There was a 57 Chevy, 69 Camaro, 71 Camaro, and 69 Mustang made in 1/8th scale. The 71 Camaro seems to be the hardest to find on ebay. I'm not sure about the production years either. I just looked at my mustang, it's dated 2005, and made by "Funline".
I'm looking for 1/8th scale ford flathead heads if anyone has any. Even one will work for me. Also looking for an Ardun head and Chrysler firepower valve covers.
Awhile back you queried about a '52 Cad engine in 1/8. Twelve years ago my brother built a SCALE model of Grabowski's T ("Kookie Kar") every detail was duplicated, except the engine. He had a Pontiac engine out of the Big Deuce, so I measured and scaled the Pontiac against a blueprint of an early Cad engine, block, heads, intake. Intake on Grabowski car was a Horne, so just the Cad runners had to be indexed (located) Main block profile was to be dealt with first: Cad was 90 degree layout, Pontiac was more 'upright', similar to SBC. I sliced a 'V' out of the Pontiac block, inserted a 1/4" evergreen plastic strip between the block halves to get angle and width. Heads were sanded to Cad shape, and valve covers added to and carved for the fin layout, also tall arcs on top. Intake was pieced together with Evergreen strips and filed to shape. This was the first use of the then new 'Alclad ll' chrome lacquer in the bottle, at least by us. Careful coat of black, then the Alclad chrome. First time I saw anything work like that... The model was akin to being shrunk down from the real deal... He took it to a local model show put on by a self-proclaimed expert in hot rods. The guy judged it poorly, "just another fad T"... He'd never heard of Norm Grabowski, but knew Von Franco had a chopped '32... Some guys live in unconsciousness. The late Randy Vandraiss asked, "Where in the HELL did you scare up an 1/8 scale Caddy engine?" Made it worth it.
Here's one (or two) you might be interested in. I was give some old golf trundler of wheels a while ago and have been looking for something to use them on so I decided to make an old T Speedster. With the wheels being the deciding factor in the scale the car has turned out at 1/3 scale. Then I decided to make a truck to carry it. Some old pram wheels turned up and it is all now nearing completion at over 6 feet in length. There is some detail work on the truck cab to finish and then it will all be taken apart for painting. The tray (which tilts) will be wood stained while everything else will be painted black with brass trim. Interior will be done in the same brown material as the speedster seats. Once this is done I want to build car transporter trailer to go behind it with a second Speedster. Everything has been hand made by me
I just found out. Mike was the maker of 1/8th scale car bodies. R.I.P. Mike. http://m.legacy.com/obituaries/merc...gradis&pid=181885909&referrer=0&preview=false
If anyone is interested I know I make 58 Biscayne tail lights with the choice of three different lenses. Best way to get in touch with me is email [email protected] or you can come visit us on our Facebook group called RATRODZRUS trust me the site is all about hot rods with only a couple of rat rods. I've been calling it that for years way before I knew of the negative connotation the word had.
HPI vintage and touring wheels And tires Some of them might work For 1/10 or 1/12 HPI 1/8 tire and wheel
Where you been, yourself Jim? I haven't seen any updates on your 34 in a long time, I guess your to busy driving the wheels off it.
I missed that one Jim, very nice. Is the 32 next to it, the wife's? A 34 Chevy in 1/8th would be a seller.
Here's my latest large scale build, it's a plywood 1/1 scale V12 for my lawn art 1929 Cadillac. I got two GM Holden six heads, and mounted them, on my wooden V block. I w used thick plywood, and the head bolts screwed into it real nice. Because the inlet and outlet ports are on the same side of the six head, I turned one around, and I'll use panel steel to block off all the outside ports, and weld zoomies to it. This means all the spark plugs are on the valley side of the heads, so I'll make an inlet manifold, that sits in the valley. That's still to be determined, after I find as many matching carbs, as I can find. I've used the Holden six oil pan, and turned it around, so the pickup area is at the back of the engine. The Holden dip stick was used, as well as the engine mount brackets, but I need better pics, after painting the wood block black. I'm also going to give the wood a coat of textured paint, to disguise the wood further.
I found it at an estate sale then I refined it by setting the wheel wells in as it should be. I also added the X's on the firewall. It was very thin in spots, cracks, and had a hole in it. There were dents in the roof and the sides were very wavy. I did the best I could to straighten it out but I'm no body man. I tried to cast the whole nose in one piece and that didn't work out so now I cast them in four separate pieces. As for how? A lot of time and swearing.
Further to this old post of mine (has it been that long!!) I recently completed another large scale (1/8) kitbash loco. It is based on a 1/20 scale 3-truck Shay loco. I cleared it to the decks, so to speak and then rebuilt the decking and superstructure to a whimsical, 1/8th (1-1/2" to the foot). I just took it to Denver for a big model train convention over the Labor Day weekend and got two awards in the model contest, one a 3rd in class and the other from a noted model train mfg, Bachmann trains, the maker of the basic loco I used. I did use some 1/8 details from some of my Lindberg and Monogram kits (like the Mexican blanket on the seat from the latest Deuce kit), but a lot of miniatures, military modeler and other found items, too. Hopefully theses pix will get to stick around awhile, not being purely auto related. I'll post one pix so you can see how big this thing is, and a few others taken yesterday at the world-famous Sundance Central 1/20 layout here in the Tampa Bay area which is a fab layout and provided a great background. Gary