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niteowl7710

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Everything posted by niteowl7710

  1. Jay Savarese is building all of SJR's "promotional" (eg used for their advertising and inclusion as built examples on NASCAR's website, Fanatics, etc), he has one of the test shot bodies, shot it in primer and mounted it to the chassis.
  2. $47 before shipping is higher than anyone else's price for a new kit short of one of the crazy top-end Tamiya kits (Enzo, FXX-K, LFA, etc), Belkits (and now DModelkits) Rally offerings, and the MSRP on Salvinos JR. All of those things being brand new tool (at the time) highly detailed plastic kits. Not a - oh well let's run plastic through it and see what happens - recycling of a diecast tooling. We all know what the Revell "dual use" kits are, and I don't think anyone around here actually appreciated the results of those kits in terms of fit, assembly, and body shell properties. I'm fully for the subject matter, give me cool Holdens & Ford Falcons, et al. But it's 2023, I expect 2023 or there abouts quality in something that costs that much. I'd happily pay $55-60 for one that fits the bill.
  3. These were discussed several months ago when they were initially announced. They're just plastic versions of their diecast line, so it's not so much a quick build as it is the simplified (and usually quirky, if not outright bad) result of pouring styrene through a diecast mold. You usually wind up with very thick parts and bodies that are "slab sided" since the molds are designed to hold the thicker more viscous liquid metal than plastic. It's interesting subject matter, but I can't see paying their asking price for what I see in that video, particularly when these aren't new molds, just re-purposing existing already paid for tooling.
  4. It probably will be molded in black, but it was stated again last night on their live stream that the entire car is covered in decals top to bottom and side to side. There will be no part (allegedly) that isn't covered by the wrap. I also don't expect them to really follow up on the vinyl wrap idea anytime soon.
  5. The entire Truex Jr. car is a wrap, not sure what color they're going to mold it in yet, but to quote Rick - "There's not even a 32nd of an inch on that car that isn't a decal".
  6. Alright I meant to do this earlier this month, but this forum is now all but useless to me when I try to access it from my phone. The reply box goes haywire and won't let me type if I'm quoting someone, and randomly adds spaces to the posts when I've never hit return to start a new paragraph. So this is a bit redundant at this point, but hey I made this thread, so I can dub myself relevant. ? February 2023 Company-wide price increase on the MSRP to $49.95. The Blaney 2023 Mustang is the first kit this actually effects going forward as most reputable places wouldn't raise their already existing shelf prices on "dead stock". But re-stocks of older kits in the future would reflect the increase. Next Gen cars will be MSRP'd to reflect the cost of decals individually. Cartograf has effectively doubled their price - to everyone, not just SJR - and those costs will be at least partially passed on in kits that require extensive "wrap" style decal sheets. All 2023 Kits going forward (starting with the Blaney Mustang) will now have a dashboard and electronics box included in the kits. Kits this month are the 2022 Mustangs for Austin Cindric's Daytona 500 Win, Joey Logano's Championship, and the 2023 Ryan Blaney Menards/Duracell Primary Livery.
  7. Sure but the original question was about it being offered on their own website, not retail in general. With the increase of MSRP to $49.95 that took place last week, if you're buying the kits directly from them you might as well join the Kit Club at that point since they didn't get that increase passed along to them - membership having it's "priveledge" and all of that. You can always flip the stuff you don't want, since you have it 1-2 weeks before it hits store shelves and someone will always want to be first.
  8. It was shipped for club members earlier this week, probably would have been out this month if February had a normal amount of days in it.
  9. I know, but to me (at least) it looks like the brighter, more vibrant yellow that Pennzoil sponsored cars have been over the years when you compare it to the "Shell Yellow" that was traditionally used in their Red/Yellow schemes. At this time there is no licensing agreement with RFK, the only Ford team currently licensed is Penske. It's possible more may be coming in the future, but even then there's no surety which livery would be decided on to be produced. If you're talking about the 2022 Gearwrench car that Powerslide is going to do, skip the yellow plastic and buy the Austin Cindric kit - that will be molded in white. For 2023 liveries, again the Cindric car will be molded in white.
