JIMMY MACK IS BACK!
1949 Mack Model 75 with Jimmy Power
While this Vintage Smoke column usually centers around period original diesels, this Mack drew our attention. While it’s technically a “resto-mod” it’s a resto mod done in a vintage way. Have a look at this 1949 Mack Model 75. It started life as a fire truck but fell into disuse and was rescued from the back of a used car lot in 1982 and given a new life with a historic powerplant. Sit back and we’ll tell you that story.
Mack Fire Trucks
Mack started building fully fitted out fire appliances in-house in 1935. They built a wide variety of units based on the Mack trucks of the eras in which they were sold. Sometimes they had different model designations than the equivalent standard trucks they were built upon and sometimes had slightly different styling. From the info from the Mack Museum, it appears that only 5,222 fire trucks of all types and models were built from 1937 to 1969. The majority of those were built between 1937 and 1955.
This Old Mack
This truck is a Model 75, which was built on the bones of the ‘37-50 Mack E-Series. In fact, this one is the last E-Series truck shipped for 1949. The only available engine for the 75 lines was the Mack “Thermodyne” ENF-510A, 510 cubic inch,150 horsepower gasser. Though there were several diesels in the Mack lineup at this time, including the END-510 Mack-Lanova diesel variant of the gas 510, it wasn’t on the options list for the fire trucks. The Thermodyne had dual ignition systems and two spark plugs per cylinder for maximum starting reliability. Gas engines were generally preferred for fire trucks in that era due to the lack of cold starting issues versus diesels. See a Vintage Smoke article on the Mack-Lanova diesel at https://dev.dieselworldmag.com/diesel-engines/vintage-smoke-2/.
Thanks to Mike Martinelli and the Mack Museum, we know this Model 75 truck was built in 1949 as a pumper for the Schwenksville, Pennsylvania, fire department and shipped December 30, 1949. We don’t know much about the truck from that point but it acquired 18,641 miles in service of the Schwenksville community. By the early ‘80s, it was long out of service and pretty much living the life of a giant paperweight.
If you are in the enthusiast world of GM two-strokes, you may know the name Lowell Baker. He has the reputation of being one of the best two-stroke techs in the Midwest and one of the best Great Lakes Diesel in Vermillion, Ohio, ever had on staff. He also worked for Greyhound, helping keep their vast fleet of Jimmy-powered busses on the road. Lowell was a noted collector of vintage diesels, particularly Jimmies, tractors, trucks and many other things that have an engine. Sadly, Lowell passed on in 2017 but this old Mack is one of his many legacies.
The truck was acquired in 1982 from the back lot of a used car dealer in Allentown, Pennsylvania. It was stored at the Baker shop until a resto mod began in the early ‘90s and it was completed in 1996. Why wasn’t it restored back as a fire truck? Well, Baker needed a 5th wheel truck to haul his various tractors, trucks and equipment to shows more than he needed a restored, essentially useless fire truck so the stylish Mack was converted to a 5th wheel tractor. Fire appliance collectors may be foaming at the mouth by now but there aren’t many uses for vintage fire trucks other than to be restored and shown, or converted for other forms of useful employment. Baker chose the latter and used the truck extensively.
Reportedly, the original Thermodyne engine was seized up but no self respecting Jimmy fanatic would drive a gasser anyway. Lowell shortened the wheelbase and added a stouter, more modern rear axle. He wanted to install a 6-71 but it was too big. Instead, he built a ‘77 4-valve 4-71N (“N” indicating a four-valve engine). It was originally built as an automotive engine and had been removed from an International stakebed truck. Lowell added a turbo but we don’t know much more than that. He may have done the other mods needed to take full benefit of the turbo but apparently he took that knowledge with him to Detroit Diesel heaven. The current owner doesn’t know and isn’t likely to do a teardown to find out anytime soon. The Jimmy is backed up by a 13-speed road Ranger gearbox. Also installed was a fifth wheel from another truck and a big Tulsa winch behind the cab for hauling derelict equipment onboard the flatbed trailer.
Lowell’s Legacy
John Androvich is the current owner of the Mack. He was a friend and neighbor of Lowell’s and spent considerable time working with him on the initial build and subsequent maintenance of the truck. In fact, around 2005, Lowell sold him the truck under an agreement where he retained what John describes as a “life lease.” Both men used the truck when needed and when Lowell passed, full unfettered ownership went to John. John uses it the same way he and Lowell always did, hauling equipment to shows and sometimes showing the truck on it’s own.
Sources
Big Mack Trucks Forums
BigMackTrucks.com
Mack Museum
www.macktruckshistoricalmuseum.org
Smokstak Detroit Diesel Forum
www.smokstak.com