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my66s55

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Everything posted by my66s55

  1. I have every issue of each of these since they came into print. Like Harry, I only skim through and read selected sections. Hemming's Classic Car Hemming's Muscle Machines
  2. If you check the "contests and shows" section you will see the post for the upcoming show in Melbourne next week. There are usually more than one show in Melbourne each year. There have been shows in Jacksonville. Every April, the Orlando IPMS has had a show at the fairgrounds. I don't know anything about the west coast.
  3. I have 19 completed, 8 wip and about 300 still in their boxes and not started.
  4. I have around 320 and plan on building every one. I'm now 65 1/2. Note how half years start to get important as you get to a certain age. At 30 a year, I might make it. Maybe if I don't try to paint them. LOL
  5. Thanks for the answers. Now I know how I will handle it.
  6. I'm wondering if anyone has done this or knows if it will work. I am finishing up a build of the Entex 1936 Mercedes roadster. There are a number of very thin chrome strips that attach to the sides and trunk that have no pegs or holes to insert them into. I understand that Future can be used to attach photo etched parts and wonder if this would work in this case. I have already put Future on the body as a clear. If it will work, should I put the Future on the parts or the body?
  7. My list would include 58 ford convertible or hardtop 34 LaSalle convertible coupe or coupe 36 LaSalle, Buick or Olds 3 window coupes w/rumble seat ;
  8. I'ii say real. If it's a model, it's a beautiful rendition.
  9. This is my first posting to this forum. I'm like the 4 year old boy who never spoke. His family thought he was mute. One day at the dinner table he spoke up-please pass the potatoes. His father, in utter estonisment remarked - he speaks, why haven't you spoken before. The boy simply replied-I didn't have anything to say. I remember all these things about this time period and more. Art is possibly 6 months older than I. At 7 years old in 1952, I had already built wood ships and bulsa/paper airplanes. I grew up in the northwest burbs of Detroit. Woodward ave area to be specific. In 1952, my Dad took me to the hobby shop in Royol Oak and I saw the Gowland & Gowland models. I had to have them. My allowence purchased about 10 of them over time. They sat on a curio shelf I my bedroom until I left home at 21. I had an uncle who would buy me models or promos for my birthday or Christmas. Mostly Revelle models. When AMT came out with their models in 1958, I built some. The last one I remember doing was a 1960 Edsel. Wish I still had it. Being in the Detroit area, the automobile was a great part of our life. Someone's father was always taking us to a car showroom for the new models. My parents bought our first tv in 1952. Before that, we went across the street to a neighbors to watch the test patern until Howdy Doody came on at 5 PM. It was a great time to be alive. I am lucky to have lived in that time period and be in the heart of the area that was the Woodward cruise, Motown, Royal Pontiac and the auto industry. By the way, root beer was .05 cents at the A&W stand.
  10. My first post on this board guy's. Hope everything goes right. The fifties and early sixties. Where do I begin. First off, I was born in 1945 just north of Flint Michigan. From 1949 on, I lived and grew up in northwestern Detroit burbs. Cars were in our blood. In the early to mid fifties, many times our dads would take us to see the new models as they came out to the dealers. Car models and promos? You bet. I got all I could handle at Christmas. Gowland and Gowland to Revell to AMT as the years progressed. A & W root beer, right accross the street from our local hobby shop and a mile from home by bike. As the early sixties and high school set in, it was all that anyone could ask for. Motown, cruisin Woodward Ave from the Totom Pole in Royal Oak to Ted's in Bloomfield Hills and back to the Big Boy in Birmingham. One night a week was reserved for your steady and the passion pit. Center concel? What was that? Bucket seats were refered to as birth-control seats. Those summers were filled with visits to thw Wald Lake Casino, a place were teens from all over the northwest burbs of the Detroit area could come and dance and see the popular rock groups of the time. I feel blessed to have grown up in such a time. It was truley wonderful. Doug
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