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AMT-1124 Supernatural Impala


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1 hour ago, Snake45 said:

Watched the "Baby" episode this afternoon. Looks like almost the entire show was shot from inside the car. At the end, it's pretty beat up. Wonder if anyone will model it that way?

Sorry, but the show just seems lame to me. I have better guns (and knives) than the stuff I've seen on there so far. It's not particularly humorous or interesting in any way. It reminds me a lot of NBC's Grimm of a few years ago, which I similarly grew tired of after a couple seasons of watching the heroes fight the "monster of the week" in improbable and silly ways. I didn't realize Supernatural had been on so long--it's very likely that Grimm was a ripoff/copy of it. 

Kinda cool car, though--I did buy the model. And, before that, the diecast! B)

I'm another one that never watched an episode of it... I'm just not into that stuff...

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Like the Snake I didn't know anything about the TV program before this kit came about. Not something I would get very worked up over it sounds like. Now the kit and especially the subject being something out of the ordinary is why I have two to build now. 

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Same here, I never heard of the show until the kit came along. I've since built the car and it's a great little kit, I also took a butchers at the show and it's ehh, it's ok. I watched the first series, it's watchable but not much incentive to keep following the series, at least for me anyway.

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  • 2 weeks later...
On 8/18/2020 at 3:58 PM, Goose1957 said:

Snake, I can't believe you can't get into the show, lol. What's not to like, lots of muscle cars, lots of guns, (Dean has an awesome, engraved, nickle plated genuine Colt 1911a1). Great "real" rock for the soundtrack also. Some hot women too. I know the whole "Supernatural" thing with ghosts, vampires, demons and the like is hokey sometimes, but I got hooked on the show for the cars, guns, classic rock, and hot women. And yes, I'm 49, married with children, and don't live in my mom's basement, lol.

P.S. check youtube, found several good videos about just the car, I just can't figure out if I can imbed video links here.

Enjoy the build,

Jeff 

My girls (wife and daughter) got me hooked on this show through Netflix.   Like you Goose, I love the cars, guns and music.   Some of the story line is getting old and tired but there is enough humor in some of the episodes that keeps me coming back. 

I'm still trying to get this model from my LHS but they are having trouble getting it in stock.

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  • 2 weeks later...
  • 4 months later...
On 6/16/2020 at 8:18 PM, Jordan White said:

The TV car is an automatic, and so they may have decided to just keep the manual transmission and add the automatic shifter rather than molding a new transmission.

Unfortunately (but understandably), they left the floor hump in place, as well as the forward hole for the console location pin. Not a huge deal, but the bench seat obviously won't cover it, so it looks a bit out of place. I suppose Round2 didn't want to create an all new floor piece for the sole purpose of eliminating the floor hump, but I noticed the underside of the trans tunnel isn't dimpled at all, so there's probably enough material thickness in that area if someone wishes to sand off the hump and go that route.

Having just procured one, and considering the earlier comments Jesse and others made regarding the faint scratches in the body, I'm wondering if the newly tooled parts were exposed to excess moisture for an extended period of time. I also see what appears to be traces of pitting on the backsides of the door panels, so maybe the scratches on the body were an attempt to remove some damage? The body section of the mold clearly did not get the normal level of attention we've come to expect, or maybe it did, sat around while licensing was procured, and it suffered some corrosion damage. I wasn't expecting '90s level Lindberg polish, but the trunk scratches are very obvious when held to a certain angle in the light.

I suppose it's not a huge deal to most, but considering the kit is molded in black, and aimed at a less experienced (read: gonna screw up a black paint job if required), I would've expected Round2 to take extra care to make sure the body was acceptable out of the body as far as finish color is concerned.

There are a few other interesting things I see, too, so perhaps this kit has more to its story than what we've heard?

Edited by Casey
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So I finally went through my kit, which I've had for some time, and just realized I never opened the bags.

My body has a lot of that light scratching everyone else has noted. Definitely not one of the better polishing jobs I've seen from any of the manufacturers. I also hadn't noticed the lack of trim and emblems, Model Car Garage to the rescue it looks. My moulding has one tiny bit of flash on the passenger-side front fender at the grille location. Won't take more than a minute or two to clean up. There's one parting line at the edge of the trunk-lid on the back. that'll require a light sanding. All in all, the clean-up won't be too bad.

With some of the other comments I'm reading, I wonder if they did permanently alter the 2-door? It would be unfortunate if they did.

I have a set of stock wheel covers from Missing Link, one of Dale's front seats (good casting, will need the tunnel cleared out, though).

For the stock builders, what have you found is the best way to achieve the correct ride height?

Charlie Larkin

Edited by charlie8575
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Here's a shot of the door cards showing where the line of the two door version was. I'm thinking Round2 modified the old original two door mould and made a completely new mould for the two door. It makes sense, why not clean up and modify the old mould if your going to make a new mould anyway.

Impala Door Card.jpg

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I think Round2 decided to make the best of things, while retaining the existing floorpan. Maybe not 100% accurate for four -door, but it allows them to run the 2-door again with minimal changes.

The new door panels (cards), wheel back retainers, and column shifter pieces are all surrounded by a completely new runner, so the existing two-door door panels haven't been altered. Ditto for the front bench seat, front bench seat back, and hood.

373679044_PXL_20210218_2237002482.thumb.jpg.37876ee71cb34fe7343d7d5e303d6616.jpg

1301432699_PXL_20210218_2239080423.jpg.91bde398020021d6cdcb5c32359dad68.jpg

 

Edited by Casey
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On 2/18/2021 at 5:41 PM, Casey said:

I think Round2 decided to make the best of things, while retaining the existing floorpan. Maybe not 100% accurate for four -door, but it allows them to run the 2-door again with minimal changes.

