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Phildaupho

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Everything posted by Phildaupho

  1. What paint did you use for the exterior? Great model of one of my all time favorite cars.
  2. YEAH BABY!! Two beautiful Ferraris. I was sure bummed when I learnt Revell of Germany decided not to release the former Gunze 250SWB which is on my top ten list of all time favorite cars.
  3. This is my self-done GTO conversion done on a Revell of NA 599. More photos at http://public.fotki....errari-599-gto/
  4. Tommy Hamilton asked me to add a tire rack to the trailer so I had to oblige.
  5. DATE - SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 29, 2012 LOCATION – Victoria BC Canada at The Citadel near Mackenzie and the Pat Bay Highway 4030 Douglas. This is a great facility with lots of parking. We will have the gym, which will give lots of space for display tables and vendors. There are also many doors for people to bring in their stuff. FORMAT - It will an NNL style event with entrants voting for their favourite model in a number of categories as well as special awards chosen by sponsors. Spectators will also have the opportunity to vote for the Peoples’ Choice Award. Check website at http://modelcarsofvictoria.shawwebspace.ca/
  6. The trailer is a very simple one piece plastic unit with metal axles. I suspect it came with a ERTL diecast. Underneath it has ERTL markings with TOOL # 62-4405 and CHART # 5451.
  7. For anyone interested in more photos of the Shelby Mustang GT350R have a look at http://public.fotki....n_bros_gt-350r/
  8. I built this ’57 Ranchero for a friend who had such a vehicle back in the late sixties with which he towed a ’65 Shelby GT-350R racecar. About eight years ago, I built him a model of the Shelby so when he acquired a 1/25 trailer the idea of reuniting the model racecar and a model of the tow vehicle seemed like a project that needed to be completed. I was fortunate that a model car builder friend had a stock height previously started Ranchero kit he was willing to part with. In fact he had two kits to trade. I have to say I am pretty impressed with a kit that started life over fifty years ago as a station wagon. The separate body panels had been previously glued together so it already seemed like a model body I have become used to. BUILD PROCESS - Separated dash from cowl. Instruments are a decal made from an internet image of a brochure illustrating the dash. - Molded pickup bed floor and side to body - Headlight and taillight bezels and lenses from AMT 57 Ford - Grill, gravel panel, narrowed front bumper, hood, steering wheel, dash and engine from AMT 57 Ford - Wheels are narrowed American Torque-Thrusts from AMT ’49 Ford - Fender skirts scratch-built and removable - Door handles from Owencraft - Paint Testor’s Boyd’s White and Artic Blue Metallic - Scripting decals made with Testor’s program
  9. I am looking foward to the Revell of North America 599 GTO which will be less expensive, white plastic and will come in a more conventional box even though I have already completed a conversion of a 599 to GTO.
  10. Excellent rendition of boxtop Deuce.
  11. Fantastic job. I saw and heard this car run at the Monterey Historics a few years ago. You could hear the snowmobile fan motors for the entire lap no matter where you were standing around the circuit.
  12. All very attractive. I sure would like to get a resin cast 35 front end.
  13. Down right amazing. A tour de force.
  14. One of my favorite liveries. Only those who really know their racing history would think your Corvette is anything other than an accurate replica.
  15. I needed a quick build for a club night. I had a completed Double-T rolling chassis with engine that was built for an old project that lost its body years ago. Lately it has been on my self with an unpainted Tall-T body sitting on it. The Tall-T body is a saver so I decided for a re-do featuring a Chopped-T body done in the style of the Double-T box art. The chassis was already orange to that made the colour choice easy. It is pretty well built according to the old instruction sheet but I did make a few alterations. - The body was shaved and smoothed - Used only the back half of the red tinted windows - Dull coated the Moon discs and narrowed rear wheels - Cut front metal axle - 6-carb set up from Tall-T kit with red pin head balls in trumpets - Aluminum tubing for steering column and exhaust tips
  16. Hopefully this looks red
  17. Beautiful build of a great kit.
  18. Earlier this year, the Revell of Germay website showed that a Ferrari 250 SWB was to be released later in 2012. There was speculation that this was an Italeri re-issue.The last time I checked the website, the listing was no longer there and some on-line vendors showed it as discontinued or out-of-stock. I would have definitely bought one of these kits as the SWB is one of my all time favorites.I do have the AMT kit which needs a lot to make presentable. Just out of curiosity, does anyone know what happened.
  19. Yes I see what you mean about it looking pink but the model really is red. I guess the lights I used for taking the pictures changed the shade.
  20. I started this model in early summer of last year and had it pretty much completed when my painting area was taken over by items for a group garage sale and then I got caught up in a new project. Basically all I had left to do was the exterior paint; devise a hinging arrangement for the engine cover, final assembly and decals. This was a very interesting project as I learnt about the old MPC kit and the real car itself. The 1967 Le Mans race, which it won driven by Dan Gurney and AJ Foyt was the only race, this car ever ran. After the Le Mans victory the car went back to Ford’s facility in Detroit. There the engine was removed for dyno testing and somehow later disappeared. A replacement 427 was installed but that engine has never been started. I did not know this when I helped push it into position for a photo shoot at Monterey Dan Gurney tribute in 2010. Another thing I find intriguing is that a left side mirror is clearly visible in photos from the ’67 Le Mans, the car currently only has the drivers’ side right mirror installed and there does not appear to be any indication on the left front fender that a mirror was ever mounted there. As for the model, MPC did a pretty good job replicating the body although the proportions are a little off and the panels do not fit that well together. The rest of the model kit however was just an approximation. I tried to add as much accurate detail as I could but I did not attempt to duplicate the complex exhaust system. For final finishing I used Model Gloss Red Lacquer and Fred Cady decals. The build process was documented On the Bench at http://www.modelcars...l=&fromsearch=1 and on my Fotki at http://public.fotki....?cmd=manualsort
  21. Phildaupho

