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440 6BBL

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    Hugo Stieglitz

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  1. Loving this build already. I´d like to point something out regarding conversions of 2-doors into 4-doors. I´ve been working on a ´71 Valiant for a couple of years now and I posted this pic to ask for advice because I felt something was out of proportion. The result of the discussion was that I had built a sedan with a coupe roof height. The roof came out too low, like a very gentle top-chop. I ended up cutting the pillars and raising the roof 1.5 millimeters or so. I used a Duster front clip with a Dart body to get the correct style a-pillars and a simple body to work with for the conversion. Someone mentioned that the windshield of a Dart Hardtop wouldn´t fit a Valiant Sedan in 1:1. The picture of your modified body´s rear end with the 1:1 pic next to it. Compare the rear windows with each other. I could imagine that it´s not only Mopars to have different roof heights on sedans and hardtops. In the case of my Valiant it was pretty obvious, that the roof had some sort of issue. Easiest way to find out would probably be calling a glass guy and asking if 2-door and 4-door Novas use the same size windshields. Looking forward to seeing this evolve, digging the subject.
  2. Thanks for the comments guys. If there´s just one of you starting to see more than a pile of poo in this kit, then I´m a happy bloke. To me the General kit is now on the cool stuff list. I´ve never expected to say this, but I kinda start to dig this kit. Of course the details lack all around in comparison to Revell´s Charger family, but there is a sexiness in the proportions of the MPC Charger. You´re in big trouble when you want to build a car with wheel arch trim...but for everything else it´s a actually an awesome kit. Last update post...the finished thing will appear in the showroom. That scratchbuilt aircleaner has found its way onto the carb. I modified a 440 Magnum air cleaner as a base. Still need some touch-ups in the engine bay and a couple of wires. The chassis has a nice looking K-frame member and with the scratchbuilt front suspension parts there´s not much missing that a Revell Charger has. I find modifying and upgrading this kit is easier than making a Revell Charger look awesome. There are more MPC Chargers coming from me in the future. The white 500 is a little bit more dedidcated than the green Charger and will get a red tail stripe. A Daytona will be next, body preparations are already in the advanced stages...and finally I´ll tackle my ´70 restoration and I hope ya´ll wanna watch it. RC2 just needs a newly designed sprue with one stock and one deep Mopar steelie. Two sprues in each kit along with 2 F60 and 2 L60 pad-printed tires...these kits would be winners again. See you in the showroom
  3. Still in the stages of gathering parts? The Gremlin is basically a Hornet that was rear-ended by King Kong´s fist. The two cars have a lot in common underneath. I have built AMT´s ´76 Gremlin about two years ago and that kit has quite the ton of upgrade potential as I have experienced. I did put some work in it, but that would the case with your build anyways if you want to swap parts. I´ll search for my built Gremlin if interested...it´s stored in a box somewhere. It now has steerable front wheels and a scratchbuilt engine bay. The Gremlin kit could be a starting point...bringing the chassis to the correct length or maybe combining chassis sections of the Gremlin and the Hornet. EDIT: ...found it... Inner body structure in front of the firewall is either scratchbuilt or from the parts box. Can someone identify the inner fender wells? I don´t remember where they came from. Maybe from a ´66 Nova Pro Stock kit!?! Looking at the pic of your promo-chassis...I´d say the Gremlin parts could do the job for your Hornet. I´d totally try it myself if I had a Hornet promo.
  4. The Charger is now on its wheels after the final stance has been figured out. The front end is steerable and all wheels are glued to the axles as I hate wheels wobbling all over the place. BMF is also done. Just some final tweaks and I´m calling this thing done. Currently scratchbuilding an air cleaner and completing some incomplete spots here and there. The build should be done in no time from here.
