Jump to content
Model Cars Magazine Forum

Recommended Posts

Posted
  On 9/9/2023 at 12:51 AM, Chuck Kourouklis said:

Such a lead pipe cinch and so wretchedly overdue, a boat-tail Riv.

Guess it's the "Version 2" that's the hangup.  Though I'd imagine Revell would feel scrapers have had their day, I gotta wonder if a low rider of just this one would justify the tooling expense as the second version.

Expand  

That one is identical to my old one ,, only in MUCH better shape.

 

And I think the lowrider crowd would buy out the production run just by themselves.

  • Like 1
Posted
  On 9/8/2023 at 4:55 PM, oldcarfan said:

AMT had a nicely proportioned 3G Camaro in the promo line, maybe they could use that tool and add detail?

Expand  

They did. The annual kits were based on the promo tooling. I always thought they looked dead on to me.

Posted
  On 9/9/2023 at 12:51 AM, Chuck Kourouklis said:

Such a lead pipe cinch and so wretchedly overdue, a boat-tail Riv.

Guess it's the "Version 2" that's the hangup.  Though I'd imagine Revell would feel scrapers have had their day, I gotta wonder if a low rider of just this one would justify the tooling expense as the second version.

Expand  

Some big wheels and a new grill would make a second option viable. I am sure the Lowrider/Custom types would take it from there. 

I know this is just an art piece, but it does show the possibility and feasibility of it 

1972 Buick Riviera

  • Like 6
Posted (edited)
  On 9/10/2023 at 6:58 PM, kjohan said:

A traditional Rolls Royce town car 1925 -30 in scale 1/24

Expand  

That sounds nice.  There are Jo-Han and Italeri's Cadillac town cars, and there's Monogram's Duesenberg town car, but if it really has to be a Rolls, you could always try some kitbashing with either Monogram or Italeri's Phantom II kits.  Both depict models made after 1930, but the Phantom II started production in 1929.

Edited by Richard Bartrop
Posted
  On 9/11/2023 at 1:35 AM, Richard Bartrop said:

That sounds nice.  There are Jo-Han and Italeri's Cadillac town cars, and there's Monogram's Duesenberg town car, but if it really has to be a Rolls, you could always try some kitbashing with either Monogram or Italeri's Phantom II kits.  Both depict models depict models made after 1930, but the Phantom II started production in 1929.

Expand  

Thanks for the idea Richard

Actually quite similar to the process used; chassis with engine delievered to a body manufacturer. 

Though I still think it would be appropriate with a model of a specific actual Rolls Town car, the history around the infividual cars or models is often quite entertaining.

And the Rolls Town cars are for me the archetype of this kind of car.

It would be a natural complement to the cars you mentioned plus a few others availble, like the Heller Hispano Suiza 

Anyway, will consider the idea of combining kits. 

Posted

Thank you for reminding me about the Heller kit.  I've actually built that one.

I guess it boils down to how badly do you want one, though if you wanted a specific Rolls Royce town car, my personal favourite would have to be this one built by Fernandez & Darrin for the Countess di Frasso.

file.php?id=14314&t=1

  • Like 1
Posted (edited)
  On 9/11/2023 at 11:09 AM, kjohan said:

Thanks for the idea Richard

Actually quite similar to the process used; chassis with engine delievered to a body manufacturer. 

Though I still think it would be appropriate with a model of a specific actual Rolls Town car, the history around the infividual cars or models is often quite entertaining.

And the Rolls Town cars are for me the archetype of this kind of car.

It would be a natural complement to the cars you mentioned plus a few others availble, like the Heller Hispano Suiza 

Anyway, will consider the idea of combining kits. 

Expand  

Not exactly a Town car, but you might consider the 1932 Rolls-Royce Sedanca II coupe made by Pocher  in 1/8 scale:

pocher rolls.jpg

Edited by jokar124
Posted

Beautiful Rolls posted by Richard, have never seen.

The Pocher Rolls posted by Jo equally attractive, though in a quite different category. 

Thanks both.

