
Chuck Most
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Everything posted by Chuck Most
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Dave Metzner told me in an e-mail that the cut lines will be corrected on later runs of the kit.
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Judging from the photo, the wheelbase IS off, but not by as much as was thought. I think it has to do with the rear overhang- look at it- on my monitor, the body aft of the rear tire looks about 1/16 or so short compared to the pic of the 1:1.
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I'll be watching this one for sure. Hope it turns out as killer as the Coupe you did before!
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Scale auto renaissance?
Chuck Most replied to Jantrix's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
On the other hand... there was seemingly pent-up demand for the Beverly Hillbillies Olds kit, and look at how that reissue tanked. Really, who knows what could happen? -
Scale auto renaissance?
Chuck Most replied to Jantrix's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
You left 'into the ground' on that last sentence. RC2 actually killed off model kit production before Round 2 took over- could market oversaturation have had anything to do with that? I'd have to think it played a role. Why would a store buy more, say, '67 GTO kits when they already had a shelf full of the last run that weren't sold? Though in the case of the IMC stuff, it might work, simply because they've been out of production for so long (for the most part) there's pent up demand from modelers who don't want to pay collector bucks to land one. That and I'm sure that quite a few guys (and gals) are being introduced to them for the first time- I showed the '59 Rambler thread to a local modeler who didn't even know the kit existed until then- he's up for a couple of them now. -
Looks like the rear overhang might be a bit short on the kit, too. Meh- won't stop me building this stack of them!
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You know... snow? Nature's wet, icy dandruff.
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The axle does seem to be a tad too far back- I've got a book with the wheelbase listed somewhere. Trouble is I don't have a Hornet built up with a stock chassis to measure.
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Scale auto renaissance?
Chuck Most replied to Jantrix's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
Well, if you like modern Ponycars, you're pretty well covered- at least four versions of the Dodge Challenger, half a dozen Mustangs (even one in large scale, which is weird because all the 'experts' say large scale is dead), and three Camaros- a snap and glue kit of the concept and the upcoming Revell production version. There's also a slew of Vipers, Vettes, and at least one iffy-but-workable Ford GT. Performance cars are still hot in America, trouble is most people still think 'performance' has to mean 'V8 engine, rear drive, two doors'. -
Scale auto renaissance?
Chuck Most replied to Jantrix's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
Okay, Harry and Casey... so just simply churning out a kit because the tooling is workable is a sound business proposition? -
Scale auto renaissance?
Chuck Most replied to Jantrix's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
I bought zero Tahoes- they're yuppiewagons. Besides, that's an SUV, not a pickup. I do have a few of the Revell Expeditions, though. Dodge Rams? Which one? The Revell VTS? Or the Ertl Snap kits of the 2500 and 3500. Five of the VTS, ten of the 2500, and about fifteen of the 3500, if ya must know. I've got nearly 30 of the AMT '97 style F-150s in various stages of 'not done yet', and a dozen Revell Lightnings. Lindberg F-150's? Twelve of those at the moment. Easily as many of the Monogram F-250, and I buy EVERY Monogram F-350 that comes near me. AMT Chevy C-series pickups? I've got all of them except the promos. Sorry- not too many of the AMT Rangers or GM S-trucks, but that's mostly because the Rangers are getting tougher to track down, and I don't care for the S 10s much. And don't get me started on all the AMT '92-'95 F-150s. If there were any kits of modern pickups (SVT Raptor, Ford Super Duty F-2 or 350, Ram Power Wagon), I'd have just as many of them laying around as I do now. I even have a stash of the Maisto diecast F-250 Super Duty kits (1999 vintage) if you're curious. -
Scale auto renaissance?
Chuck Most replied to Jantrix's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
Yeah, but all the decal sheets you'd need to buy would kill you... -
Scale auto renaissance?
Chuck Most replied to Jantrix's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
Brett, I do agree with 90% of what you are saying, but you are completely overlooking another aspect- REISSUES! I don't expect to see tons of new tool stuff. The Trumpeter Monte Carlo is a moot point, I mean, really, can Trumpeter to anything automotive right? But the MPC Monte Carlo has been back, and from where I sit, it's doing pretty well. Granted, much of that might have to do with the inclusion of the Honda Chopper, but hey- that Honda Chopper itself is a Seventies vehicle. And of course Round 2 is bringing back the Gremlin kit- would they be doing that if there were no interest? One of the kits IMC is bringing back is the JoHan Cutlass- can you get any more '1970's' in terms of subject matter than an Oldsmobile Cutlass? Wait- you can- custom vans- those are slated to make a comeback. And these kits that are coming back weren't the only vehicles kitted during the polyester decade- they're just the ones that are known to have usable tooling, or tooling that was close enough to be viable with some freshening. I'm sure there are more out there than just what I've listed, and the fact that a kit of fill-in-the-blank already exists precludes the need to tool up an all new kit. Maybe I'm off base, but even if a kit needed some parts completely redone it might still be workable to reissue it. I know that tooling is expensive, but it's cheaper today that it was in the past relatively speaking. And with reissued kits, we're talking about tooling that was bought and paid for when Carter was still in the white house. Ten, twenty grand to freshen something is still better than ten times that amount for an all new tool. Would people buy new tool kits of this era? That would depend on the subject. But the fact '70's kits are being reissued at all is pretty telling, if you ask me. -
Desktop Milling Machine
Chuck Most replied to bill w's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
If I had eight grand floating around in my couch cushions, maybe... -
Scale auto renaissance?
Chuck Most replied to Jantrix's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
1:8 scale Superbird? Not my thing, but I do admit that would be VERY cool. Especially if it were a full-blown NASCAR-spec rig. I'll join Andy and say I'd like a '10 Oldsmobile as well. (Know what? Put me down for a 1:25 Curved Dash as well. Something about those old motor buggies just fascinates me.) Just pepper the golden oldies with something a bit more consistent with the century we're living in now, that's all I'm sayin. -
Did absolutely NOTHING model related Saturday!!!!
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Scale auto renaissance?
Chuck Most replied to Jantrix's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
Try speaking for yourself and not the rest of the class, please. Just because 'we' invented the hot rod and muscle car doesn't make 'us' experts on what makes a car cool. -
Scale auto renaissance?
Chuck Most replied to Jantrix's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
I was reffering to the mid '50's Dodge in Darrin's post.