Jump to content
Model Cars Magazine Forum

A pair of Italian beauties: Ferrari 250 California and Dino 246


Matt Bacon

Recommended Posts

These have been progressing speedily, and I haven't got round to posting until now... An Academy "Classic European Sports Car", better known as the Italeri Ferrari 250 SWB California, and a Fujimi Dino 246, inspired by seeing Keith Richards' beauty driven on The Classic Car Show. It's the simplified curbside Dino, not the full-on "Enthusiast Model" kit with the engine, detailed suspension, underbonnet details etc...

250-engine-side-view.jpg
250-engine-wiring.jpg
Classic Ferrari 250ish engine -- I've built a fair number of these now. Distributors wired, and electrical "ferrules" to replace the hideous intake trumpets. NB: the kit has parts for several variants of this engine on the sprue, so make sure you've got the right ones!
250-body-2.jpg
SWB body in "Vinaccia" (aka Aubergine). This has been around for a while in the stash, so I'm glad to get it under way.
dino-body.jpg
dion-body-2.jpg
Beautiful curves! Dino body in Tamiya Gloss Aluminium. After seeking advice, and test fitting, it is possible to get the chassis inside the body with the lower front valance in place, which makes painting the body much easier.
dino-chassis-paint.jpg
No engine, just some painting. Homebrew "rust/burnt iron" accentuated with Citadel coloured washes.
dino-cockpit.jpg
Dino interior in multiple shades of black/grey. Keith's seats are very shiny leather!
dion-dash-2.jpg
Dino dashboard comes up nicely with a bit of paint. I'm not sure whether Keith's is "factory finished" but it's got plenty of suede-y Alcantara today...
bestest,
M.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

...continuing:

dino-interior-2.jpg
dino-interior-3.jpg
Not a lot of parts in this interior, but it looks neat, I reckon.
dino-interior-in-2.jpg
dino-together-from-underside.jpg
The front suspension has to be built before installing the chassis into the body, but the rear can be assembled afterwards (and probbaly needs to be, because it's the back end that needs to twist and flex most to get it inside).
250-swb-chassis-L.jpg
The familiar Ferrari 250 chassis coming together.
bench-22-Apr.jpg
And this is where I'm up to today. The eagle-eyed will spot that I've relocated the filler/breather caps on the 250 SWB engine back to around halfway along the block. That's where they are on the prototype, and if fitted further forward as instructed, they'll foul the wheel wells on the engine bay walls. The engine bay has been "jigged" on the chassis, and separated for painting and detailing.
bestest,
M.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Glad to see this here as I'm working on Monogram's 250 GTO and the engine has been fighting me, though it is an ebay junker to start.

Your engine looks good but wondering how you fit those 6 wires into the cast on valve cover tube. I replaced it with the smallest tube I could fit .. slightly oversize but looks ok. I also user v to replace the intake trumpets. Both bodies look great.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Both are really nice. Great color choices too.

Too bad Italeri cheaped on this with the GTO interior and engine block.

On the California, you realize the induction cold air is for a 250. If on a California, you need to have a sport version with a gas cap protruding through the trunk. What are you doing for the interior conversion?

Edited by Exotics_Builder
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks, guys! The Dino is on the home straight:

dino-on-bench-2.jpg
dino-on-bench-3.jpg
dino-on-bench-1.jpg
Not a whole lot to report other than the "chrome" parts have their raised rubber inserts painted with Tamiya "Rubber Black", and she needs a good dust!
The 250 Spider is making progress:
not-forgotten-250-SWB-25-Apr.jpg
door-linings-2.jpg
As it happens, I have an (dreadful) AMT 250 SWB as a "donor kit", so I'm carefully slicing off the door furniture and attaching it to the Academy kit cockpit sidewalls. The seats are currently WiP....
bestest,
M.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks, Paul!

On with the 250 Spider:
door-linings-before-paint.jpg
doors-again.jpg
The operation to transfer the door furniture was mostly successful, apart from one of the door closing handles which disappeared into oblivion, along with a small slice of skin from the end of my thumb. No blood on the paint, mind... that's what matters! A new one was fabricated after several tries, and now I think the door liners look the part.
exhausts-on-1.jpg
exhausts-on-2.jpg
underside.jpg
The exhausts (painted in Vallejo Model Air "Rust") are a bit of a pain to thread and get into position (and the instructions aren't so clear and well drawn...). To save anyone else the hassle, this is how they go. I used actual polystyrene cement for these, after cleaning up the mounting points. I wanted a REALLY strong bond when the time came to put the engine bay on (which is a very tight fit around the exhausts at the chassis level), but plenty of time to fettle the final positions of the pipes as I installed them.
interior-shaping-up.jpg
The interior is an "interesting" colour, but it's a very close match to the references I have -- I think it's called "Tobacco" by Ferrari. I think it will go well with the body colour, and it's much less boring than black (though that would have hidden the "cobbled together" door liners a bit better!)
trial-fit.jpg
Another test fit of the chassis -- the engine bay does fit around the exhausts, after all. The seats are much modified from the ones in the "donor" 250 SWB, because the "buckets" in the California kit are completely wrong...
The Dino will reappear shortly!
bestest,
M.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