  5. Great stuff Spencer, looking forward to see this progressing. This kit has its reputation, but it remains my personal first choice when it comes to building a Chevy Nova. You can end up with a very nice body if you take good care of the fender assembly and maybe even replace the side window framing. It is possible to remove the SS badge from the grille and rescribe it to downgrade it into a base model grille. And you can carefully cut off the top part from the grille to glue it to the hood. This is a progress pic of my AMT Nova. The rocker panel trim was removed after the fenders had been installed. This way everything will end up being super straight. The side window framing was redone with sheet. I actually glued in full sheets into the body, then marked the posts and cut out the three window areas on each side. Now they are nice and thin and not so terribly bowed outwards. It was quick and easy work and a big improvement on the look of the body. I´m also using Revell Nova axles with the the AMT chassis plate on this build. Front end modified to be steerable aswell. There is tons of potential in this kit. Great job on the engine so far, I´m sure this is going to be a very neat build.
  6. Foiling work is in progress on my Charger. I tried some rims from a broken Gotham City Police cruiser. Gonna keep it like this, it´s just the look I was after.
  7. Faster than expected...first coat of green already on the re-primered body. Since this is a no-care-hackjob-build I wanted to try something. I always thought Chargers look quite mean when the headlights are visible, so I removed the outer parts of the grille inserts...which are wrong anyways. I cut the grille open and glued ´68 Roadrunner headlights to the back of it. The grille is definitely the weakest spot on this kit and this is actually a good option. Half of the wrong grille insert is gone and the remains are a bit overshadowed by the presence of the headlights. I like how the front came out with the modified grille and scratchbuilt core support detail.
  8. My first Cannonball entry ever is a retired General Lee from MPC. Let´s see how much we can get out of one of the world´s most hated kits. It started out as an ugly pile of parts from an unfinished build. The Slant-6 engine is from a Deora kit, there´s a scratchbuilt exhaust, some sheet to fill holes in the engine bay sheet metal, a modified radiator core support and a set of Polyglas tyres. Tamiya bright orange spray paint is annoyingly tough to strip...I had to go the brake fluid route with it. While the body is slowly losing its paintjob, everything else has seen quick and dirty progress so far. The engine remains in stock condition and the car will pretty much be a plain Jane. It shall look like a fast car at first glance, but with very reliable daily driver internals. I went with high impact light green from Tamiya to keep the ridiculousness of this car on a high level. It´s no V8, but it still kinda has Mopar written all over it. I´m having lots of fun with this build. Scratchbuilt goodies on the front end in progress to make it steerable. Other than that...it just takes some detail painting. There are definitely much worse chassis out there in many kits. It´s actually quite easy to make these simple Mopar chassis neat. Not done with detail painting yet...just the current state of what´s going on. Hope to get this thing done quick so I can throw in another inliner-build for the Cannonball Race.
  9. @mademan I used stuff from my favorite decal-dude Keith Marks. I just dig his homegrown decals. I ordered two different sheets...one for Roadrunners and one for GTX´s or so. I think the 6BBL decals were on both sheets, but you can just say what you need when dealing with him. You`ll get a Charles Bronson style reaction. He just grabs your cash and soon after there are decals for you that can turn whatever you are working on into a little jewel. Pricey, but worth the investment if you keep his stuff for your more graily builds. It was a no-brainer for example to grab decals for a Johan Rebel Machine and I´m soon ordering stuff for my MPC Charger Family. ´68 Charger, ´69 Charger, ´69 Charger 500, ´69 Charger Daytona and ´70 Charger. Still need to get me unbuilt and complete annuals from ´68 and ´69, though.
