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Early Ferrari Models 1949-1967


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For ease I copied and past Gary's text:

Gregg, 

I am no expert on Ferrari models so I just wrote down some kind of chronological remembrances from the “olde days”.  There is no doubt that I have missed something(s). 

Old Ferrari’s (1949 to 1967)

In the beginning (early ‘60s) there were no Ferrari kits in 1/25th or 1/24th scale.  There was a 1/20th scale IDEAL Ferrari 166 and there were kits in 1/32nd scale but that was it.  Then around 1964 Aurora released its Ferrari GTO kit (with beautiful box art of the Bob Grossman Bridgehampton entry) and we were on our way.  The kit had full detail with engine, opening doors and trunk in 1/25th scale.  The bad news was the shape, sort of ok but not great, and the vinyl tires, overtime, would consume the plastic wire wheels.  Revell had a hard plastic GTO slot body in 1/24th scale that was pretty good but just a little bit flat in side elevation.  About this time Tamiya released a pontoon fendered Testa Rossa, but only the most dedicated modelers ever saw one outside of Japan.

The next ratchet up came with the release of the Monogram 275P.  This was a hard plastic slot car body with a simple chassis pan and no engine, what we would call curbside today.  A pretty good representation of the car that won Le Mans in 1963 if the decals had been one digit different.  The slot car craze also produced a number of injection molded Ferrari bodies like the K&B P2 and GTO64 along with the Strombecker P2.  A Japanese company by the name of IPC produced a very simple kit of the GTO64 that was almost identical to the K&B offering.

Then the industry went silent until Heller in France released their wonderful series of sports cars including the beautifully styled 1967 Ferrari P4.  This kit included a hinged tail section with the famous Ferrari V-12 engine reproduced in scale.  The instructions said this was the car that placed second to the Ford MKIV at LeMans in 1967, but there were some detail differences like the mirrors that needed to be modified.  AMT even repackaged the Heller kits in 2 car combos with the Ferrari sharing a box with a Porsche 907.  Then there was quiet in the market again until the era of the GTO began.

All of a sudden it seemed the model makers worldwide fell in love with the Ferrari GTO.  Gunzye Sangyo, Italeri, and Protar released GTOs in rapid succession.  The G-S lacked an engine in the multimedia kit but made up for it with the all time best body casting of the GTO.  The Italeri kit was good and later released by Testors, and the Protar had the best chassis with real coil springs.  Not to be left out Bburago added a GTO to their diecast line.  The GTO craze also lead to SWB spin-offs by Gunze, ESCI/ERTL, and Italeri and a California Sypder by Italeri, latter Testors.  MiniExotics molded a transkit of the special bodied Breadvan for the GTO chassis.  Happy days were here again.

Then a surprise appeared from Japan and distributed by Academy, a lovely 1965 250LM.  It was a curbside, but a beautiful molding with accurate Dunlops to boot.  Bburago and Revell must have been impressed because they both brought out diecast versions of the 250LM also.

Ferrari modelers were pretty happy at this point with lots to work with but the expanding cottage industry resin casters recognized the longing for more.  One of the first to act was Q Models of Japan who released a drop dead gorgeous 1960 Testa Rossa with lots of detail and a price tag equaling the cost of my first car.  Later releases included the TRI61 and TRI62.  Climax from Japan did a detailed 250LM and a GTO.  Western Models did a white metal GTO that was superb.  Not to be outdone, John Johnson of Teapot Graphics released an affordable TRI 62, the winner of the 1962 LeMans and a 246SP Dino in resin.  Even Danbury Mint did a pontoon fendered Testa Rossa as did Bburago, though a bit large in scale.

Then the holy grail of Ferrari modelers, the 166MM appeared.  It was the winner of the 1949 Le Mans, the car that got Ferrari recognized around the world as a builder of sports cars, the seriously pretty Barchetta.  Informed collectors knew of a resin kit of this car in Japan but when Mike Quarterman, head honcho at Umi and Motor Racing Replica News, announced his intention of molding it here in the States, the line formed.  It is a gem complete with full engine detail, rumored to have been molded by Paul Fisher of Fisher Models fame.  Unfortunately Mike Q quit the resin business to focus on his decal making.  The molds survive in Canada with Perry’s Resin we are told.  Scale Kraft now has the 212 version available in resin.  Fujimi recognized this interest in Ferraris and released their injection molded Ferrari P4.  This lacked the engine but was more prototypically correct for the Le Mans runner up than the Heller.  The P4 was the last of the sexy curvaceous Ferrari sports prototypes with the subsequent 512 series paying more attention to aerodynamics than sculpting.

