dino246gt Posted Thursday at 10:54 PM Posted Thursday at 10:54 PM I had a beat up old AMT annual '64 GTO that I wanted to resto-mod. I don't build 1/24th American cars, so the Monogram one wasn't for me, and the Polar Lights although 1/25th, just didn't look "right" compared to that AMT annual. I cleaned up the body, removed paint and crud, then gave it some grey primer. I cut the inner fenders out of the '66 and installed them along with the Revell firewall into the '64. It's a start! 5
dino246gt Posted Friday at 03:36 PM Author Posted Friday at 03:36 PM I boxed in the part of the Revell frame rails that might show. Then I fitted the rad wall. Looks much better now. 3
dino246gt Posted Friday at 03:39 PM Author Posted Friday at 03:39 PM Oh back in the 60s we loved that tube glue! Removing the "windows" is always a problem. The new interior will NOT use those stubs, so they're easily removed. 2
dino246gt Posted Friday at 03:43 PM Author Posted Friday at 03:43 PM Interior side panels have quite a rise towards the rear, on the '66. I smoothed the tops off to match the '64 body profile. 3
dino246gt Posted Friday at 03:50 PM Author Posted Friday at 03:50 PM (edited) I had some old vintage Pontiac engine enamel, so I sprayed it and started with basic detailing. Nothing too much, wanted to keep it fairly simple. I used a brown paper bag for valve cover gaskets. Edited Friday at 03:51 PM by dino246gt 8
NOBLNG Posted Friday at 03:56 PM Posted Friday at 03:56 PM Fantastic work so far Dennis!👍 If that wiring and throttle linkage is keeping it simple, what do you call extreme?🤪 1
dino246gt Posted Friday at 04:01 PM Author Posted Friday at 04:01 PM That 389 was going to be a tight squeeze, so I removed those bits of inner fenders closet to the engine. Now the upper A arms will show so they need a bit more detail. I drilled through and placed styrene rod through them and added some 3D printed bolts. After paint, they look okay, better than before and might not even show! 3
dino246gt Posted Friday at 04:10 PM Author Posted Friday at 04:10 PM I chose this colour, well, I gave it a try and as it turned out, I like it! So I went with a creamy interior colour and added body colour stripes on the seats and lower dashboard. I have a few shades of tan flocking but none seemed to look right with the gold, so I mixed some green into tan and it blends in more to my liking. 4
dino246gt Posted Friday at 04:15 PM Author Posted Friday at 04:15 PM I tried something new for the gauges, didn't work out though, but no harm done. I thought that maybe applying the gauge decals to clear plastic, part of a kit windshield, so pretty thick, then foil behind would maybe let light reflect and make them more visible. That didn't make any difference, oh well. Dash turned out okay anyway. 3
dino246gt Posted Friday at 04:20 PM Author Posted Friday at 04:20 PM After adding foil and some detail paint to the side panels, I foiled the rear ashtrays, added seat belts, some wood-ish paint, steering wheel, shifter and, well, it looks like an interior! 7
Kanada Kustoms Posted Friday at 05:09 PM Posted Friday at 05:09 PM Nice build…. Interior looks great! 1
kelson Posted Friday at 07:24 PM Posted Friday at 07:24 PM Fantastic work on all assemblies so far!! 1
espo Posted Friday at 07:34 PM Posted Friday at 07:34 PM The additional detailing looks great. Like the tasteful interior colors and details as well. 1
Zoom Zoom Posted Friday at 08:49 PM Posted Friday at 08:49 PM Great work so far! Interesting conversion, and I recently acquired the latest Monogram '64 GTO reissue to compare side-by-side w/the original built AMT '64 GTO I got from an estate sale collection, including fresh Modelhaus chrome the previous owner procured to restore it. I built the Monogram '64 decades ago in a very similar color to the one you've chosen, I want to build the fresh kit as a HT this time with skills acquired in the decades that have passed. Looking at your build inspires me to get my Revell '66 kit out and see what's what. I loved building the '65 GTO Craftsman kit and a pair of '68's as well in the past few years. 1
johnyrotten Posted Friday at 09:33 PM Posted Friday at 09:33 PM Beautiful work. Great idea with the valve cover gaskets, little details like that can add so much to a build. The interior looks amazing as well. 1
dino246gt Posted 22 hours ago Author Posted 22 hours ago After brush painting the headliner, I made some simple visors, 2 layers of .010 styrene scraps. Nobody ever looks at the headliner so it's certainly not even close to perfect, I just do it for fun. 2
dino246gt Posted 22 hours ago Author Posted 22 hours ago I like to add detail to my batteries, so easy and it does make them look better. Separate caps helps. I drill out the molded on ones then use styrene rod pushed through to the same height then glued from underneath. Cable ends are from Norm, Replicas and Miniatures of Maryland, I always use them. DELCO, is simply printed on paper and glued on. 5
dino246gt Posted 22 hours ago Author Posted 22 hours ago (edited) The radiator was going to interfere with the hood once I added a rad cap, so I carefully cut it down. Had to make a tiny bit more room for my battery to fit at the same time. You can see where I removed some inner fender at the bottom where the upper A arms will go, making it wide enough for the exhaust to fit between the inner fenders. Cutting the painted and polished body is somewhat dangerous! I cut the top off a parts box rad that will fit properly. Edited 22 hours ago by dino246gt 2
dino246gt Posted 22 hours ago Author Posted 22 hours ago I scratch built this piece to bridge the new rad with the grille. It's just layers of flat styrene, drilled with tiny bolt heads from the railroad section added. Here it is installed. 5
dino246gt Posted 19 hours ago Author Posted 19 hours ago Made up some better than original power brakes. Will make 4 wheel discs soon! Cheers. 3 1
FoMoCo66 Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago Amazing work with this one! Crazy how fast you a shaping this one up. 1
Kanada Kustoms Posted 17 hours ago Posted 17 hours ago Engine compartment is really shaping up nicely! 1
Recommended Posts
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 accountSign in
Already have an account? Sign in here.
Sign In Now