  10. Most of the time no. Not with any ease anyways. The older tooling is not at all designed to be modular, so you would most likely have to run the entire rest of the 74 kit to get the parts you'd want to borrow. That's a huge waste of time and plastic since it's an entire process to take out a tooling and re-rack in another one to make a singular item.
  11. They aren't spec engines like say Super GT or something, but for the most part there are only one or two places making engines for each manufacturer and everyone else buys engines from those shops. Externally they are more or less the same, the main differences being how the air intakes attach, and SJR did address those changes between all three kits.
  12. I like the bit about curbside entries not being allowed to have visible engines...so what all the 60 part Fujimi Ferraris, Lamborghinis, and anything else with an "engine window" gets kicked over into Factory Stock to play with the full detail builds? I wouldn't necessarily worry about the "must have a number" on drag racing as that is it's own sub-category in Competiton.
  13. The only stock parts that were "restored" to the kit are the wheels and the rear bumper, otherwise it's the same kit as it ran in the last several reissues as a custom lowered SIlverado.
  14. Isn't the MPC '68 GTO Annual kit what was updated through the years and now sits as the heap of a '72 GTO? Is that what you want for an engine and chassis? ?
  15. Yes but the only real "rare" kit they're doing is the 2022 Mustang. They will be doing something to the effect of at least a half dozen (if not more if they decide to do the one-off Patriotic or Throwback designs) of the 2023s. There will be something like 11 Camaros before you get into one-off designs and all of the Joe Gibbs Toyotas at least once over. They're not making any less model kits total, just splitting them up into smaller runs to release more kits choices. They made a slew of those Chase Elliot cars (along with the rest of the Hendrick cars) and a lot of places are still sitting on them. Having things sell out (on their end) by the time the kits ship out is a win to them. After all they're in this to make a profit, not make sure people can still find the kit on the shelf two years from now.
  16. Those Gen 6 kits are hard to find now after people hoarded Revell kits like toilet paper when Hobbico went under and everyone was convinced there would never be a Revell again. BUT... You'll also remember that they were blowing all those Fusions and SSes out at Ollie's the previous Christmas, and those were the glue kits, not the SnapTite MAX ones.
  17. "1976 Chevy Street Pickup" is the terminology used on the boxings of the Revell Stepside. Also, that Monogram kit was just released last year, how are you going to reissue it again when it's already in the catalog. ? That section of kits were specifically North American market items, not reboxes in RevellAG packaging.
  18. No I'm saying the kit which is the flareside "Street Custom" pickup which the box art was shown in the previous page of this thread has been around in that format since at least the 80s - the kit goes back into the 70s - is most certainly not the factory stock longbed that is shown in their "ShutterStock" stock photo they decided to use. Also when the kit came out it was branded a 1978, it's magicly lost two years over the course of time and became a 1976.
  19. Unfortunately most of it is driver error. These days almost no one has actually driven a vehicle on an actual skidpad to learn how to control/recover a vehicle, and not many more are taught vehicle dynamics so they'd have at least a "book sense" of how to control their vehicles. Most people lose traction under acceleration, and then immediately slam on the brakes which breaks the car out of one skid into another and they ride off out of control into the sunset so to speak. Look at all the videos of people sliding down ice covered hills at 5mph with their wheels locked, where if they just let go of their death grip of the brake pedal they'd be able to roll down the hill. Much like the church parking lot it's a hill they've invariably sped down at 20-30mph over the posted speed limit on a near daily basis, but it's covered in ice and they slide down it like a drunken ballerina at less than 10mph bouncing off every other idiot that doesn't understand ABS doesn't function under 15 mph.
  20. Best example of that is a church parking lot. Don't worry this isn't a religious comment, just observational humor... You're talking about a group of people who are in the same place, usually the same exact parking space at LEAST 52 times a year. But the first time it snows enough to cover the lot everyone loses their minds and start to park completely contrary to the way the lot is striped and occasionally on sidewalks and in the fire lane. Like you KNOW where your car goes 48 other Sundays a year, why is it snow suddenly erases the rules?
  21. I know some folks around here are fervent members of the HPICult, but do we need two copies of the video posted? ?
  22. That's true, but compared to the 24 pieces of engine in the other it's barely sufficient.
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