After this flurry of Ferrari modeling activity, the English, French, Italian, and
South African resin casters stared filling in the holes.  K&R Models produced the brutal 375 Plus, winner of LeMans in 1954, and Renaissance brought out Testa Rossa’s in 1958 (pontoon fendered), 1959, and 1960 vintages.  MG models in Italy started making Berlinettas of various years as did Scale Kraft in South Africa.

There was one other Ferrari modeling gem that needs mentioning.  Master craftsman Norm Veber of Replicas and Miniatures of Maryland produced resin versions of the Ferrari 250 GTO and 250 SWB engines.  These were almost too good to be hidden inside a model.

 

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  • 4 weeks later...

I have never seen one, but Airtrax is a brand that is rare.  I want their 330GTC.

I got the Model Factory Hiro Lusso.

I also got a body of the 122 Berlinetta from a Shapeways vendor.

Got the Hasegawa 250 TR Testarossa last year, have not opened that one.

Can attest to Norm's V-12 engine being a model unto itself.

I'm a nut. :P

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Thank you Kurt for your input.  I do not have the AirTrax 330GTC nor the MFH Lusso as they came later after my notes above.  I have seen photos of the Shapeways Barchetta but not the Berlinetta though I do have the MG Model 166 Berlinetta.  One of the rarities is the ACME 330 LMB which I was fortunate to get back in the day.  I fully support your assessment of Norm's V-12, and Brads too.

ACME 330 LMB

20190307_082924.jpg.f336f31a4a019b681828d9500188aba5.jpg

Replica and Miniatures of Maryland V12 SWB build by William Depooter.

Ferrari_William_engine_-6.jpg.32853230cfd398f4e51c87c25ee02eef.jpg

Ferrari_William_engine_-12sm.jpg.ec9903fca3681fa77b4cb645a413e536.jpg

 

MG Models 166 Berlinetta and UMI 166 Barchetta

Ferrari_166MM_1197sm.jpg.63a5454de083fd57b3b10be4ee4182ed.jpg

 

UMI 166 Barchetta kit

Ferrari_UMI_1198sm.jpg.92ddd07ead342c3bac94ad8066c95356.jpg

Edited by Gramps46
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1 hour ago, Gramps46 said:

Thank you Kurt for your input.  I do not have the AirTrax 330GTC nor the MFH Lusso as they came later after my notes above.  I have seen photos of the Shapeways Barchetta but not the Berlinetta though I do have the MG Model 166 Berlinetta.  One of the rarities is the ACME 330 LMB which I was fortunate to get back in the day.  I fully support your assessment of Norm's V-12, and Brads too.

ACME 330 LMB

20190307_082924.jpg.f336f31a4a019b681828d9500188aba5.jpg

[...]

MG Models 166 Berlinetta and UMI 166 Barchetta

Ferrari_166MM_1197sm.jpg.63a5454de083fd57b3b10be4ee4182ed.jpg

 

UMI 166 Barchetta kit

Ferrari_UMI_1198sm.jpg.92ddd07ead342c3bac94ad8066c95356.jpg

Nice..... more lust worthy models!

Here is that Shapeways body, after I sanded it to see how that goes.
IMG_8840_Fotor.thumb.jpg.f328e467addece4146aceeefe0a5745d.jpg

Just some parts that Norm makes, the seats are awesome.  Comparing to Shapeways sourced seats, no comparison.
IMG_8842_Fotor.thumb.jpg.9803ed9a610eaf9cf82129cab96321ff.jpg

If anyone has questions about the four kits of the GTO....
IMG_8843.thumb.jpg.e1bd6cb62f8c091cde4d8120d54f15a3.jpg

The MFH Lusso, this is my holy grail (so far).
IMG_7492_Fotor.thumb.jpg.f6340ffc2174fffa57e61282d58f7b62.jpg

 I have an incomplete kit of the Italeri 250 SWB, thinking of a resto rod idea for it.  I did the AMT years ago, horrid kit.
IMG_3769_Fotor.thumb.jpg.7501a92d3b153f84b60c9d907e276b06.jpg

Thanks for letting me onto your lawn.

