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MotorVehicleChronicle-2

Custom Painted Vehicles

 

RG&E

This is a Motor Max ’41 Plymouth pickup that I repainted as a Rochester Gas & Electric vehicle.
The logos and Colors are from the 1950s and earlier. I designed and printed them using CorelDraw and an Alps MD1000 printer. Eventually, I will scratch a utility body and mount it on a heavier truck chassis.
 In the background is a Walthers HO Cornerstone gasholder The kit is useful in O scale by removing the HO scale ladders and walkways The kit can be built in one of three different heights
Gasholders were use for storing manufactured gas and once were common in industrial landscapes. They were telescopic and raised and lowered in relation the volume of gas contained. The external framework supported the sections.

 

U-Body

A late 1940’s Walter truck with a utility body.
Notice the crew section in the front. Walter trucks are specialized all-wheel drive and primarily used for snow removal. They are still built today by The Kovatch Organization.

Let’s see photos of vehicles painted for businesses on your layout.

CLICK HERE for last week’s post


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I think I only have two vehicles custom painted with a logo (others have undesired logos painted out)  and both are Ertl "1930" Chevrolets.  The first is an Ertl panel coach that has been repainted aspen yellow with spruce green fenders and lettered "D&FR Shops", and the second, yellow cab and hood, green fenders and stake body, lettered "D&FR" (Denver and Front Range) on the doors.

Oops...wrong again.  Further thought sent me to the shelves of structures waiting to

be put on the layout, and there are tank trucks repainted for Frontier Oil, coal dump trucks repainted for Brannem Fuel and Forest (mythical owner of this railroad), and

a beer truck with barrels lettered for Glacial Springs Brewing Co.  Some of these have

been pictured on here in the past, with the structures.

No logo, but here's a Brooklin Hudson that I repainted a while ago. I didn't care for the orange Brooklin painted it, and it was an easy enough repaint. The only difficulty was with the Testors spray can, which blasted too much paint. I had to re-strip it once because the paint went on too thick. I learned a lesson, 1/43 cars are too small for spray cans. Next time I'll use the airbrush.

 

 

Brooklin 1935 Hudson

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I have repainted a lot of trucks and cars, all with rattle cans.  I've had no problem with paint being too thick, etc. -- I jsut hold the can farther away, etc.  I did have one problem when I tried to paint a car early on without priming it first, just applying spray paint over whatever paint was on it.  Had to soak my new and the original paint off it and prime it.  

 

Scratchbuild trailer and diecast cab on customer 'Streets chassis.  Testors red rattle can.

 

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Top below, diecast cab on stretched 'K-line vintage truck 'Streets chassis, Testors red rattle can on cab, brushed testors flat brown on stakebed (taken from a the vintage truck.  bottom below, This was a blue NY times or some other newspaper truck.  Now its white for the local paper on my layout.

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I have three buses in this two-tone color scheme, , shortened Corgi model. sports car in background (red and black Lagonda) has been repainted, too, come to think of it.

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specast cab on custom 'streets chassis has not been repainted.  Scratch trailer is actually printed, then glued on. 

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Adam-12 is all business here.  I had to repaint this as a police car.  Emplem on door is, if you get really close, just drawn on it with colored pencil. Slide5

 

Inspector Frost plain jane unmarked dull police car and the '66 Fairlane below were both repainted at the same time with the same blue. 

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Aside from a bit of weathering or blackening out some whitewalls on pickup trucks, I really haven't tried to paint any vehicles, myself.  But looking at the results that you guys have come up with, maybe it's time to try my hand at doing my own adaptations of some paint schemes.  I like what you guys have been able to accomplish.  The one thing that would scare me, however, is to try to apply lettering or decorations to the cab door of my trucks.  My fingers aren't nimble enough to handle those tiny decals.

 

I certainly like the "commercial look" that the lettering offers, however.

 

Paul Fischer

I just noticed that Brooklin has done some 1940 Buick (station wagons).  I had heard somewhere that Brooklin was doing their Buick series for 1934-1939 (only?), so was glad to see them roll over into 1940, where I would like to see the GM line, from Chevy to LaSalle.  I see scattered Pontiac and Olds models from the late 1930's but no

evidence of a line of those as extensive as that for Buick.  (with Brooklin originating

in Canada, still I have seen no models of McLaughlin, or Russell)

I also see those 1940 Buick wagons priced even higher than the rising Brooklin prices.  I wonder who usually carries the entire Brooklin line, and who, except for the guy now gone from York, carries them discounted (probably won't be lucky enough to find them to be one and the same).  Even so, I will wait until something shows up cheap.  I just want to know what to wait for.

Rextoy was generating a tiny brochure, showing models they never got to making.  I

don't think? Brooklin puts out a regular, current catalog?

Originally Posted by colorado hirailer:

I recently looked at an online listing of Diecast Direct, and found they had only ONE

Brooklin listed...must not then have been a complete listing of theirs?  Will check now.

I just checked the DD website and they listed around 300 items for Brooklin. Maybe you hit the "final sale" page by accident, or some other special page. 

Last edited by Southwest Hiawatha
Originally Posted by Southwest Hiawatha:
Originally Posted by colorado hirailer:

I recently looked at an online listing of Diecast Direct, and found they had only ONE

Brooklin listed...must not then have been a complete listing of theirs?  Will check now.

