Jump to content
Model Cars Magazine Forum

Force

Members
  • Posts

    4,601
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Force

  1. Well Ronald, I know wery well the AMT 359 Unilite cab kit came in 1969 and the later 359 1100 series cab kit came 1976 and also that they have wreckers based on both in 1972 and 1977, but the AMT kits are not what my post was about. It's the Revell Germany Can-Do/Will-Do wreckers wich are more modern rotator wreckers and based on their full detail 359 Peteski and I was talking about and that 359 is also the kit cifenet is/was building in this thread.
  2. Yes, the Can-Do (1993) and Will-Do (2013) wreckers are based on the 359 tooling and the 359 was first issued back in 1982...I built one back then. The Can-Do is not right for what it's supposed to be as the original Stepp's Can-Do wrecker truck is a 378...but Revell did not have a 378 so they used the 359.
  3. Yes the research on a subject is allmost as fun as building it. But when it comes to mold/create parts it can't be that hard, the Revell Ford Flatheads are a lot more detailed. but on the other hand they are a lot more modern tooling, the 1949 was deveopled in the early 1960's and the Revell kit's in the mid 2010's...there's the difference. We expect a lot more from the kits developed today than what was expected back then and the kits they develop today are a lot more accurate and detailed...not allways but often.
  4. The engine in the AMT 49 Ford is a 8BA 1949-53 (8CM for Mercury) wich replaced the older 59AB and the 8BA was the last flat head engine for Ford and it was replaced with the Y-block 1954 wich was Ford's first OHV V8. The thing with the AMT kits are that the engine in the kit is very simplified and some things are not there so it's not that easy to get it right as it doesn't look as it should, the water pumps are very simple, the exhaust manifolds are casted in and things like that. The flathead in the 1949 Mercury is slightly better but definately not perfect, it has separate exhaust manifolds and the cross over pipe, but the water pumps are like the 49 Ford, very simple and does not look like the real thing.
  5. The pipe in your picture is the cross over pipe for the exhaust. The radiator should have two outlets, one for each water pump.
  6. Teams like John Force Racing, Don Schumacher Racing and Kalitta Motorsports build chassis in house, and some teams buys them from McKinney, Hadman, Morgan Lucas Racing/Lucas Fabrication and from the other larger teams who build chassis in house. But you can get some measurements from the "modern era" Revell Top Fuel Dragster kits wich have a recent chassis, not the most modern but pretty much what they use today except for some alterations done since they were up to date. A modern Nitro engine for Top Fuel and Funny car is based on the old Chrysler 426 Hemi design, same dimentions, bore spacing and so on with some approved alterations and strengthening and you can get dimentions from the Revell Top Fuel kits there too. All engines used in these classes are machined billet aluminum with no water jackets and steel sleeves for the cylinders, the heads are also machined billet aluminum with dual spark plugs per cylinder. I'm sure there are drawings and 3D files for these parts but I'm not so sure the engine block manufacturers like Alan Johnson Performance Engineering (AJPE), BRad Andrerson Engineering (BAE), Keith Black and others, are letting them go as easy as you from these files can do a copy of their engine blocks and sell to anyone. The 14-71 super chargers are made by Kobelco, BME, DMPE, PSI and others but based on the GM Roots design for two stroke diesels but with a longer case and rotors, Ignition is dual MSD Pro Mag 44's.
  7. I also find (Castrol) Super Clean works well, the plating disappears right before your eyes and the base clear coat in an hour or two.
  8. Well most of the Thermo King reefer units I have seen has the control and gauge panel on the drivers side for us driving on the right side of the road. The reefer unit in the ERTL now AMT Great Dane Reefer kit has this panel on the passenger side wich is strange as I have not seen any reefer units with the panel placed there.
  9. I think someone allredy has done one in 3D printing with the gauge panel on the correct side wich the kit doesn't have, I remember to have seen one somewhere. My original question was from 2013 and the old "ERTL" Great Dane Reefer trailer wich as far as I know never had been reissued since 1978-79 was reissued by Round 2 last year.
