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Wheel Part Pack brain storm...


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What wheels (rims) would you like to see included in a Round 2 wheels part pack?

The catch to this question is, that they have to be in R2's back catalog (tooled up by Amt, Mpc, Ertl, Lindberg or PL in the past) and you have to list, the kit(s) they came in.

Note for the moderators:

The question started here http://www.modelcarsmag.com/forums/index.php?showtopic=93300&p=1262095

But think the question deserves a separate topic

Thanks!

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Keystone Klassic Kustomags from the AMT '69 Riviera annual.

American Torq-Thrusts from the AMT '55 Nomad.

Cragar S/S from the JoHan '66 Marlin.

Apaches from the AMT '67 Camaro annual.

Custom mags (dunno what they were) from the AMT '66 Corvette roadster annual.

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Astro Supremes from 60 Ford Starliner

Deep & deeper Cragars from the Baldwin Motion 70 Camaro (with those great Mickey Thompsons)

Vectors from the General Lee or Eckler Corvette

Astro Supremes from 60 Ford Starliner

Keystone Mags (40 Ford SD and others)

Buick Wires mentioned above (also in the Silhouette)

Chrome reverse with baby moons from 49 Merc

Astro Supremes from 60 Ford Starliner

Chrome reverse from 36 Ford (hey they're already on their own little mini-sprue!)

Americans from 62 Bel Air (plated - or better ones from another kit)

Slot mags (help me out, which kits have a decent set?)

Astro Supremes from 60 Ford Starliner

Astro Supremes from 60 Ford Starliner

Astro Supremes from 60 Ford Starliner

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'65 Riviera wire wheels

Radir mags from the Fireball 500

The deep two-piece chrome reverse wheels from the '57 T-bird if they still exist (Were those only in the Here Comes the Judge version?)

'57 Plymouth wheelcovers that were in the original issue '62 Impala

Kelsey-Hayes wheels from the '34 Ford coupe (or just put them in all the AMT '32 Ford kits)

'65 Dodge Coronet wheelcovers from the AMT trailer kit (Jo-Han and Lindberg '64 Dodge Polara and 330 and Polar Lights '65 Dodge Coronet can use them)

'36 Ford wide-5 wheels

Open steel wheels from the '58 Impala or '59 El Camino (chromed, maybe?)

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Thought of another one: The Chevy Rally Wheels with no center caps from the '70 ZR1 Corvette. LOTTA cool ways to use those, from winter beaters to street racers to full-on racers.

Ed Fluck casts those. I have a couple sets. They are a cool wheel.

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Two-fold problem I think, as not always are wheel "hobs" removable from the larger tooling which created the original model kit. In a model kit tool, often wheels, wheel covers and hubcaps are tooled as separate pieces, round, and simply lightly pressed into the larger dies, but not always can they be removed, transferred to other molds for say, a parts pack. That had to have been planned from the get-go, and we've all seen where a chrome tree has been done with that in mind--every once in a while you will see a curved "parting line" in the sprue that attaches to a wheel, which is a dead giveaway. But not always. And I suspect that most certainly all those "Annual Series" 3in1 kits from 40-65 years ago really weren't tooled with any future releases (including modified reissues) in mind.

Art

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I'd love see these hard-to-find wheels. I think the 1:1 versions were made by ET.

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I don't recall seeing these in any other MPC kit & wouldn't mind having a few sets for current projects.

mNpLbMy11ekHPwPATz82_0g.jpg

MPC included a set of two larger Keystone Klassics as the "front" wheels in the '68 Cuda kit issued in the mid-'70s. Why not issue them as a set of four?

mazDZ6RyI50qkFSpbQ2hPFw.jpg

Lastly, I'll add the Motor Wheel Spyders from the MPC mid-'70s + Firebirds.

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Two-fold problem I think, as not always are wheel "hobs" removable from the larger tooling which created the original model kit. In a model kit tool, often wheels, wheel covers and hubcaps are tooled as separate pieces, round, and simply lightly pressed into the larger dies, but not always can they be removed, transferred to other molds for say, a parts pack. That had to have been planned from the get-go, and we've all seen where a chrome tree has been done with that in mind--every once in a while you will see a curved "parting line" in the sprue that attaches to a wheel, which is a dead giveaway. But not always. And I suspect that most certainly all those "Annual Series" 3in1 kits from 40-65 years ago really weren't tooled with any future releases (including modified reissues) in mind.

Art

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