The new door panels (cards), wheel back retainers, and column shifter pieces are all surrounded by a completely new runner, so the existing two-door door panels haven't been altered. Ditto for the front bench seat, front bench seat back, and hood.

373679044_PXL_20210218_2237002482.thumb.jpg.37876ee71cb34fe7343d7d5e303d6616.jpg

1301432699_PXL_20210218_2239080423.jpg.91bde398020021d6cdcb5c32359dad68.jpg

 

These doors are mostly accurate. The real Babys have crank windows in the front an sometimes a power window in the back. Easy to model.

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Just a few shots of the 2- and 4-door AMT '67 Impala interior parts, for comparison. Note the 2-door's rear interior panels have a dogleg bump out, the lower half of which is not present on the 4-door panels, leaving a noticeable gap between the panel and the seat bottom:

1726203094_PXL_20210220_0146182552.thumb.jpg.18acc713cc008e6b6a98add894a362b2.jpg

1919962296_PXL_20210220_0143016542.thumb.jpg.8e48646b251d0db4a72e44049cd83035.jpg

Also note both side pieces nest properly inside the notch in the package tray, which makes sense as the package tray/rear seat in both kits is identical. I'm not sure if the real cars used different width rear seat bottoms or not, so not taking the discussion any further than the mention.

Door panel/card comparison:

1721606329_PXL_20210220_0137116322.jpg.5adf3df9a2875c08102943f512a6dcd3.jpg

711762819_PXL_20210220_0137456952.jpg.e9c1cd5ade5a110bb998ab7024a1e1b3.jpg

510196455_PXL_20210220_0139372942.jpg.a75ab1a230f0d356db1d04668bee2dea.jpg

 

The bump out on the 2-door panel is much more noticeable in this shot:

887531066_PXL_20210220_0138490712.jpg.fa680578c28fde26402f319f1e88e973.jpg

 

*edit* Wow, echoing Jesse's earlier comment, that carpet "texture" just screams '80s MPC kit.

Edited by Casey
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14 minutes ago, doorsovdoon said:

Yes, I can see now they are very different. Strange how there is a parting line on the new four door panel exactly where a two door shut line would be though. Maybe Round2 have something in store for the future?

I edited my post above yours again to add the inside faces of the door panels, and I see (I think I do, anyway) the line you are talking about, but it doesn't align with the gap between the two-door's door and rear quarter panel. It seems to be aligned with the step in the floorboard, which makes things even stranger...just noticed the angled, slotted hole for the dash tab is significantly larger on the four-door panel, too.

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22 hours ago, Casey said:

Just a few shots of the 2- and 4-door AMT '67 Impala interior parts, for comparison. Note the 2-door's rear interior panels have a dogleg bump out, the lower half of which is not present on the 4-door panels, leaving a noticeable gap between the panel and the seat bottom:

1726203094_PXL_20210220_0146182552.thumb.jpg.18acc713cc008e6b6a98add894a362b2.jpg

1919962296_PXL_20210220_0143016542.thumb.jpg.8e48646b251d0db4a72e44049cd83035.jpg

Also note both side pieces nest properly inside the notch in the package tray, which makes sense as the package tray/rear seat in both kits is identical. I'm not sure if the real cars used different width rear seat bottoms or not, so not taking the discussion any further than the mention.

Door panel/card comparison:

1721606329_PXL_20210220_0137116322.jpg.5adf3df9a2875c08102943f512a6dcd3.jpg

711762819_PXL_20210220_0137456952.jpg.e9c1cd5ade5a110bb998ab7024a1e1b3.jpg

510196455_PXL_20210220_0139372942.jpg.a75ab1a230f0d356db1d04668bee2dea.jpg

 

The bump out on the 2-door panel is much more noticeable in this shot:

887531066_PXL_20210220_0138490712.jpg.fa680578c28fde26402f319f1e88e973.jpg

 

*edit* Wow, echoing Jesse's earlier comment, that carpet "texture" just screams '80s MPC kit.

A four door '67 Impala won't have a bump out at the rear seat because the door opens. 

unnamed.jpg.9c32c2fd6bf410b31f95880c5b70e161.jpg

 

 

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3 hours ago, Plowboy said:

A four door '67 Impala won't have a bump out at the rear seat because the door opens. 

No, it wouldn't. 

Now that you posted the pic of the sedan, it's clear the sedan rear seat has a larger diameter curve at the front corners (mentioned earlier by Chris for when using the rear seat as a factory pattern-matching front bench seat) no doubt to ease ingress and egress. Not an issue on a 2-door, but for those wanting more accuracy, the rear seat bottom will need some work, too.

Edited by Casey
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  • 8 months later...

I'm working on one now, and what an awful kit. I clearanced the rear of the interior tub to let the chassis settle in better, and made tabs so the back of the chassis would have somewhere to locate, but when I assembled the interior and glass, there was more interference! When I set the rear of the chassis, the front comes out, when I set the front, the rear comes out.. Anyone ever figure out what to modify to make this car buildable? You'd never think that these are the same people that make the 63 nova wagon 

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On 9/18/2020 at 10:25 AM, keyser said:

Series ended. Most cars used headed to US from CN

Eh6zfXxWoAU1XwZ.jpg?q=50&fit=crop&w=740&h=334

I'm surprised they were able to find that many 67 4dht's left to fill out the shows. As well as clean 80s era chrome pinwheel type rims for them all. After 50 years, It's not like that many people collect 4 door hardtops. They're not 69 Chargers or 78 Trans Ams, after all!

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