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Chariots of Fire

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About Chariots of Fire

  • Birthday 05/25/1940

Previous Fields

  • Are You Human?
    Yes
  • Scale I Build
    1/25 and 1/32

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  • Full Name
    Charles L. Rowley

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Chariots of Fire's Achievements

MCM Ohana

MCM Ohana (6/6)

  1. Got one more, Danno. This one is 1/32 scale and was done for a guy who loves the Nashville, TN FD. They had a tillered aerial drawn by an Anniversary Series Seagrave. He had a Franklin Mint Seagrave tiller that was drawn by a cab forward J series. I scratch built the '62 using the tires and wheels from an Aurora kit. The rest is plastic stock. The top was formed from the Aurora ALF top and cut open for the green vision panels. I had the nose and front bumper chrome plated by Chrome Tech back in the day. The same guy wanted me to build a Nashville Seagrave that had a Pitman Snorkel on it but I never was able to get enough good information to do it.
  2. Here you are, Danno. I built two of the River Edge pieces. One is in their Company 2 station. The first one I still have and was shown in Scale Auto Magazine years ago. A River Edge SAE reader saw it and inquired as to who built it. SAE contacted me via snail mail and the rest is history. When I delivered the built to River Edge I got a personal ride around the village in the real Seagrave. A real treat! The second one is a typical Detroit sedan style rig, I took a lot of information from Matt Lee's book on Seagrave. This is the River Edge piece I still have. It was built from photos I took at Croton-On-Hudson fire muster years ago. The rig that is in River Edge is in the foreground. The Company Chief insisted it needed a flag and although it is difficult to see It is there near the right end of the windshield. The Detroit Seagrave. Doors and hood open. An original Eisbrenner casting.
  3. Got it standing up on all 10's now (temporarily at least). Working on the steering arm for the front end as we "speak".
  4. Whose Seagrave casting is that in the background? I built two from the original Eisbrenner castings and still have one of the real early ones that had no window trim. Looks like brown bakelite.
  5. Hey, Bob. The hex nuts are on the ends of the shackle bolts but are hard to see. I use them for all sorts of stuff. I had a master done in 3D by Down Range Productions. Then I made a mold and cast what you see. All I did was send a photo of the tire with some basic dimensions and they did the rest. 12:00 x 20's are good size and much larger than anything else I had.
  6. Here's the latest work on the M-20. Front springs are done along with shackle components. I found some soft 1/8" brass craft wire that comes in a coil but which is easy to straighten. Pieces were cut to length and soldered at the ends beginning with the short ones first. The front axle is soldered brass stock as well. Spindles a finished and the wheels are all set for tie rod connections and the steering arm. The gadget in the right front is a template for making holes in the wheels for the lug nuts. It fits the center of the wheel and it is easy to locate each hole for drilling and the spacing is even. Can't do it to the remaining front wheel. The hub is glued in so the locations for drilling have to be by eye. Oh, well. Live and learn!! The universal joints are 3D printed from Down Range Productions. They sort of snap together but need to be modified for the drive shafts.
  7. Depends on what type of nozzles you are talking about. If it is for either the booster line or the handline in the bed try DonMillsModels@aol.com He has them in white metal. If you want a larger nozzle for a 2-1/2" working line then you could make one out of sections of brass tubing. I'll show you the white metal ones and one I made from brass. The nozzles on this brush truck are the white metal ones that have been painted up and given a wash. The nozzles on the tailboard of this Class 325 military fire truck were made of brass tubing as was the nozzle on the booster reel in front of the rear tire.
  8. Yes it is. I have a 1/35 scale kit of the same rig but 1/25 is the scale I prefer.
  9. Been working on this project for a while now. Slow in coming as there is a lot of underside detail to do. Lots of castings, brass soldering, etc. But it is fun to do. Will be posting in progress pix from now on. The M-20 is a Diamond T 10 ton tractor used to pull a 45 ton Rogers trailer. They hauled tanks and also heavy supplies to the American army as it progressed inland from the beaches of Normandy. Trailer will be done after the tractor is finished.
  10. A bit hard to see but I think you may be putting the paint on too heavy. Best to do thin coats and let it dry between coats so that if there any imperfections you can sand them out. Each time is a learning experience.
  11. Looking good. If you have the guides for the other side of the hose reel, put them at the other side of the body, not at the hose reel.
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