  10. I think it could be this one, because the Crown 500 is written on top of the grille on them so it can't be that, the one in the kit has Thermo King on top of the grille.
  11. Oh my, that looks good.
  12. I'm still waiting on the #217 replacement (this usually takes time), and the #218 and #219 issues, the #220 is too early to expect yet. I don't have a clue why the magazines disappear and where they end up...maybe in a dark hole somewhere or something like that, because they for sure don't reach my mailbox. I subscribe to another magazine from the US and the deliverence of that magazine is iffy too, not as bad as Model Cars Magazine so it's not just Model Cars Magazine that vanish on the way over here, and it worked a lot better before and even during the Covid Pnademic than it has done the last year-year and a half. I have contacted our mail service Postnord but they can't do anything as the magazines are sent as letters and are not traceable, and they say that they deliver everything that comes to them in the order they get them...so I don't know. So if it's not with them the problem is it must lie somewhere else in the mail chain and it's getting very frustrating, because I got issue #211, missed #212 and #213, got #214, missed #215, got #216 and have missed the #217, #218 and #219, so out of 9 issues sent to me I got 3...and nothing comes back to the publisher after what I can tell. I have got replacements for #212, #213 and #215 and still waiting on the replacement for #217, but it seems like I will not get the other 2 as I should either and we will see how it goes with #220.
  13. I have a couple more of the CO-4070B Transtar II in my stash and will build another some time, I need the air intake tube/exhaust stack assembly for one of them tho'. I also bought a coupe of the new tool CO-4070A wich will be on the work bench in the future..
  14. To avoid silvering, do as the armor and aircraft modelers do, paint the part with a gloss color or with a gloss clearcoat, apply decal and then cover the whole thing in dull coat of desired lustre when the decals dried, then you will not have a problem with silvering wich happens because you put decals over a flat or semigloss surface and air is trapped under the decal film. I have learned this from my armor and aircraft modeler friends where all models they do are with flat or semigloss paints., so many use Future Floor Polish or a gloss clear coat before decals and then dullcoat over everything.
  15. Yes. Here are a couple of pictures of both Dodge and Pymouth from 1971. first Dodge Plymouth And a what if Plymouth build And a what if Dodge build.
  16. Yeah, light beige does not hide anything. ?
  17. Nice start. I built one of these back in the late 70's early 80's, the one with walking beam suspension, and it still sits on my shelf. A nice kit as I remember.
  18. MPC did a "what if" 1971 Plymouth Road Runner "Superbird". First issue from 1970-71 Second issue from the 80's
  19. Looks good Tommy. The 1974 trucks did not have diamont tuft inserts in the headliner but the 1975 trucks did in opposite colors to the rest of the interior so it right. By the way, did you see my PM with the license plates?
  20. Naah finish it...it's the only one available. I built one of these several years ago, didn't open up the doors tho'. Even if it's not a totally correct model it looks pretty nice on the shelf. I have a few more in the stash of wich a couple are the Testors version from 2007 with a photoetch fret where the side markers and emblems are on, and also a 1970 Rebell Machine wich I will build some day.
  21. It's a challenging kit and the old plastic seems to be very brittle. But I hate to disappoint you, this kit is not a 1969, it's Jo-Han's 1966 Rambler American kit with decals and a few other parts to make it look like the 1969 Hurst Rambler SC...but the body itself is a 1966. The rear panel was changed 1967 and the tail lights became taller and narrower and was pretty much the same to 1969, 1968 was side markers mandated wich the kit also doesn't have.
  22. Not much exclusiveness for this kit. It's basically the same kit as the original kit from 1963 with a one piece chassis and all.
  23. They reissued the 780 some years ago and it has been out 3 times. But the 670 was only available from Italeri and reboxed by Revell Germany back in 2005-ish
×
×
  • Create New...