistant
to its chief test pilot, "Mutt" Summers. His
initial task was the testing of the
Wellesley bomber, and it was while flying a
production Wellesley that Quill had a narrow
escape. The 74ft 7in-span bomber refused to
recover from a spin and at 3,000ft Quill
decided to bale out. As he descended, the
spiralling bomber seemed intent on slicing
the pilot with its wings; but he landed
safely not far from the Kingston bypass.
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Quill's long association with the Spitfire began
in earnest when he made his first flight in the prototype on 26
March 1936. There was some rivalry with Hawker, whose Hurricane had
first flown four months earlier and Quill's priority was to get the
Spitfire cleared for acceptance by the RAF. A thoroughbred from the
start, the Spitfire nevertheless needed a great deal of work before
it was deemed safe for young RAF pilots to fly, and did not enter
squadron service until July 1938. However, developed through many
marks and variants, the Spitfire remained a first-line fighter
throughout the war. During this entire period Quill was in charge of
development and production flying, a job that he took very seriously
- so seriously that he felt he must obtain first-hand combat
experience. During August- September 1940 he was temporarily
released to join No 63 Squadron at RAF Hornchurch, privately hoping
that it would be a permanent appointment. On 16 August he shot down
an Me109 and two days later he shared a victory over Heinkel He 111.
His combat days were short-lived, but they made Quill all the more
determined to make the Spitfire an even better fighting machine. |
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Jeffrey Quill in September
1994 |
Cockpit
of Supermarine Spitfire - note Jeffery Quill's signature on
the panel |
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In 1942 the Luftwaffe's Focke Wulf Fw190 was
gaining the edge over Allied fighters, and it was an urgent priority
to capture an example. For a while Quill was on standby to be taken
to France in order to hijack a Fw190 back to England. Fortunately an
example was delivered to the RAF on a plate in the meantime, when a
disorientated German pilot landed at a Welsh airfield by mistake. |
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With the introduction of the navalised Spitfire,
the Fleet Air Arm suffered enormous losses through deck-landing
accidents. In the space of three days one force of 106 Seafires was
reduced to 64 serviceable aircraft: something had to be done. Quill
duly spent five months with the Navy, during which time he made 75
deck landings. The distinguished naval test pilot Capt Eric "Winkle"
Brown later wrote, "{Quill} was an inspired choice, as he had the
analytical mind of a superb test pilot trained to find answers to
any flight problem." Equally importantly, he could explain testing
problems to his team in language which everyone could understand. |
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By the end of the war Quill had personally test
flown all 50-odd variants of Spitfire and Seafire. The rapid
increase in performance, armament and all-up weight produced a
never-ending stream of design changes, most of which tended to be
detrimental to handling qualities and affected the Spitfire's
aesthetics. But, as Quill remarked, "We were trying to produce the
most effective flying machine, not the most elegant flying machine."
His personal favourite mark, from a pure flying point of view, was
the Spitfire VIII, with standard wings. |
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Quill continued as chief test pilot after the
war, when Vickers - ever on the cutting edge of development -
produced Britain's third jet aircraft, the Attacker. On 27 July
1946, Quill made the first flight, from Boscombe Down, and continued
to undertake the testing until, one day the following June, he
passed out at about 40,000ft. Fortunately he recovered at about
10,000ft in time to land safely. Quill had been flying continually
for 16 years, often at high altitude and without oxygen; he was
tired and unwell, and he knew that his career as a test pilot was
over. He handed the reigns to Mike Lithgow and prepared himself to
fly a desk. He had logged more than 5,000 flying hours in nearly 100
different types of aircraft. |
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Quill continued to fly, delivering Spitfires 22s
to Cairo and Attackers to the Royal Pakistan Air Force. For many
years he kept his hand in with the Spitfire, flying a Mk V at
airshows, his aerobatic displays indicating that the master had not
lost his touch. His last flight in a Spitfire was made on 16 June
1960, 30 years after his first flight in the prototype. Afterwards
he recalled, "As I climbed out of the cockpit, I had that feeling of
sadness of bidding farewell to an old friend." |
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The desk flying began in 1948, with
Vickers-Armstrong. After the formation of the British Aircraft
Corporation Quill became involved with the Jaguar programme from its
inception and became director of the Anglo-French company Sepecat.
He was in at the start of the tri-national Multi-Role Combat
Aircraft (Tornado) programme in 1969 and became Director of
Marketing in Panavia until retiring in 1978. |
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Outside flying, Quill's interests extended to
sailing and powerboat racing. In 1962 he and his friend Lt-Cdr Don
Robertson, a former test pilot with Supermarine, won the Daily
Express offshore powerboat race in Tramontana, a wooden Vosper-built
craft powered by two Italian 37-litre engines, The following year
the pair finished third in Tramontana II. |
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In 1983 Quill published his excellent and
absorbing book Spitfire: a test pilot's story, dedicated to the
pilots who flew and fought in the Spitfire. His second book, Birth
of a Legend: the Spitfire, co-written with Sebastian Cox, was
published in 1986. Quill was passionately interested in English
literature, believing the English language to be "the greatest
medium of human communication". Shortly before his death he had
almost completed an anthology of quotations, mostly from English and
Scottish writers, entitled Other Men's Thoughts. |
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Jeffrey Quill was a modest, conscientious and
talented man, admired, respected and liked by those fortunate enough
to know him. A cheerful man with a sense of humour, he was an
inspiration to those who worked with him and a hero to thousands who
watched his career from the touchline. |
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Jeffrey Kindersley Quill, aviator:
born Littlehampton, Sussex 1 February 1913; married three times
(three daughters); died Andreas, Isle of Man 20 February 1996. |
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Copyright 1996 Newspaper Publishing PLC
Provided by ProQuest Information and Learning Company. All rights
Reserved. |