    GT-40

    I like what you did with the GT-40, especially the opening doors.
  22. Best of Show Gerry Chevalier [originator of Mini Exotics] Model started with AMT Snap Blackforce. Has scratchbuilt V12 Ardun. Interior is fully lined with wood. More photos of show at http://public.fotki....er-auto-mode-2/ Unfortunately album does not include photos of models entered by Vancouver Island modelers
  23. This model was built in 2003 for the original driver Tommy Hamilton. It even appeared in Model Cars magazine. At some point the model had a big crash, falling from its display shelf. Fortunately it did not break. Rather it came apart. Tommy did a very good job putting it back together with only a few parts getting lost – a front disc brake,a rear shock and the radiator hose. He used some sort of glue that was very sticky but not harden so disassembly was fairly easy to undertake a restoration. This model was my first attempt at making my own decals using my first colour copier and I also had some serious issues with the kit supplied stripes. Other than replacing the missing parts and reassembly, the main part of the restoration was applying new livery decals and fixing up the stripes. It took me awhile to figure out how I was going to fix the stripes. During the original build, the first set of stripe decals completely bubbled and weremvery difficult to get off. The second set I used did not conform ton contours with decal solvent so a couple of areas that should have had stripes did not. These stripes seem to have permanently bonded to the paint. During the restoration I went through my collection of Shelby GT350 decals and could find none that were suitable. Then I remembered the story Tommy Hamilton told of getting a roll of reflective blue tape that was used on phone booths. Over the winter he used this tape to re-do the Shelby stripes. The blue sign vinyl I had was not reflective but it was metallic so I cut and appled new stripes just like Tommy did. For more photos go to http://public.fotki....n_bros_gt-350r/
  24. More photos at http://public.fotki..../iroc-porsches/ The group I slot-car race with decided to have a racing class based on the first International Race of Champions which became known as IROC. For the first year of the championship Porsche 911 RSR’s were used and drivers for various racing series competed. The cars were painted a vast array of colors and at each event cars were assigned by a draw. For our slot-car class we used 1/24 scale Scale Auto Porsche 911 GT3 RSR kits which we got a very good price from our good friend Alan Smith at 132 Slots cars http://132slotcar.us These kits happened to be rally cars so a few modifications had to be made such as filling holes for additional headlights and for the roof vent. I was assigned the job of painting the cars of colors of the six lane Suzuka GP Circuit replica track we race on. The colors I used were Model Master Custom Lacquer Italian Red, Daytona Yellow and Green Go and Tamiya Orange, Brilliant Blue and Racing White. After another fellow did the decals, I sealed them in three fairly heavy coats of Model Master Acrylic Clear. To make marshalling the races as easy as possible and as a bit of a joke, the colors were identified on the wings. We decided to assign the name of a current racecar driver each from a different discipline to each car. The two other slot-car racers involved in this project go by the names of Slotbutton and PTfan so the white car was assigned to Jenson Button from F-1 and the blue car to Paul Tracy from Indy car. Valentino Rossi is on the yellow car, Tony Stewart is on the orange car, Tom Kristensen is on the green car and Sebastian Loeb is on the red car. Slotbutton painted each of the driver’s suits and helmets in the designs the drivers are most known for. He also did the final assembly after I did some additional body detail. For the first race with these cars fourteen slot-car racers participated with each doing three-minute heats in each of the cars. Even though the cars just barely fit on the track side by side the racing was very realistic and other than a bit of wing rub to the outside and inside lane cars, they still looked very nice after the racing was over. In the end the total number of laps for all racers were pretty close but the winner was clearly ahead of the rest. This was a fun project and I am very happy as a modeller how the cars turned out and I am also very impressed as a slot-car racer at how much fun they are to race.
  25. Right you are about the slot-car being the 65 Galaxie but I would still like to race one of Dan's cars!! Not sure if they got completed in time but I was involved in painting 6 1/24 Scale Auto Porsches for an IROC race at the same event. I will be taking photos and will post a link under the scale racing heading. - Phil
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