inside.jpg

underneath-2.jpg
With the chassis basically assembled, time to move on with some engine bay detailing.
engine-bay-bits.jpg
Plundering a few unused detail bits from the Dino, and some more of the 250SWB, I've at least got a radiator fan, battery, coils and a screen wash reservoir. (No idea what that was on the Dino, but it'll do the job here with a cap added and a repaint...
hose.jpg
There's a big air duct hose running from the right hand side of the bay into the back. After wracking my brains trying to figure out where to find one, I thought I'd just have a try at making one, and I'm pretty happy with the result. 1) Wind garden wire around a suitable diameter bit of sprue, 2) cover with porous-ish paper-ish medical tape, 3) Spray with Tamiya "Rubber Black". It's still very flexible, and works just like the real thing. A couple of short stubs of the sprue mandrel stuck to the bay walls in the right places will make mounting points.
On with the tubes, pipes and cables!
bestest,
M.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks, guys...

landman -- the "Tobacco" is a Vallejo "Tanned Flesh, with a drop or two of yellow to make it a bit less pink.

And this is where I am tonight:

radiator-hose.jpg

I KNEW that would come in handy one day... My abortive _first_ return to modelling in 1990 or thereabouts was to attempt a wooden model boat kit. It didn't work out -- tool far too long to achieve anything. But at the time, I bought some self-adhesive copper strip for the anti-fouling covering of the bottom. 25 years later, it's come out of the bottom of the toolkit, and made that little bit of copper pipe in the middle of the radiator hose that much easier! The rest is some electric flex insulation over a solid wire core, and BMF for the jubilee clips...
brake-master.jpg
The brake master cylinder is pretty visible in the engine bay, and, unusually for a 60s Ferrari kit, in my experience, is not included. A stack of tubing fills the gap.
radiator-in.jpg
radiator-in-2.jpg
The radiator hose doesn't connect to anything, of course -- not the first time I'll be grateful for that "roasting dish" on the top of the engine! I think the ducting looks the part. The wiring diagram I found online stopped me connecting the battery to anything stupid -- ground at one end, the fuse-box at the other, apparently!
coils-in.jpg
The twin coils brighten things up a bit. I'm glad I didn't have to fabricate those, mind you...
cylinder-in.jpg
Master cylinder cluttering things up nicely.
bay-nearly-done-1.jpg
bay-nearly-done-2.jpg
bay-nearly-done-3.jpg
No idea what most of these bits and tubes do, but they busy it up nicely. One of the sage green caps is sitting on top of the steering box, the other is angled off teh top of a additional square section "lump" at the front left corner of the bay, which will also anchor the fuel lines. It's completely "gizmology", but there's _something_ over there...
top-down.jpg
So that's more or less done now. The fuel line to the carbs will be added once that gizmo in the corner is thoroughly set and anchored. Guitar string is a bit unforgiving...
On the next episode... the inside goes inside the outside.
bestest,
M.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Gizmo wizardry at it's finest, looks great

"Roasting pan".....hilarious

Drove myself nuts looking over MG restoration manuals and photos trying to replicate everything in the engine compartment when I did a 1/16 MG TC....Not a mechanic by any means

Edited by Twokidsnosleep
Link to comment
Share on other sites

I'm gonna tell you if you ever decide that your expertise at building these inferior kits into things of beauty,has you deciding to do something else you might think about writing comedy,Dude besides being a very proficient model builder you are hilarious! Superbike-shaun.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks, guys! As promised... the inside is inside the outside. No great drama, thank goodness!

chassis-in-1.jpg
chassis-in-2.jpg
chassis-in-3.jpg
The body's covered in greasy fingerprints, but there's no point in getting too antsy about cleaning it at this stage! I'm leaving the bonnet hinge to set thoroughly before I even think about opening it!
bestest,
M.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Very cool work on both of them. especially the California.

However the three carb set up with the aluminum tray is typical for a competition engine. Californias like the one you are making had the big oval air filter on them.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

My owner has had his upgraded to the competition set up...

...seriously -- I don't have a spare oval air cleaner, and this was supposed to be an "empty the queue" build before I depart in an entirely different direction!

so, more or less done now. A few fragile details (door handles, wipers) to add, and a good clean, and then she'll be ready for prime-time...

front-right-3.jpg
right-profile-1.jpg
rear-right-2.jpg
bestest,
M.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Matt bring home the Bacon,yea baby! Wow!beeeuuuutifullllllll!For whatever reason I was not a big fan of the 50's,60's series of these cars actually, but because you've chosen to build and post these babies,I've decided to choose one,build it and see how it goes down, Shaun

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...