Showing posts with label GLM. Show all posts
Showing posts with label GLM. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 31, 2024

1950 Nash Rambler by Franklin Mint

 Franklin Mint UK14 - 1950 Nash Rambler Landau Convertible Coupe in Yellow













The 1950 Nash Rambler is a classic American automobile known for its unique design and innovative features. It was one of the first compact cars produced in the United States and was aimed at appealing to buyers looking for a more efficient and economical option.
This 2-door Nash Rambler Convertible  Coupe featured a distinctively rounded body and smooth lines, setting it apart from the boxier designs of other cars of the era. The 1950 model was powered by a 173 cubic inch (2.8 L) inline 6-cylinder engine, producing around 85 horsepower.
Overall, the 1950 Nash Rambler is celebrated for its role in the evolution of compact cars in America, combining style, efficiency, and practicality in a way that resonates with classic car enthusiasts today.
The Rambler compact series was designed with several types of body styles, but in the first year of production, only a single model reached the market: this two-door Landau Convertible Coupe with fixed door window and side window frames and a retractable fabric roof (known in America as fixed-profile). Another feature was the covered wheels (even the front ones).
The model perfectly captures these features. The roof, made of genuine canvas and not a plastic imitation, is beautiful. Perfectly chromed parts and automobile badges frame an excellent model.
This somewhat underrated model is a great addition to a collection and definitely deserves a recommendation.

1950 Nash Rambler Convertible Coupe by Franklin Mint   



 Manufacturer: Franklin Mint
 Scale: 1/43
 Production Year: 1998
 Part Number UK14
 Color: Yellow
 Material: DieCast
 Rating: 10/10



Wednesday, January 4, 2023

1938 Packard 1601 Eight Graber Cabriolet by GLM

1938 Packard 1601 Eight Graber Cabriolet












This is a uniquie one-off Packard. First shown at the Geneva Auto Salon in 1938, this is one of just two or three Packards that were bodied by Graber along with three Duesenbergs.Swiss coachbuilder Graber bodied this American Packard 120 chassis. The car was originally sold and titled in Switzerland.
 
This 1938 Packard, a 127-inch wheelbase “junior” Eight, is among the latter. It was bodied by Graber for the 1938 Geneva Auto Salon, and its body virtually duplicates, albeit to a smaller scale, one built for a Model J Duesenberg, number J-246. The body was ahead of its time, as the lines include sweeping French-inspired pontoon fenders with fully skirted rear wheels and a single tailfin dropping down the rear deck lid. The hood is covered in dozens of small louvers, and beautiful hints of chrome trim appear everywhere.

For many years this car was lost but turned up about twenty years ago in a cinder block garage in Switzerland. Unrestored, it was taken to the 2010 Pebble Beach Concours d’Elegance in the Pre-War Preservation Class. The paint was tired but all else was intact. I restoration followed with the car returning to Pebble Beach in 2011 to win Best in Class. This was followed in 2012 where it scored 100 points at the CCCA Annual Meeting.

Wonderful GLM model is highly detailed in top quality. Black painting with chrome trim is stunning. A great model, though not a "diecast" metal one.



 Manufacturer: GLM
 Scale: 1/43
 Production Year: 2019
 Part Number ---
 Color: Black
 Material: Resin
 Rating: 10/10



Thursday, February 4, 2016

1933 Duesenberg SJ Arlington Torpedo Sedan 'Twenty Grand' Rollston by GLM

GLM 1933 Duesenberg SJ "Twenty Grand" Arlington Torpedo Sedan by Rollstone










The coachbuilder Rollston Body Company began after World War I as a body repair shop in Manhattan and soon expanded into coachbuilding. Rollston bodies appeared on Bugatti, Buick, Cadillac, Chrysler, Cord, Duesenberg, Ford, Hispano-Suiza, Lincoln, Mercedes-Benz, Packard, Peerless, Pierce-Arrow and Rolls Royce.
Rollston's most famous car was this  this 1933 Duesenberg Model SJ Arlington Torpedo Sedan "Twenty Grand" – the most expensive Duesenberg ever.
Designed by Gordon Buehrig, the Twenty Grand was built as a show car for the 1933-34 Century of Progress Exposition in Chicago, Illinois, and the finished car's price tag was $20,000, an astronomical amount at the time  when the average U.S. physician earned less than $3,000 a year ( by the way - other completed Duesenberg models cost  max between $13,000 and $19,000).

This supercharged Duesenberg with chassis number 2539 and engine J-513.
Chief designer, Gordon Buehrig, designed the "Twenty Grand", adapting several of the earlier coach styles, and the noted coach-builder Rollston Body Company, made the design a reality. With polished stainless steel tubing covering the exposed exhaust pipes, and an aerodynamically slanted windscreen, the luxurious "Twenty Grand" exuded a feeling of speed, as well as grandeur. Its long and sleek lines, uninterrupted by superfluous extravagance, elegantly belied the power that lay under the bonnet—a 320-horsepower supercharged engine that was claimed to have pushed the machine to speeds as high as 130 miles per hour.
The power and elegance that were revealed by the exterior were complemented by the sumptuousness of the interior. The "armchair" type seats were upholstered in broadcloth bounded with silver patent leather. Instrument panels, in the front and back seats, were panelled in two-tone burl walnut with silver inlay.

The famous ’20 Grand’ 1933 Duesenberg SJ Torpedo Sedan wears a California license plate with its original sales price was restored in 1979 and took top honors at Pebble Beach in 1980.

Original  Car Owner:   S. M. Archer, Minneapolis
Owner in 1968:   B. Johnson, IN
Current Owner:   The Nethercutt Collection in Sylmar, California

Model made by GLM Models is authentic to the smallest detail.
Company GLM was founded in 2012 by a group of model car collectors.
Finish of paintwork Posh Champagne Silver and assembly are of the highest possible standard - each worker in GLM factory can only finish 2 cars every day!
The resin body casting is flawless, and the finish is accented with a mix of hand-applied detail castings, photo-etched metal, and sharp tampos.
Out front, the  Duesenberg grille, delicate photo-etched hood ornament and set individually-lensed head are very well done, and the photo-etched  front window frame look absolute perfect. Interior details include good-looking upholstery and hand-painted wood-grain dash and door panel wood trim, photo-etched control panels, and detailed instruments up front.
Tall whitewall bias-ply tires wrapped around exquisitely etched spoked wheels with finely crafted Duesenberg crests in the centers. Those wheels are probably my favorite feature on the whole model, and give it a feel of quality and completeness that ties the whole piece together.

It’s a beautiful car, and GLM does a beautiful job presenting in in 1:43. As a model that captures the promise and potential of the pre war period, this Duesenberg has few rivals—if this era appeals to you, this one is worth adding to your collection. But the price of the model is relatively too high, as once was the price of the real car.


 Manufacturer: GLM
 Scale: 1/43
 Year of Production: 2015
 Part Number: GLM43106201
 Material: Resin
 Rating: 10/10