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Ray, that's a sharp looking Brooklin Ford above!  I know Ted likes those Ford's...as I do.  I can't believe what the newer Brooklin's are selling for these days....ouch!  I picked up some on an auction site during the "Great Recession" for what turned out to be a song.  The newer years of production appear to have added chrome details to the mix?  Those cars have to be the heaviest around...manufactured with white metal  After I uploaded the picture right below, I noticed the tail end of a '57 Brooklin Olds Fiesta on the left side of the picture...always had a likeness for the GM yellows and wagons in general. 

The lead Chrysler wagon and the mint green Buick (top up) are both Brooklin's...City 87City 33

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Last edited by Capetrainman

I showed some photos of my layout to a good friend who lives in New Mexico.   He wanted to be "part of the layout" so he insisted on donating a model of his 1955 Willy pickup:

Here is a photo of his Willys

4046

Here is the model I started with

4045

And this is what I ended up with.  Note the New Mexico License plate

40484049

4135

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  • 4045
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Last edited by John Sethian
Capetrainman posted:

Ray, that's a sharp looking Brooklin Ford above!  I know Ted likes those Ford's...as I do.  I can't believe what the newer Brooklin's are selling for these days....ouch!  I picked up some on an auction site during the "Great Recession" for what turned out to be a song.  The newer years of production appear to have added chrome details to the mix?  Those cars have to be the heaviest around...manufactured with white metal  After I uploaded the picture right below, I noticed the tail end of a '57 Brooklin Olds Fiesta on the left side of the picture...always had a likeness for the GM yellows and wagons in general. 

The lead Chrysler wagon and the mint green Buick (top up) are both Brooklin's...City 87City 33

 

Capetrainman posted:

Ray, that's a sharp looking Brooklin Ford above!  I know Ted likes those Ford's...as I do.  I can't believe what the newer Brooklin's are selling for these days....ouch!  I picked up some on an auction site during the "Great Recession" for what turned out to be a song.  The newer years of production appear to have added chrome details to the mix?  Those cars have to be the heaviest around...manufactured with white metal  After I uploaded the picture right below, I noticed the tail end of a '57 Brooklin Olds Fiesta on the left side of the picture...always had a likeness for the GM yellows and wagons in general. 

The lead Chrysler wagon and the mint green Buick (top up) are both Brooklin's...City 87City 33

Paul. Those are some nice shots love that wagon 

John Sethian posted:

I showed some photos of my layout to a good friend who lives in New Mexico.   He wanted to be "part of the layout" so he insisted on donating a model of his 1955 Willy pickup:

Here is a photo of his Willys

4046

Here is the model I started with

4045

And this is what I ended up with.  Note the New Mexico License plate

40484049

4135

John. Thanks for posting those nice pics you did a great job on that Jeep 

Richie C. posted:

A couple of pics of the Chevy Stake truck partially assembled (the boxes the front end is resting on will eventually be going onto the truck bed). I didn't have any left over orange paint (and all the local hobby stores are closed) so the engine ended up as Ford blue instead of Chevy orange, but we'll get through it !

 

CHEVY STAKE 1CHEVY STAKE 2CHEVY STAKE 3.

Richie. Great progress and work on the Chevy I like how you painted the engine and details 

Thanks, Lee - pic's of finished model below. The two figures came with the kit and are also hand-painted. Everything was molded from the factory in a bright green color (including wheels and tires), so everything had to be hand or spray (rattle can) painted. I also moderately detailed the undercarriage. It was a difficult build because the cab is not one piece. It is formed by the fender assembly, front bumper, two doors, roof and cab backing plate which all have to be cemented in place at basically the same time to get everything matched up. I also had to find 4 different colors of brown for the boxes, barrels, stakes and truck bed. All the cab pieces were sprayed with dull coat after painting. The decals, even after 65 years, went on fairly easily using Micro-Sol, although I can see from the pic's,  need to trim the "Chevrolet" decal on the front bumper.

I have three more of these to do and will gradually get to them. For now, I want to concentrate on getting my roundhouse built. The only question is whether I should weather the truck now that it is done ?

 

CHEVY STAKE 4CHEVY STAKE 5CHEVY STAKE 7CHEVY STAKE 8CHEVY STAKE 9CHEVY STAKE 6

 

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  • CHEVY STAKE 4
  • CHEVY STAKE 5
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Richie

A good job!  I suffered through that kit as well. Having the cab in so many pieces and getting them together is a real challenge, particularly because the locator pins are very sloppy!. Then there is the lack of a windshield to deal with. My understanding is all the other Revell truck kits of that era suffer the same problems.  

Anyway, to answer your question: a little weathering on the tires/wheels and undercarriage would be a good idea if other items on your layout are also weathered.

To see how a fellow modeler struggled with this thing, go to the following link

https://ogrforum.com/...-chevy-2-ton-truck-1

Once again, great job!

 

24 REA truck dock 2

Truck dock of our REA transfer building.

ERTL Ralston Purina 1950 Chevy COE tractor

ERTL 1950s Chevy/GMC with fenders blackened and decals applied to doors

DSCN1971

BB-157 repainted with Santa Fe signs.

DSCN1928

Athearn van cargo compartment painted black with a nose mounted reefer unit added.

 

BB-157 with load

BB-157 chassis with details added.

John in Lansing, ILL

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Images (6)
  • ERTL Ralston Purina 1950 Chevy COE tractor
  • DSCN1971
  • BB-157 with load
  • DSCN1928
  • 23 REA truck dock 1
  • 24 REA truck dock 2
 
Dewman51 posted:

Where did you find the reefer unit?

Weaver cars come with a piece of foam between the wheels and the underside of the body.  I cut a piece of foam( a piece of wood could be used), painted it white and glued it to the front.  Not museum quality but it works on our layout.  John in Lansing, ILL

Last edited by rattler21
rattler21 posted:
 
Dewman51 posted:

Where did you find the refer unit????

Weaver cars come with a piece of foam between the wheels and the underside of the body.  I cut a piece of foam( a piece of wood could be used), painted it white and glued it to the front.  Not museum quality but it works on our layout.  John in Lansing, ILL

John. That’s old school I like it 

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