Modelmartin Posted April 20, 2007 Posted April 20, 2007 These 3 kits were made by a small French company called Europe Models sometime in the 60s. They are 1/32 scale and were some of the strangest tooling I have seen. They are all Panhards and are 1891, 1895 Coupe, and a 1905 Roi Des Belge(King of Belgium). The 1891 had so many little parts because their moldmaker likely couldn't do anything very involved. They probably didn't even have a pantograph. The 1895 went the opposite direction. It had whole assemblies molded in one piece. The 1905 was the best. It was broken down in a very reasonable way. I did find pictures of all 3 cars in my "Wall o' Mags and Books" and ironically the 1891 was the most accurate and the 1905 the least accurate. Go figure. Building was easy on the 1895 and 1905. The 1891 had really terrible instructions. Good thing I had reference material. There was one part I recognised from the photos but the instructions showed it on the opposite end of the car! I figure the guy drawing the exploded views got sick of trying to figure out where everything went and just plopped it anywhere! I had the brass parts plated by Chrome-Tech and I then sprayed them with a 1/1 mix of Tamiya clear yellow and clear with a tiny bit of flattening agent thrown in. Paints are airbrushed Home Decor colors: a rare example of me using enamel for paint jobs. These were really fun to do and are amongst my favorites. Yes, It IS as tall as it is long!! Note the wooden brake pads rubbing on the rear of the solid rubber tires! State of the art for 1891. Note the full elliptic springs in front and semi-elliptic on the rear. These were the first front-engine rear drive cars ever made. Yah, I know they were among the first cars ever made, too! What's your point?
Harry P. Posted April 20, 2007 Posted April 20, 2007 With the proportions of a phone booth on wheels, cornering in that coupe must have been fun!
ismaelg Posted April 20, 2007 Posted April 20, 2007 Does the 1895 has a rollover warning decal on the sun visor? Interesting and different subjects.
mr moto Posted April 20, 2007 Posted April 20, 2007 That's beautiful work and very interesting subjects. I love 1/32 scale but I seldom build any 1/32 models because quality kits are so hard to find.
Steve H. Posted April 20, 2007 Posted April 20, 2007 Hmmmmm ... that coupe would make an interesting street rod! 8) Neat builds, Andy! I thought the same thing when I saw that one! Neat builds, I'm not sure I've ever seen these subjects done before, especially as nicely as yours!
Darin Bastedo Posted April 20, 2007 Posted April 20, 2007 With the proportions of a phone booth on wheels, cornering in that coupe must have been fun! Yeah, I can hear the wife now, "slow down around this turn! you're going 8 MPH!" :shock:
Mike Posted April 20, 2007 Posted April 20, 2007 Very cool subject matter of original car history. 8)
RodBurNeR Posted April 21, 2007 Posted April 21, 2007 I must admit they are different! I have never seen those kits built before. Do you mind if i use those pictures for my instructions site? I don't have the boxes or instruction scans yet, but i assume i will eventually.
Guest roadkill2525 Posted April 21, 2007 Posted April 21, 2007 I there room to add a ford race engine from my Monogram 1:32 kit?
Modelmartin Posted April 21, 2007 Author Posted April 21, 2007 I have an extra kit of that coupe. Who wants it? $10.00 plus postage.
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