Skip to main content

I am channeling Lee Willis here.  Like a lot of us on this forum, I am also a car nut. In particular I am fond of the Prototype/Sports cars of the late fifties/early sixties. So I decided the city on my layout, named New Lyon (after Sir William Lyons, who founded Jaguar) should have its own Grand Prix.  Since my layout is set in 1956, I have now generated a plausible excuse to collect and display models of all those cars I lusted after when I was a kid.

 

I don't have enough room for the race or pits, but I do have room for an area in which the cars are unloaded.  This is where they are touched up by the mechanics before they are taken to the paddock for a full race preparation.

 

The welcome sign is a variation on the one the Pennsy displayed where they stopped the GG1-powered Army Navy Football Day Specials at the Greenwich Yards:

 

 2239

 

 

The sign is made on my computer using Microsoft Power Point.  The race cars were brought in a Sunset "Vanderbilt Stable" Horse Car.   I trust the car was cleaned up before loading.  Here a 1956 Ferrari 625 is being carefully brought down the ramp by a team of Ferrari Mechanics:

 

2240

 

The ramp is made from Gatorboard covered with Lightweight Spackling compound.  Another Ferrari, this one a 1959 Testa Rossa, is being prepared for unloading:

 

 2241

 

That's a race official checking the car. He started off as a 1/43 scale pit crew member, who would have been 7  1/2 feet tall in O Scale. So I cut a section out of his shins.  He has not complained yet.  The Horse car comes with closed doors.  So I had to cut out a door and fabricate a new one in the open position.  The stand is made from strip wood, bits from a Tichy Fire Escape, and some Phosphor Bronze wire.

  

In the next photo, some more members of the Ferrari crew look over a 1957 Testa Rossa (with the famous "Pontoon Fenders") to make sure it weathered the trip well:

 

2242

 

It came out fine, but this Porsche 904 was not so lucky. A rag tag team of mechanics is frantically trying to figure out how the right rear wishbone came undone during the ride.  While the mechanics are mired in their state of panic and perplexity, Race Car Babe sits on a tire doing what she does best:

 

2244

  

Yes I know the 904 is a bit of an anachronism, but its one of my favorite cars, and it's my layout.

 

At any rate, the 904 mechanics suspect the culprit in "The Case of The Wandering Wishbone" is that gentlemen casually relaxing in his 1955 Mercedes 300 SLR:

 

2245

 

From the Argentinian Flag, could that be J. M. Fangio himself?  Actually it’s a severely dismembered Artista figure.

 

The Brits are out in force as well, including the Aston Martin DBR1-300 that won LeMans in 1959:

 

2246

 

I hope to find an Artista figure in bib overalls at York, so I can have a stand-in for Carroll Shelby

 

Here is the Jaguar D Type that won LeMans in 1957, and the Jaguar C Type that won in 1953.  The mechanics are decked out in their period-correct light tan colored jump suits (actually Aged Concrete-colored jump suits). They are debating whether to replace the right rear tyre now, or limp the car to the paddock. At least at the paddock they won't have to worry about trucks screaming down the hill right behind them:

 

2247

  

The standing mechanic also got height reduction surgery.  

 

One of my favorite all time race cars is the 1957 Reventlow Scarab.  They only made three of them (one was made for the street).  They were extremely successful, and generally won every US event they were in from 1957 to 1959.  The body was designed by a 19 year old art student, and most of the principal mechanical designers and builders went on to make the Shelby Cobra:

 

2248

 

Here is an overall view of the unloading area. 

 

 2249

In addition to a new side door on the Horse Car, I also had to modify the rear doors so they would open completely.  By the way, I lowered that car and added beams under the trucks to eliminate all semblance of a gap between car body and trucks.  It's much more realistic, but I think the minimum curve on this car is now about 750 inches, or O-1500.

 

And here is the view from another angle:

 

 2251

 Cheers!

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Attachments

Images (12)
  • 2239
  • 2240
  • 2241
  • 2242
  • 2244
  • 2245
  • 2246
  • 2247
  • 2248
  • 2249
  • 2250
  • 2251
Last edited by John Sethian
Original Post

Replies sorted oldest to newest

John, Very nicely done.  I love a setting that makes sense and has a reason for existing.  I am not a big car buff but, it appears to me like you have some genuinely awesome vehicles

I am also taken by your excellent detailing of the rock hillside, loading ramp, roads, vegetation and that awesome road barrier/fence on the sides of the roads.  Very nicely done.

Thanks for sharing.

