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Claude Thibodeau

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Everything posted by Claude Thibodeau

  1. Hi Richard! That is sweet! Very clean build. I think the Ford brochures refered to that colour as "coral", if my memory is correct. Fits the car perfectly. Suddently... It's 1956! Bravo. CT
  2. Hi Sir! Great build... I LOVE the FOMOCO switch under the hood. Let's keep a moment of silence for the offended Bow-Tie brigade... You are right about the massive size of the IFS components. We see the lower arms inner pivot shaft litterally touching the ground. Even at that, 1/1 builders like Bobby Alloway found ways to almost contact the pavement at the front fender side apron level while keeping a safe IFS geometry, mostly by splicing and kicking-up the frame rails ahead of the firewal, à la Cop Shop Coupe if you will. Those "magazine cover cars" had killer looks, but were cartoonish, and difficult to drive in the real world. I drove an Alloway Speedstar once, and it was a risky proposition... CT
  3. Hi Lou! Thanks for the comments. I think that if you seriously channel the body, with a slight forward slant, and create a smooth, more flat firewall... you already dispose of two major hiccups! CT
  4. Thank you Patrick. And I like the "groovy" adjective... Some coolness relief, so to speak! (just kidding) CT
  5. Hi! Insider information... Interesting. These boats are icons nowadays, I saw a few last year on lake Winnipesaukie in NH. No woody tow vehicle in sight, however. Alas... CT
  6. Thank you Dave! Twenty something? Make that 3 times and counting, alas... CT
  7. Hi Sir! Beautiful combos. I had seen many of the towing vehicles trough past features in mags, but the boats... Many are new to me. Bravo! CT PS: I was looking at a 2014 issue of Rodders Journal this morning, featuring Steve Stanford's fantastic creations. He had a phantom 48 Chrysler woody pickup/wooden speedboat combo, and it was great! You could certainly pull it off should you try...
  8. Hi Dale! Thank you for the detailed reply. So far, I've avoided using real automotive clear on my models, because if polishing is ever needed, the sheer hardness of this cured "real paint" most often requires vigorous rubbing, i.e. heat... and styrene does not like heat, as I'm certain you know. But, you changed my mind, and therefore, I'll soon pull-out the HOK Show Klear that I use on real cars, and give it a try. Who knows? Thanks again, and stay safe! CT
  9. Hi Larry! Well, what can I say... COOL seems to be the general feeling here. Ah, those beach cars... CT
  10. Hi Wayne! Sorry I missed you comment when you posted it. Too much styrene vapors, I guess. Thanks for the compliment. CT
  11. Hi Hector! Thank you for the comments. When I was young, a neighbour had one in the same combo. The car obviously made a lasting impression on me... CT
  12. Thank you my friend! I must say that upon choosing that grille, I wondered what you would think about it... Let me say: I knew it! The Mopar powertrain and grille changes us from the ubiquitous Chevy engine in a Ford. Who's to complain? CT
  13. Thank you Oliver. Happy it pleases you! CT
  14. Hi Alan! Of course, experimenting with "surgery" is less risqué when you do it with styrene. As the famous Ken "Posies" Fenical once said" It takes a real man to cut one up"... CT
  15. Hi Jerry! Sorry I missed your entry the day you posted it. Thank you for the comments. CT
  16. Hi Steve! Sorry I missed your post. With kids back in the 80's, I can tell, to paraphrase you, that there was a mini-van in my past... Those Mopars were very efficient on trips. Loved mine. CT
  17. Hi Sir! Your 36 is dead-on as it relates to "vintage" early 60's look, and so cohesive. It is a textbook case as to how to recreate "the look" at early AMBR events. The wide whites, the bell shaped air cleaners, and the dropped axle all scream "genuine". The hair-pin radius rods seal the deal. Truth be told, if I had a 37 truck grille on hand while building mine... I would have used it, but totally chromed with Alclad. The Chrysler unit was a case of "let's see what leftover part could do". Superb build, bravo! CT
  18. Hi Marty! A channelled 30's car, if raked properly, looks somehow as if it was about to "leap", like a predator. Even more so if the rear wheel wells don't make the tires look lost in a hole. Many refer to that as the "Ohio look", championned by the late Barry Lobeck, a 1/1 hot rod builder of considerable fame. That might be it... CT
  19. Hi Marty! Glad you like it. But I'm curious: what is-it exactly that won you over? Just so that I can repeat that in future builds... CT
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