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Everything posted by Ace-Garageguy
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When I got back into the hobby in around 2005, I bought a bunch of kits I never had as a kid. Rather a lot of them had the old-style blobular AMT everything-molded-in-one-piece chassis. I put most of them on the shelf until I could decide if I wanted to go to all the effort of building realistic underpinnings. Same thing happened when the gorgeous box-art suckered me into buying the AMT '62 Corvette. I knew it wasn't very good before I bought it, though.
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AMT vs (old) Revell Buick V8s
Ace-Garageguy replied to jbwelda's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
Mentioned in post #2: "There is a fairly good AMT version in the old Willys / '32 sedan double kit, but they're getting rare and pricey." There's also a decent-looking (when built and detailed) nailhead in the old Monogram Orange Hauler kit. Though it's supposed to be 1/24, it measures in at roughly the same size as the other good 1/25 ones mentioned here. Interesting thing about it is that it's backed up with a Dynaflow automatic. -
Seeking new modellers ?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Krazy Rick's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
Absolutely. The tech it takes and the knowledge to modify it is staggering compared to what it took to put a carb, cam, manifold and headers on an old Mustang. Even in my own work building mostly "traditional" cars, a lot of the clients want EFI and computer-controlled automatic gearboxes. -
The most recent issues (front-blown SBC, 427 Ford, a mis-labeled 365 Caddy and a Pontiac) are all over ebay, often amazingly cheap ($5) if you buy in multiples. I've paid between $25 and $50 for the Buick and Hemi original issues.
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Seeking new modellers ?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Krazy Rick's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
The world has changed, and the whole instant gratification thing is only a symptom. The "can do", self reliant attitude left in the wake of WW2 had a lot to do (and the memories of widespread rationing, constant low-grade fear, no new cars for the duration, etc.) I believe, with the way things were then. Life in this country in general has now become pretty easy to get by in, and developing some kind of manual or technical skill just isn't seen as necessary, or cool, these days. You can buy a lot of reliable performance car on the second-hand market easy-payment-plan, so there's no real incentive to build a hot-rod ANYTHING, unless you just want to do something different...which is as unusual now as ever. It takes considerably more knowledge to performance-tune a recent vehicle than it took to build a hot-rod when I was young, and getting dirty doing it has lost its appeal to a generation that gets a pretty decent used car from Dad (and they're not even expected to mow the lawn in return). But also, when I was young, I firmly believe more people had hobbies. And that's why hobby shops were available to us as kids...not for us, but for our parents. Adults had model train layouts in my neighborhood, and some guys built hi-fi systems and dabbled with electronics. Others had woodworking shops where they made great looking furniture. My own father built models, kites, and a full-scale Snipe sailboat from plans. A lot of models came as a block of wood, and a picture of what the finished model was supposed to look like, but many "modelers" today cry and complain if the parts don't all but self-assemble. There are STILL people who build models from scratch, and who engage in the other hobbies too, but the percentage is certainly down. Just compare a vintage issue of Popular Mechanics, with a wide range of plans and projects to do yourself, with anything on the market today. It's very true that parental influence is usually necessary to expose youngsters to anything their peers don't care about, and as people are generally herd animals who go along to get along, doing something different from your peers, no matter at WHAT age, is just too radical for many folks. -
For as long as these things have been around, the tooling still seems to be in excellent condition. The most recent runs I have are every bit as crisp as the first ones, with no flash usually. Some of the more recent runs do seem to have deeper sink-marks, as though the plastic shot was cut off just a fraction of a second too soon. Other than that, they look great. One rarely sees a chrome engine in reality, so doing a run of the tools that are left (I've never seen the Buick or the Hemi re-released, or the non-Potvin-blown SBC) in an opaque plastic (the originals are translucent when stripped) would get money out of my pocket. I hope the recent re-runs of the excellent AMT engine trees will be successful enough to prompt Revell into doing a non-chrome run of engine kits.
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Reading that pleased me.
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Excellent.
