Danbury Mint
A model car is a miniature representation, or scale model, of an automobile or similar powered vehicle, generally reproducing the shapes of actually-produced vehicles. Other miniature ground-running vehicles, such as trucks, buses, etc. more...
Home
Action Figures
Beanies
Construction Toys & Kits
Diecast & Vehicles
Anson
Auto Art
Bang/ Box / Best
Benbros
Britains
Brooklin
Brumm
Budgie
Burago
Cararama & Hongwell
Charbens
Code 3
Collections/ Bulk Lots
Conrad/ NZG
Corgi
Crescent
Danbury Mint
Detail
Dinky
Dragon
EFE
Eligor
ERTL
Exoto
Ferrari
Franklin Mint
Gearbox
Guisval
Herpa
HotWheels
IXO
Jada
Jadi
Joal
Johnny Lightning
Kinsmart
Kyosho
Lledo
Lone Star
Magazines/ Books/...
Maisto
Majorette
Matchbox & Lesney
Maxi Car
Micro Machines
Minichamps
Muscle Machines
NASCAR
Newray
Norev
ONYX
Other Diecast & Vehicles
Oxford Diecast
Polistil
Revell
Rio
Road Champs
Road Signature
Saico
Schabak
Schuco
Shell Classic
Siku
Solido/ Verem
Spark
Sun Star
Teamsters
Tekno
Tomica
Tonka
Tri-ang
Trofeu
Unbranded Vehicles
Universal Hobbies
Vitesse/ Quartzo/ City
Welly
White Metal/ Hand-Made/...
Toys & Games
Wargames & Role-Playing
(but not railroad trains or tracked military vehicles) are usually included in the general category of model cars. The line between model and toy cars is not well-defined; some toys can be scaled and detailed well enough to be considered models also. Miniature cars which are poorly proportioned or lack significant detail are usually considered to be pure toys rather than models.
Model cars from kits
Model car most frequently refers to scale miniatures of real production vehicles, designed as kits for the enthusiast to construct. They can be created in plastic, die-cast metal, resin, even wood. The best kits have incredible levels of detail, even in parts unseen when the finished model is on display. Major manufacturers are AMT, Revell, Monogram, and Tamiya but many smaller companies abound.
History
Banthrico started producing die cast promotional model car banks in the late '40s for the banking industry. These banks were available as a gift to people that started a new account and had a slot in the bottom to put their spare change. Usually the banks name and address was painted on the roof of the car. These primitive promotional cars included Buicks, Cadillacs, Lincolns, Packards, Desotos, Chryslers, Dodges and of course the more common (relatable) Chevrolets and Fords. In mint condition, today these cars are exceptionally sought after.
About the same time, another company, Product Miniature Corporation was introducing promotional models made from plastic to the public, many of which were also in the form of banks. Many Chevrolet bank models had the inscription on the bottom \"To help save for a rainy day, or to buy a new Chevrolet\" The almost mandated scale for these cars was 1:25th, however a few Chevrolets and Plymouths were produced in a larger 1:20th scale.
The model car \"kit\" hobby began in the post World War II era with Ace and Berkeley wooden model cars. Revell pioneered the plastic model car with their famous Maxwell kit derived from a toy. Derk Brand, from England, pioneered the first real plastic kit, a 1932 Ford Roadster for Revell. He was also famous for developing a line of 1/32 scale model car kits in England for the Gowland brothers. These kits were later introduced by Revell in the U.S.
AMT, and AMT's sister company SMP, began producing assembled 1/25 friction and coaster models in the early fifties. These were an outgrowth of promotional models manufactured for automobile dealers. Youngsters would be given the scale models to play with while the parents and the salesman haggled. Collecting and trading these \"promos\" soon became a popular hobby.
Read more at Wikipedia.org
|