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On an other thread there is an ongoing discussion about scale and prices of motor vehicles we use on our layouts.
1/43 is the most common size for automobiles. It’s about 10% larger than American O but is the scale preferred by serious collectors, its also British O scale. With the exception of  Proto 48, our layouts are a compromise with a scale 5 foot gauge, pizza cutter wheel flanges, giant couplers, and never mind the third rail.  As to vehicle prices, that depends on the aspect of your scenery. If your scenery is highly realistic, you will want accurate and probably not cheap vehicles. If you’re a postwar modeler and use Plasticville with grass mats, a dime store vehicle will do. Fortunately, there is some inexpensive to moderately priced accurate 1/43 vehicles available.

Here some recent releases, Some are moderately priced and some are expensive

 From American Excellence (NEO)

AE56 Linco;n

1956 Lincoln Premier

 

AE60T Bird

1960 Ford Thunderbird

 

AE85Chevy

1985 Chevrolet Taxi

From Brooklin

BK57 Ranchero

1957 Ford Ranchero

 

BR55Buick

1955 Buick Special

 

BR-54DeSoto Ambulance

1954 DeSoto Ambulance

From Matrix

MX-76 CadillacHerse

1976 Cadillac Superior Hearse

 

In last week’s post I neglected to mention The Chrysler Imperial Parade Phaeton.  Chrysler built 3 of these in 1952. They were returned to Chrysler in 1955 and updated to 1956 Imperial styling. If anybody ever dose a 1/43 model , I’ll buy one.

 

 

1956_Imperial_Parade_Phaeton_-_Dwight_Eisenhower_car_-_fvl

Truly, a stunning automobile.

 

52Chry

As originally built.

 

 

Here is a link to learn more.
As originally built.

http://www.imperialclub.com/~i...2-56Parade/index.htm

 


CLICK HERE for last week’s post

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  • MV Chronicle
  • AE56 Linco;n
  • AE60T Bird
  • AE85Chevy
  • BK57 Ranchero
  • BR55Buick
  • BR-54DeSoto Ambulance
  • MX-76 CadillacHerse
  • WB-2013 Maserati Quattroporte
  • 1956_Imperial_Parade_Phaeton_-_Dwight_Eisenhower_car_-_fvl
  • 52Chry
Last edited by Richard E
Original Post

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Who made the Thunderbird shown above? looks sharp.

 

I am working on my layout trying to get ready my "Car Show" and "cruise in" on my layout on a city street scene above the layout.

 

Diecast Direct www.diecastdirect.com

 

Has perhaps one of the best collections of vehicles for sale and is a forum sponsor and advertiser in OGR great shop and great deals. There are vehicles of all $ ranges you can get almost everything here.

 

Our local diecast car shop that has been a good shop for our local model train club with club discounts and good selection and selling local members collections. Disappointing that they are now shutting down the store front.

 

They are clearing out the last of the collection at huge discounts till March 28. up to 70% off

You can search eautomobilia . com for the website.

use the extra discount code at checkout;

MAINandFOURTH

 

And be sure to click on the US flag at top right of page to get the US discount prices with exchange rate.  And the Availability button to see what is in stock, really cleaned out!

 

 

Without trying I've accumulated five or six Buicks.  I always liked Buick, but was never around them  much or owned one.  My dad was an Oldsmobile man, and my grandfather loved Cadillacs, so I just didn't associate with the brand in the middle, but grew up being told it was a good brand, slotted in between the two as it was.  An uncle owned a '54 like the blue and white one below, the only one in the family when I was growing up.

 

And I'd like to get a good version of the Buick Patrol car Broderick Crawford drove in Highway Patrol: 1955 Buick Century coupe.  I can find and could repaint a "three-holer" but his Century was the four-hold model.

 

Normally all these Buicks are not on the all together but scattered around the layout, but I took this just now:

 

DSCN2494

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  • DSCN2494
Originally Posted by rex desilets:

I can find and could repaint a "three-holer" but his Century was the four-hold model.

Thinking back to my mis-spent youth, the Century was always a 3-holer; the 4-holer was a Roadmaster. Century was a Special with a big engine; we teenagers lusted for one.

The car used in the show was an actual model built only for the Calif Highway Patrol.  It was a Century coupe - the smaller lighter body, but with the big motor and heavy duty drivetrain, etc.  and it had four holes in the side.  As of about a year ago, Diecast Direct was going to offer a 1:43 model of it but I haven't seen it listed as coming soon in a long time.

 

Originally Posted by Joe Hohmann:
Originally Posted by Lee Willis:

 

 

DSCN2494

I own that model of the '54 red/white Buick, but the incorrect 2-toning, drives me nuts. The only 2-toning on the '54 was roof/whole body (like the blue/white one). The way it is shown did not start until '55.

You're right Joe, but back then dealers would bend over backwards to make a sale. and their profit margin was higher. Who's to say they didn't run it through their paint shop?

Originally Posted by Lee Willis:
Originally Posted by rex desilets:

I can find and could repaint a "three-holer" but his Century was the four-hold model.

Thinking back to my mis-spent youth, the Century was always a 3-holer; the 4-holer was a Roadmaster. Century was a Special with a big engine; we teenagers lusted for one.

The car used in the show was an actual model built only for the Calif Highway Patrol.  It was a Century coupe - the smaller lighter body, but with the big motor and heavy duty drivetrain, etc.  and it had four holes in the side.  As of about a year ago, Diecast Direct was going to offer a 1:43 model of it but I haven't seen it listed as coming soon in a long time.