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FYI: "Resin Casting Specialties" was the name of Harold Bradford's first company.  He quit because the early resins made him ill and he passed along his molds to Norm.  When more benign resin products became available he started a new company calling it Historic Racing Miniatures.

IMG_8842_Fotor.thumb.jpg.9803ed9a610eaf9cf82129cab96321ff.jpg

Edited by afx
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Speaking of old Ferrari kits here is a Turbolences Turbo Le Car resin Ferrari 1958 Testa Rossa Le Mans winner.  Not as nice as Renaissance or other later issues but it did have an engine.

20190307_121700.jpg.76f71299b7d213157af2f113e524ce96.jpg

And lest we forget, the Revell GTO slot car body.

5c8157e77cdfa_Ferrari_GTO_1962_19_002.jpg.8cd1b475d2f91f9864bbcede114c6aa7.jpg5c8157e88569d_Ferrari_GTO_1962_19_003.jpg.ba657727587a75b07b84aff9a0fcdacf.jpg

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5 minutes ago, afx said:

The Revell GTO body is very nice Gary.

Image result for revell 1964 ferrari gto

Didn't Revell also do the '64 body style?

No darn it, Revell only did it in 1/32nd for the GTO 64.

I had to use a K&B body on a Protar GTO chassis for the 1/24 GTO64.

 

Ferrari_GTO64_1964_#26_001.jpg

Ferrari_GTO64_1964_#26_002.jpg

Ferrari_GTO64_1964_#26_003.jpg

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Here's a pic of the Airtrax Ferrari 330GTC. I've filled the pinholes and primered it. It's a beautiful car and a good kit. For the Airtrax price list, Mr. Obsessive posted it on another thread, easy to find using the search function.

DSCN8917.JPG

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1 hour ago, afx said:

The Academy/Minicraft 250LM you mention in your article. 

1004748-13833-16-pristine.jpgImage result for academy ferrari 250lm

Thanks JC.  How I wished Academy had done a long nose like the 1965 NART Le Mans winner.  Back then I had to convert a BBurago 250LM diecast to the long nose using Bondo.

5c82886dbe778_Ferrari_250LM_1965_21_001.jpg.614c093c12b233fd31ea28cc7740c5fd.jpg

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On ‎3‎/‎8‎/‎2019 at 6:40 PM, ChrisBcritter said:

Anyone have a builtup Italeri 275 GTB they'd like to show us?

Chris,

The photos and model are by Scott Kercher.  Maybe I can get him to tell us more about how he built it and post a separate thread.

5c8525034014c_FerrariGTB_Vwsm.jpeg.c655a1bdd443fdf9d46f5ec750077639.jpeg5c8525048eb7b_FerrariGTB_wsm.jpeg.04e2e4e34806aff8a73c74aaf2e201ae.jpeg

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Looking back, I think the 275GTB has Renaissance Campagnolo resin/metal wheels on it. The NART Spider has its bootlid spoiler enhanced, which Tony Nancy did for McQueen at the same time as retrimming the interior, which is why it has the rather plush leather bolsters for seats instead of the proper buckets. If you use the original seats, paint it pale yellow and add the Campagnolo wheels from the one above, you'll get the car that Faye Dunaway drove in The Thomas Crown Affair, but more interestingly also finished 17th overall and 2nd in class at the 1967 12 Hours of Sebring, with Marianne “Pinky” Rollo and Denise McCluggage behind the wheel...

(Ms McCluggage is a bit of a hero of mine...)

The GS 250 SWB looks so much more purposeful than the dire AMT/Esci kit, because it's a lot more like the real thing. If you can't find one, at least try for the Italeri...

best,

M.

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On ‎3‎/‎7‎/‎2019 at 10:25 AM, Richard Bartrop said:

Whether or not it counts as the first Ferrari depends on who you ask, but FPP Modelos Made a resin kit of the Auto Avio Costuzioni Tipo 815 

file.php?id=3254&t=1

Fernando is still casting this car.  PB

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