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AMT vs (old) Revell Buick V8s
Ace-Garageguy replied to jbwelda's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
The Revell and the AMT Riv engines are pretty close to the same size. I just compared them, but not the klugey '40 ford version. The bore-spacing of all the nailheads was the same (just like you get 265 Chevys and 283 and 302 and 327 and 350 & 400 Chevys in a very similar looking basic engine) but the deck height was higher on the bigger ones with longer strokes. Buick designed the engine initially to accommodate increases in displacement, but to still be manufactured using the same machine tooling. -
AMT vs (old) Revell Buick V8s
Ace-Garageguy replied to jbwelda's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
Don't feel bad JB...I can'r remember anything that's actually important. -
I'm afraid I won't be able to accurately follow the chrome lines molded in to the body. I've seen lotsa wavy BMF, and frankly, I think silver paint (or nothing) looks better than bad BMF. I'm also concerned about ruining a perfect paint job by getting wavy lines, and then peeling the stuff off, only to have it lift the paint where the knife blade scored it. And, if there's the slightest orange-peel under the paint, or if the foil goes down lumpy or wrinkled, or pieced together, I think it looks horrible too. So many ways to foul it up. Yeah, I'm intimidated. I'm about to man-up and try it on a primered AMT '57 Ford gasser. Primered so if I totally bugger it, it's an easy fix. '57 Ford because it looks like a kinda tough one, so if I can do a decent job, I'll feel like I actually accomplished something.
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AMT vs (old) Revell Buick V8s
Ace-Garageguy replied to jbwelda's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
The Revell parts-pack nailhead is found in the Tommy Ivo "Showboat" (not the Challenger) though the Showboat version has different oil pans to accommodate the angled mountings, and different bellhousings. Both versions only come with slightly underscale Hilborn-style injection setups. There's another blown version of Revell's nailhead in the Tony Nancy double dragster kit. Thompson's Challenger ran 4 Pontiac engines...also available in a parts-pack version. Again, the Challenger version is different, having a full-length deep sump oil pan, and a chain-drive for the blower, plus different fuel and ignition parts. The only other decent nailhead (the '40 Ford version bites) is in the AMT '66 Buick Rivera. It features 2X4bbl carbs, and factory front cover, accessories, etc. There is a fairly good AMT version in the old Willys / '32 sedan double kit, but they're getting rare and pricey. The Revell and AMT '66 Riv nailheads are pretty close dimensionally. Yes, the Revell and AMT engines represent the cast-iron GEN1 OHV engines of similar architecture built from '53-'66 (264-322-364-401-425) and NOT the later 215 alloy engines or their derivatives. The little 215 Buick/Olds went on to become the basis of the Repco SOHC F1 engines in the series winning Brabham F1 cars of '66-67. -
Just from being car crazy since I can remember, and building, racing, rodding and restoring them for over 50 years. I have enough ideas and build notes to easily last me another 50 years. Sometimes the weirdest things pop into my mind, like today while driving, I noticed the butt of a particular Asian high-end import would look really cool as a '32 roadster-esque lowboy.
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This is without doubt some of the slickest, trickest, most realistic weathering and diorama work I've ever seen. You've even got peeling chrome on the headlight bezels. Impressive.
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And you filled the bumper-bracket notches in the end of the front frame rails too. GOOD MAN !
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1/25 Revell '29 Model A Roadster 2'n'1
Ace-Garageguy replied to mrknowetall's topic in Car Kit News & Reviews
C'mon guys...this is hot-rod stuff. Hot-rod is six letters that mean "everything fits everything...if YOU make it". -
Do you or don't you?
Ace-Garageguy replied to Tom Geiger's topic in General Automotive Talk (Trucks and Cars)
It's been working for US car manufacturers for years... -
Danged if it dont make ya wunder, dont it?
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1/25 Revell '29 Model A Roadster 2'n'1
Ace-Garageguy replied to mrknowetall's topic in Car Kit News & Reviews
I'll mos' likely be in line for a bank truck too. Visions of a chopped, channeled, twin-Allison powered LSR money van... And the more I look at those '29 photos, the more I really hope they got everything right. If they're as good as the '50 Olds and the '57 Ford, we have a sure winner. Man, I hope so.