 

Lee:

The 55 Century 2 door sedan was a special model unavailable to the general public.

2 door Centurys were all hardtops or convertibles 

The 54 century had 3 portholes and from 56 up they had 4.

The 1949 Olds coupe with the OHV V-8 and light "Chevy" coupe body is one I would not

be ashamed to own. Not sure how long Olds offered that combination, through 1951, or beyond?  My first car in my college days was a '52 Olds Super 88 convertible, bigger, heavier, badly used, bullnosed (customized), and definitely the second of the two cars I should never have owned...oh, well, it was a learning experience.

Originally Posted by colorado hirailer:

The 1949 Olds coupe with the OHV V-8 and light "Chevy" coupe body is one I would not

be ashamed to own. Not sure how long Olds offered that combination, through 1951, or beyond?  My first car in my college days was a '52 Olds Super 88 convertible, bigger, heavier, badly used, bullnosed (customized), and definitely the second of the two cars I should never have owned...oh, well, it was a learning experience.

First cars are learning experiences, something I kept in mind when it came time for each of my boys to get a first car.  

 

My dad very quietly set the hook deep for hot cars when I was very young.  He loved smaller, lighter cars with big engines.  The '49 or '50 Olds coupe he had (can't remember which but it looked just like the model) was one of his early favorites, and until he was in his 60s, would buy a new Olds every five years, keeping it ten, so we always had one fairly new car and one "used car with a known history."  He always got the smallest lightest body, with the biggest engine they made.  

 

 

Originally Posted by Joe Hohmann:

Lee, concerning the Dodge pick-up...it's interesting that they used the GM/Ford style wrap-around windshield rather than the Chrysler Corp. style. After all, they used to advertise that the GM style was "dangerous" because it blocked your view of people who may be starting to cross the street.

Facts don't matter, Madison Avenue will say anything to try to make their competition look bad. Chevrolet ads praise the virtue of their steel bodies because Ford's new pickups have aluminum bodies.

 

Because of competitive pressure, Dodge put those fins on those pickups. They were modified station wagon rear quarters.

A 49 or 50 Olds coupe, I don't remember which but I'm near certain their the same was my 2nd car. They were the fastest car until the 55 chevy came out. And say in the early 60's they were affordable to a high school kid where a 55 chevy was pretty well for the fairly well off.

I put a 56 engine in mine from the junkyard and that engine ran real good. 

Originally Posted by Dennis Rempel:

A 49 or 50 Olds coupe, I don't remember which but I'm near certain their the same was my 2nd car. They were the fastest car until the 55 chevy came out. And say in the early 60's they were affordable to a high school kid where a 55 chevy was pretty well for the fairly well off.

I put a 56 engine in mine from the junkyard and that engine ran real good. 

That would have been quite a car.  The '49 and '50 coupes were light, powerful and fast (for their time) stock, just with the OHV engine from those years.  By '56, the Olds V8, particularly in the '98 4-barrel configuration, was putting out some serious power.  my Dad had a '55 Super 88 sedan with the '98 engine, which was pretty good stock, but he updated it to '56 specs when that model year came out and it had so much extra power compared to the '55.  It was a powerful car for its day.

Our family pretty much stayed with the "independents", Nash, Hudson, Studebaker (we couldn't afford a Packard) so, while I could appreciate the performance of a '49 - '50 Olds 88, we were stuck on Hudsons and Nashes.  The '51 Stude Commander offered a V8 that was designed after the Cadillac V-8 engines, but was only 232 cu in and 120 HP.  Really didn't offer any blazing performance compared to the competition.  But when Hudson introduced it's Hornet with a 308 cu in six, man, did our family fly!  Then in 1952 they added "Twin H Power" with dual single barrel carbs and that big Hudson with 170 HP really could go.  My Uncle Henry bought a '52 coupe with stick shift and overdrive and I would borrow it when I was in high school.  There wasn't an 88 around that could stay with me on a drag race! 

 

When Chevy came out with their 265 cu in V8 in 1955, I worked for a Hudson dealer and was able to buy a 1954 Hornet Convertible with their 7X engine and stick shift.  That was their racing engine, and it came with dual two barrel carbs and an aluminum head.  During that '55 summer, it was my "obligation" to take on any other make with their "power packs" and other beginning cars of the HP race that started in the mid-50's.   I never lost any race to a stock car. Unfortunately, at the end of that year, Uncle Sam had some other ideas for my time and I was drafted for a couple years.  What I wouldn't give to own that Hudson Hornet Convert. once again!

 

Paul Fischer

From a "Chevrolet family", I did not appreciate the independents as a kid.  It wasn't

until I became interested in vintage cars, discovered the dozens of makes that were

once available, vanquished by the Depression, that I began to understand that some  fantastic automobiles had once been offered.  However, a grandmother's brother, a

kind of boomer railroad telegrapher around Michigan, drove and swore by Hudsons,

until they adopted the unperfected Packard V-8.  My now long retired dentist had

a Hudson convertible in college, and acquired one that he was having "professionally"

restored.  He was having a problem with the restorer, and I never heard how that

came out, before he moved to Florida.

Originally Posted by rboatertoo:

I am going over the new auction list for stouts, for you car guys there is a number of lots of cars.  lot 373 to 386.

The Brooklin lots could be a good deal at $50. or so per car. Wish they showed details about the USA cars in lot 384, as those could realy be worth $$$. They were made by Motor City, with slightly lower detailing. Some of those could be $100. each and up.

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