I really really loved your shots. I raced corvettes with factory and dealership support in the 70s and the sport was a bit more relaxed, except for the race of course, back then.

Even as a successful racer it was very expensive and time consuming and required an extremely understanding wife.

 

good times, thanks for jogging the memories.

 

Ron 427 Z06

The Reventlow Scarab was made mostly by Troutman and Barnes, a couple of southern California street rod builders.  The cars went out the first couple of seasons and just ate up the competition.  Not bad for using mostly off-the-self parts.  The next season they went up against the new mid-engine cars and never got truly competitive again.

 

Not only genuinely fast and maneuverable, but also one of the most beautiful sports-racers ever.  It's been years since I heard, but Augie Pabst still had his as late as the early 90s.

Last edited by Forty Rod

Oh wow!  I love it.  It is a great idea and wonderful scene, particularly with all the details - the girl, the mechanics working on them, etc.  I particularly like the 904 with its rear body off.  I don't consider it an anachronism, by the way.  I always liked that car - it is among the few Porsches I really like - and wanted the street version, impractical as the half dozen or so made would have been and impossible to afford as all of them are (I've actually seen only two in my life, once at the Nurburgring in the '70s, and once last year at a Porsche exhbit here in NC).  I agree the Scarab was a great car.  I always loved it, too.

 

I've posted pictures of some of my sports car vignettes before, but I will provide this update.  I put my new MG-A coupe on my layout last night.  I always liked the car, particularly the twin-cam coupe (that term just sort of rolls off the tongue, too) even though, yeah, I know it was a rolling disaster.

 

 

  

DSCN0239

Attachments

Images (1)
  • DSCN0239

Thanks everyone for the comments, and your additions/recollections to the history of these cars.  Combining my two passions in one place was a lot of fun.

 

Lee:  

a) Is that an Arnolt-MG between the Healey and the Black MGA Coupe?  Where did you find THAT?  

 

b) More importantly, who makes the Twin-cam Coupe in full race setup?  I could use one of those to represent the "slow lane" at the New Lyon GP.

 

I like YOUR scene, by the way. Glad to see the 140 is parked inside the showroom. You should loose those whitewalls, though. 

Last edited by John Sethian

The twin cam, convertible or coupe, was indeed fast - very fast for its day, which made it all the more exotic.  

 

John - that is indeed an MG-Arnold coupe.  I could not resist it.  It is a NEO model and I got in through Amazon, from ModelCarsUSA - its a monster outfit in Germany that ships through a distribution center in Florida - the cars often come in a box marked "American Excellence" although it has nothing to do with the diecast maker of the same name.  

 

They have this is several colors, including mine: 

 

http://www.amazon.com/Arnolt-C...ywords=1%3A43+NEO+MG

 

I search Amazon, diecastdirect, MintModels, etc, every thursday morning for anything new.  ModelCarsUSA has a particularly high turnover and I have learned that when they have something different, don't hesitate. 

 

Another, similarly very cool rare English coupe I got in those searches is an AC Greyhound.  Its not on the layout now, but I'll rotate into the car dealer's inventory soon.  

Originally Posted by John Sethian:

I am channeling Lee Willis here.  Like a lot of us on this forum, I am also a car nut. In particular I am fond of the Prototype/Sports cars of the late fifties/early sixties. So I decided the city on my layout, named New Lyon (after Sir William Lyons, who founded Jaguar) should have its own Grand Prix.  Since my layout is set in 1956, I have now generated a plausible excuse to collect and display models of all those cars I lusted after when I was a kid.

 

"It came out fine, but this Porsche 904 was not so lucky. A rag tag team of mechanics is frantically trying to figure out how the right rear wishbone came undone during the ride.  While the mechanics are mired in their state of panic and perplexity, Race Car Babe sits on a tire doing what she does best:

 

2244

Yes I know the 904 is a bit of an anachronism, but its one of my favorite cars, and it's my layout."

 

Nice work John, love the "Mistress" too!

Last edited by Lima

Another beautiful job well done by John.

 

Never being one hesitant to "step in it", back in the 60's our shop busied our selves installing small block Chevys into Austin Healeys. 

 

Almost a half of a ton lighter than a Corvette with the same engine, sort of a coffin on wheels.  Horrible in the turns but rather quick over 1320 feet.

Last edited by Tom Tee

Add Reply

Post

OGR Publishing, Inc., 1310 Eastside Centre Ct, Suite 6, Mountain Home, AR 72653
800-980-OGRR (6477)
www.ogaugerr.com

×
×
×
×
Link copied to your clipboard.
×
×