I just checked the DD website and they listed around 300 items for Brooklin. Maybe you hit the "final sale" page by accident, or some other special page. 

Looking up specific brands, models, etc, on the DD website is a real pain. If you want to be sure you are seeing everything, you have to go though the entire 1:43 car offerings.

Thanks, Mr. Hohmann....I think you have identified the problem....I take it there is

no way to easily search their site, like eBay, by brand (of the toy, not the vehicle model)?  i didn't find it quickly, and left.  I find this a lot...web sites that are not

easily and quickly searchable in a logical manner...(I am guessing that they are designed by some computer company geeks with no familiarity with the product being

marketed)

As a collector of emergency vehicles, I couldn't pass up acquiring this rig - a Kenworth/Miller Industries Century Rotator by First Gear. It's a nice 1/50 scale rendition.

 


IMG_2366

 

 Speaking of utility vehicles, THW produced a series of modern service/utility trucks. this one is based on a unit in service with the Kern County Fire Department

 

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Last edited by DaveP
Actually, searching for one manufacturer, or any other single parameter, is no problem. For instance, to get all the Brooklin products, look to the lower left of the homepage and there's a box for "Select a manufacturer." Find Brooklin and that will take you to another pages that lets you choose cars, trucks, airplanes, etc. Click on cars and you'll get about 300 hits for Brooklin cars. 
 
The problem comes in if you want to search on two or more parameters. For instance, if I want to search on 1/43 OR 1930's, that's easy. But I can't search on both together, so I either have to slog through all the 1/43 or everything 1930's in every scale. Again, Brooklin is easier because all they make is 1/43. 
 
Hope this helps.
 
Originally Posted by colorado hirailer:

Thanks, Mr. Hohmann....I think you have identified the problem....I take it there is

no way to easily search their site, like eBay, by brand (of the toy, not the vehicle model)?  i didn't find it quickly, and left.  I find this a lot...web sites that are not

easily and quickly searchable in a logical manner...(I am guessing that they are designed by some computer company geeks with no familiarity with the product being

marketed)

 

I am sufficiently familiar with who makes what, thank you. I have steam-era 1/43 automobiles and trucks from Brooklin, Ertl, Eligor, Durham, Western Models, USA Models, Paul's, Tin Wizard, IXO, Rextoys, Matchbox/Dinky, Solido, Rio, and a few others. Several of them I bought from you (41 Ford, Plymouth pickup, Studebaker hearse, among others). My point is that DD has a lousy search engine that is incapable of doing anything more than a crude single-parameter search. I can easily do a multi-parameter search on, say, eBay or a whole lot of other sites, but not DD. 
 
Originally Posted by BK:

Hiawatha you probably don't know who makes what in 1:43. Post what 1930's cars you are looking for in 1:43.

Bob

 

I didn't mean to sound rude but I didn't understand what your point was about searching DD. Since you have all those brand names it shouldn't take long to search what ever you're looking for individually. That is some assortment of brands you have.

The names now are AE/NEO. Matrix, Premium X/Ixo, Spark, BOS, eary models by Automodello, Esval, GLM and Brooklin with their better detailing.

Bob

BK: No problem. I was trying to help Colorado Hirailer navigate the DD site and explain what you can and cannot do with their search function. The combination of 30's and 1/43 was what I picked as an example of what the search engine should be able to do, but can't. 
 
I haven't gotten any cars from NEO, Matrix, Spark, or Automodello yet, mainly because I haven't seen anything I wanted badly enough to spend the 80-90 bucks or more. I'm mainly buying for my layout and most of the time I have it set up for the 1935-1942 time frame. I use cars to change the era and location of the layout - I'll change over to 50's if I want to run transition era for a while, or to European cars if I'm running ETS and MTH Euro trains. I'm awfully tempted by a few of the AE items, including the '57 Caddy and Buick and the '58 Chevy. It always blows me away that it's easier to find a Borgward Isabella at a reasonable price than a '36 Chevy. 
 
The newer brands like AE/NEO are hard to find on the secondary market, so you usually have to pay full price for them. I've managed to snag a few good deals on some of the more traditional die-cast brands such as Brooklin, Western Models, and Durham on eBay. 
 
Originally Posted by BK:

I didn't mean to sound rude but I didn't understand what your point was about searching DD. Since you have all those brand names it shouldn't take long to search what ever you're looking for individually. That is some assortment of brands you have.

The names now are AE/NEO. Matrix, Premium X/Ixo, Spark, BOS, eary models by Automodello, Esval, GLM and Brooklin with their better detailing.

Bob

 

I'm okay with DD's serach feature.  the main problem there is there are just soooooo many cars to look through.  

 

Don't forget that there are a ton of diecast cars and trucks on Amazon. You can use the Amazon search features to cut and slice very precisely if you wish ("1:43 1957 TR 3 Spark").  You often come up with nothing, but that search got me two hits this morning (same car, for $115 or $74 dollars, different suppliers).

 

As to inexpensive, the Polish manufacturers "Amer Hobby" has $12 cars, gobs from the 1930s and forward.  Many are European, but they look generic enough that I use them when I fit out my layout with a 1930's look.  In particular the 1939 BMW 335 and Panhard look really "American" enough.

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OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
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