Moderator
- Member since
April 2003
- From: USA
|
QUOTE: Originally posted by rangerj
Matt,
As someone who grew up in the 50s and 60s I remember the old Plymouths, Dodges, DeSotos, Chryslers, and Imperials, ie the Chrysler Corporation Cars. Plymouth has gone the way of the Imperial and the DeSoto, ie it no longer exsists. The model brings back some fond memories of the days when cars were distinct. Now they all look alike.
If I remember correctly JoHan started as a company that supplied models for the dealerships (pro-mo's), and later evolved into a "kit" manufacturer. I have heard various rumors about the old JoHan molds and the possibility of new productions of some of their old kits. If you have any information about this it would be of interest to those of us who remember the JoHan kits. JoHan produced kits of cars that no one else did, such as the Rambler, American Motors, and Chrysler cars.
Thanks for sharing your Plymouth with us. The turqoise and white paint job is typical 50's, as is all the chrome. Nicely done. rangerj
|
|
It's funny, I still have a set of keys for the car, and they have the CPDD (Chrysler, Plymouth, Dodge, DeSoto) logo on them -- there aren't too many of those lines left!
JoHan has indeed made a reappearance, and they have a website at
johanmodels.com
This kit is one of their recent offerings. I believe the plastic parts are NOS. The kit includes a vacuum-formed windshield, but the one in my kit was badly distorted so I used an injection-molded part from a decades-old promo I took apart. The cast-resin interior is ok, but it's a little shallow, undoubtedly to fit properly between the body and the platform chassis plate.
They also recently reissued their Chrysler Turbine Car promo as a kit; here's one I built a few months ago:
Cheers!
Matt @ FSM
|