Posted

I know that what is currently popular in the 1:1 market doesn't always translate, but I'd love to see a line of bi-scale Toyota and Nissan trucks. A late 70s Toyota Hilux and the 80s and 90s trucks, even the Tacomas could be good subjects. The MPC Datsun truck is good for that era but a new stock bodied Nissan 720, a Hardbody and maybe a Frontier and XTerra would be cool too. The old Lindberg Hardbody wasn't too bad, but it was in 1/20th scale. It would also be nice to see a decent first gen Ford Courier and Mazda Rotary and an accurate Chevy LUV would also be appreciated. All these trucks are becoming collectible and at least around Austin I've seen a lot of them being driven by young 20-something people who see them as a cool alternative to high priced collectible cars. I'd take them in curbside or full detail as long as the body looked accurate.

In full size trucks, the MPC 70s Dodge is good and Chevys are pretty well covered, too, but maybe Mobius or someone to do a new tool dent side Ford F-100 in all the body styles.

Posted
  On 9/11/2023 at 6:47 PM, oldcarfan said:

I know that what is currently popular in the 1:1 market doesn't always translate, but I'd love to see a line of bi-scale Toyota and Nissan trucks. A late 70s Toyota Hilux and the 80s and 90s trucks, even the Tacomas could be good subjects. The MPC Datsun truck is good for that era but a new stock bodied Nissan 720, a Hardbody and maybe a Frontier and XTerra would be cool too. The old Lindberg Hardbody wasn't too bad, but it was in 1/20th scale. It would also be nice to see a decent first gen Ford Courier and Mazda Rotary and an accurate Chevy LUV would also be appreciated. All these trucks are becoming collectible and at least around Austin I've seen a lot of them being driven by young 20-something people who see them as a cool alternative to high priced collectible cars. I'd take them in curbside or full detail as long as the body looked accurate.

In full size trucks, the MPC 70s Dodge is good and Chevys are pretty well covered, too, but maybe Mobius or someone to do a new tool dent side Ford F-100 in all the body styles.

Expand  

aoshima and fujimi have a few of the small japanese trucks. and the parts box in australia certainly used to do the mazda rotary pick up

  • Like 1
Posted
  On 9/12/2023 at 2:00 AM, charger74 said:

I would like it to have a dodge omni GLH as a kit

Expand  

the dodge omni would be more likely to be done by maybe nunu or belkits. They were sold in europe as talbots and there were some rally car versions which can still be seen in classic rallying. They had some pretty big name drivers too

Posted

I would like to see a 1956 Cadillac Series 75 Limousine convertible (state Presidential) as a kit model. There are plenty of diecast versions of this car available in 1:24 scale, but as far as I can see there isn't a styrene kit out there.

David

5c6c44dfc8867-5c6c44dfc886921727_319-Yeaggy-H-.21.jpg.jpg

5c6c47896d518-5c6c47896d51a21727_319-Yeaggy-H-.12.jpg.jpg

  • 3 weeks later...
Posted

For me, a truly state of the art new '70 Dodge Challenger R/T would certainty get my money. I'd prefer many, many options, hoods, wheels, hardtop and convertible, engines, etc. I'd buy several.

cars_other_dodge-challenger-r-t-1970_77893.jpg

  • Like 5
Posted (edited)

I’d like to see some more “common” vehicles such as:

4th generation Ram 1500 Crew cab Bighorn or Laramie 

91 Ford Taurus Wagon

84 Chevy Suburban

77 Dodge Street Van

Also some vintage VW like Super Beetle, Karmann Ghia, Vans and the type 3 square back wagon.

As fun as it is to build fantasy vehicles, it is also fun to replicate common ones too.

Edited by RocketFoot
Posted
  On 10/1/2023 at 1:42 PM, RocketFoot said:

Also some vintage VW like Super Beetle, Karmann Ghia, Vans and the type 3 square back wagon.

Expand  

There's a few van kits, I believe...... Both Tamiya and Gunze Sangyo made a Ghia. I've built the Gunze one, it's curbside but looks pretty accurate.....

Posted
  On 10/1/2023 at 11:57 PM, JollySipper said:

There's a few van kits, I believe...... Both Tamiya and Gunze Sangyo made a Ghia. I've built the Gunze one, it's curbside but looks pretty accurate.....

Expand  

I'll have to check them out!  Problem is, if they are old kits...they are hard to find and expensive usually.  Periodic reissues would be nice to help keep the prices down.

Posted

This may be a pipe dream, but I think one or more of the model companies could offer body styles from the mid '50's thru the '70's of some of the upscale GM line like Pont., Olds, Buick, Ford's Mercury and MoPar's, Dodge and Plymouths.   

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
×
×
  • Create New...