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New project - 9/20/06


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Here comes a(yeah, another) Peterbilt. This one started as the Revell of Germany Peterbilt 377 A/E kit.

Here is my idea.. a doodle. A work truck owned by a steel fabricator or a specialty equipment builder.

357123doodle.jpg

Here are the cab, hood and fenders. I cut the top off the 377 hood, made new side panels from Evergreen plastic, scribed in the panel seams, added a piano hinge to the center of the hood. I cut off the cowl/cab side panels replacing them with flat plastic. Dual aircleaners will grace the cab. The fenders are scratchbuilt.

357123_prog.jpg

The daycab panel replaced the kit sleeper opening. I used an AMT 359 cab for rearwindow opening, tracing the opening and cutting larger than the trace.

357123rear_prog.jpg

Here I've mocked up the pieces.

The frame was stretched 1-3/4 inches.

357123mockup.jpg

At this point I became stumped on the final direction to take. Then a friend who used to work on the real 357s came to the rescue with this photo from Texas

357_123_twins.jpg

I really like the blue cab, black fender with red chassis scheme on these (above) units. So I went with that concept.

357123paint.jpg

Now the hard part.. waiting for the paint to cure. I noticed that after clearing the blue that the clear softened the blue pulling it away from some detail exposing the primer. I will have to do some careful touch up on the piano hinge and the hood panel seams.

I have to fabricate the under-the-cab exhaust piping, make mounts for the air cleaners other components.

Thanks for looking!

Tim

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I finished up early this morning, just in time for the sun to make an appearance for photographs.

357123_online.jpg

Here it is ready to leave the assembly line.

357_123_rear_10106.jpg

Rear view of the flatbed. The bed is made from sheet plastic.

357_123_right_10106.jpg

The finished 357.

357_123_moluminum.jpg

The air cleaners are polished aluminum units made by Jamie at Mo'Luminum. I added the support straps, made from chrome vinyl tape.

The fuel tanks are from a Revell of Germany Peterbilt 359. I removed the chrome plating, sanded the ugly seam and painted the tanks with Duplicolor Bumper Chrome paint for an aluminum finish.

357_123_rfuel.jpg

View of the right fuel tank. The step on the real truck would have a strap and bracket extending from the frame rail.

357doorsign.jpg

Thanks to Gary at MAG decals in Hawaii for making the door signs for me.

The door sill/jamb is Bare Metal Foil. To tone down the brightness, I coated the BMF for the door and hinges only with Testors Dullcoat giving the more realistic dull natural aluminum look.

More pics at www.timstrucks.com

Thanks for looking.

Tim

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Tim,

How do you fit the bare metal foil to the door sills and other tricky areas. I,ve never used it before but might do so on a future truck. Is there any particular type of foil more suited to this intricate type of detail work?

Best Wishes

Dave Bates

PS. Like the Pete!

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