  10. Some progress on my end with the ex-General. A week in oven-cleaner and the orange Tamiya spray paint was still totally unimpressed. I upgraded to brake-fluid...it is doing its thing now. A Slant-6 in a Charger...that alone is already hilarious. To make the model even more hilarious, I went with Tamiya TS22 light green. It´s more of a Kawasaki green, but close enough for my taste to act as a high impact color from the Mopar factory. I think the orange Slant in stock configuration looks preety neat in that green environment. And the slightly modified engine bay has been a huge improvement. In addition to the engine bay, some simple work on the front end works wonders on MPC Mopar kits. This model will have steerable wheels and a nicer stance than an OOB built Revell Charger. Would folks buy corrected radiator core supports and firewalls to make chassis swaps on their MPC-Mopars pretty much unneccessary? These two other builds have gotten the same treatment and that white 500 in particular has stolen my heart...that thing is just sexy and the little improvements had a huge impact. If a resin caster is interested...I´ll make a nice set of masters anytime. Huge number of MPC and AMT Mopar kits out there that could benefit from the availability of a core support and a firewall. I´m just racing through this build, maybe I´ll do another inline build when the Charger gets done quickly. One question to the Deora experts. The Deora is the source of my engine, got a yellow molded unbuilt kit without instructions in a different box someday. I´m unable to find an air cleaner for the Slant in that kit. Since I have no instructions, I can´t tell if there is an air cleaner even included or what part is supposed to be it. Can someone shed some light?
  11. I started working on my A12 Roadrunner three years ago and when I was searching for hood stuff back then I didn´t like what was offered. I ended up modifying the stock hood from my Johan Roadrunner with a reshaped scoop from Revell´s ´68 Charger Special Edition. Since the Johan hood is flat on the bottom, all details on the top can be easily sanded down without fear of destroying the hood. I added the center molding with sheet and finally blended in the scoop. The bottom side of the hood was also modified to make it look as accurate as possible. Some may notice the chassis swap. Revell´s ´68 Charger donated its chassis and the engine bay. It had to be shortened 2 millimeters or so, but otherwise fits like a glove. I still wouldn´t do it again...this conversion is pushing me to my limits. I´m faced with a very difficult final assembly situation as everything is supertight due to me going nuts on this thing...
  12. My starting point is MPC´s General Lee with a Slant-6 from MPC´s Dodge Deora kit and some tampoo-printed Polyglas tires from AMT´s Parts Pack. Removed the dual exhausts from the rear axle and scratchbuilt a new single exhaust and also made a new driveshaft for lenght correction from the engine swap. Right now I´m in progress of fitting tiny bits of sheet to the crater between the front fenders to make the whole mess look like a Mopar engine bay. This build is a test-bed for me. I´m gonna start working on my holy grail MPC ´70 Charger restoration soon and I´m using this build to figure out some possibilities. A dirty quick-build without putty and I´m staying very close to stock condition. Just something I´d love as a daily driver.
  13. Count me in with a Slant-6-powered ´69 Dodge Charger.
  14. Beautifully done and the boxes look great, too. I've found a little typo on the big box that you may want to correct for accuracy. "Nicht offen" means "not open" or "closed". "Nicht öffnen" would be the correct labeling for "do not open". Apart from this minor glitch, it's a top notch Blitz.
  15. Here it is. I bought this Charger as a chassis donor for MPC´s ´71 Roadrunner. This build is made from the left over parts from the Roadrunner build. A friend owns the 1:1 Charger and I´m doing this model for him. Since he is no rivet counter, I didn´t go for maximum accuracy. Just looking forward to getting it finished quickly while ending up with a solid model for a guy with big fingers who doesn´t know how to carefully handle a model. The bulge in the hood was cut out and replaced with a piece of hood from AMT´s ´70 Monte Carlo. Front and rear bumper units were stripped, modified, painted black and wrapped in BMF. Side markers were puttied and sanded and will be redone with just BMF and clear red and clear orange. Vents in the doors were deleted with putty and I added vinyl roof trim to the body because my friend´s Charger once had a vinyl top. Only the trim remained on his car, it´s quite a beater with dents on all four corners and a pretty lousy paint job. But it has a solid body and runs strong with a refurbished 383. I just cut away what was not needed on the bumper units. Added some sheet and putty and sanded them parts into shape. Hope this helped a bit.
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