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| Aston Martin |
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| B.R.M |
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| Lotus |
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| Ferrari |
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| D-Type Jaguar |
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| Maserati |
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| Unknown brand Bristol Cooper |
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| Aston Martin |
![]() |
| B.R.M |
![]() |
| Lotus |
![]() |
| Ferrari |
![]() |
| D-Type Jaguar |
![]() |
| Maserati |
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| Unknown brand Bristol Cooper |
I picked up this nice Hot Wheels Rrrumblers today at a German Flohmarkt.
It's the Centurion, the one with the Lion's head from 1973. It's just missing the fragile handlebars, which I replace.
It's actually my first Rrrumblers. I never had any as a kid. Lots of Redlines but none of these bikes, so I was thrilled to bag it for 2 Euros.
Seeing it immediately reminded of the later Lion Rider in the Galaxy Riders line by Silverlit in the 1980's.
Clearly a Masters of the Universe rip-off with He-Man at the controls, there's a Rrrumblers vibe going on too. I've never found any of the Galaxy Riders at car boot sales.
I'm just happy with my Rrrumbler today though. Have you got any or Galaxy Riders?
Paul Vreede supplied me with this article, following his exploits dealing with a little model he recently completed. An R2D2 kit in etched steel from the Metal Earth series by Fascinations out of Seattle. Standing 85mm tall when finished, R2 consists of well over 100 parts, many of them tiny. Which took a magnifying glass next to nail clippers to cut loose the parts and various round shapes (like chopsticks) to curl parts round.
Images show the two sheets of parts (already half-empty) and various components in mid-construction. And the finished result, which looks most convincing!
I have to agree Paul - it does look great! I was given the X-Wing model, which when finished would be under 3" long, but it has so far defeated me as ruthlessly as Darth Vader himself, due to the almost microscopic parts and the scalpel like edges of the metal! Bill
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| Reproduced courtesy of RMG |
Like Woodsy, the devil will often make work for idle hands and if I am at a bit of a loose end, I enjoy nothing better than a delve in the scrap box and knocking up a quick model or customisation from junk. Sometimes the idea arrives first and its a question of finding the parts to fit, whilst other times I will come across something that immediately suggests a shape or a model.
I've always been a big a big fan of gumball capsules and similar plastic domes, so last xmas i came across clear plastic baubles that you could fill yourself to make decorations. Straight away, I saw a use for them as a space station, with a Spacex theme, so a quick wash of orange and lime green paint and some bits from the box and voila!
Another use of an xmas decoration was one of the silver baubles, instantly reminded me of the second Soviet moon probe, Lunik. So once more the superglue came out and some parts. This in turn inspired a run of probes and satellites, so I churned out a few more with various kit spares and bottle tops!