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Mark

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Posts posted by Mark

  1. If another company considers something done previously by Jo-Han to be viable, they'll step up and tool a new kit.  It has been done a couple of times: Ertl '69 Olds 442, Lindberg '64 Plymouth.  They won't bother to copy the one-piece chassis or the interior bucket with the seats molded in.

    I'm betting that certain parts of the coming Moebius Ford Maverick pro stock will bear an uncanny resemblance to corresponding parts in the old Jo-Han kit.  Not the interior or chassis, but rather the body and perhaps the engine.

  2. The only glitch with the Revell competition kit is the headlamps.  One piece, plated, poor detail.  They were done that way for the stock version, no clear lenses and a flat piece of clear stock to make the windshield "glass".  Trying to fit a flat piece of clear styrene into the stock windshield frame is probably why built stock ones are seldom seen.  Other than those two things, the original stock one was a decent kit, especially in its day.

  3. 8 hours ago, junkyardjeff said:

    Thanks for the info,the opening hood had me confused and will come apart when I find a matching green paint.  I recently picked up a 61 Galaxie to put in the 61 box I had that claimed the model had a engine but the one I received did not have a opening hood so that one must be a promo.

    The Starliner (fastback) hardtop and Sunliner convertible kits had engines.  The Galaxie Club Victoria (square roof) hardtop kit never had an engine or opening hood. 

  4. Those wheels are the fronts in the two Vega kits I mentioned.  Cragar Super Tricks were used on the rear in both.  

    Those were molded by MPC so they could be used with their annual kit stock tires, but I remember them being beefed up a bit on the back side.  They could be filed or sanded on the back side for use with narrower tires.

  5. 6 hours ago, Fat Brian said:

    The MPC Fire Truck kit will get you a small block Ford and headers that look similar to what you need. I think one of the versions of the Revell Tweedy Pie will get you most of the rest of the way. 

     

    unnamed (6).jpg

    The basic engine is a small-block Chevy with parts added to resemble the Ford engine in the 1:1 show car.  The chassis in that kit originated in the King T, which had a Chevy engine.

    The Switchers T engine is also a small-block Chevy...both of these engines have a rear sump oil pan and oil filter location characteristic of small-block Chevys.

  6. It may have ended.  Manufacturers using licensing agreements get a "sell off" period.  When the agreement ends, they can't make licensed items but do get a set period to sell off items made under the agreement.  That way, they can't build a stockpile that would last several years after the agreement ends.

  7. The pro stock kits were produced from the same tool as the annuals.  The body of a car kit is an expensive part to tool.  MPC liked to get a second use out of each year's annual kit bodies.  Why else would the pro stockers have windshield wipers?  Too, take a good look at the quarter panels on the stock MPC Mustang II kits...they get lumpier by the year, as they were modified back and forth.  The V8 engine and snorkel hood scoop from the '75 Dyno Don pro stock turned up in the '76-'78 annuals.

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