Register now to get rid of these ads!

AMT model company......

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by Jeem, Apr 23, 2009.

  1. bobss396
    Joined: Aug 27, 2008
    Posts: 18,752

    bobss396
    Member

    MPC kits came out with their annuals in 1966. My first kit of theirs was a '66 Bonneville. The molding was a little thinner than AMT kits and with excellent detail. They did give AMT a run for their money at the time.

    Revell was known for their line of "unbuildables". Their chrome tree molding was piss poor at the time and way too fine in detail for the average 10 year old to accomplish.

    Bob
     
    czuch likes this.
  2. squirrel
    Joined: Sep 23, 2004
    Posts: 60,010

    squirrel
    Member

    I would guess it depends on if you have an architect scale, or an engineer scale. Architects work in inches per foot, so 1:24 would be easier, engineers work in decimal, so 1:25 would be easier.
     
  3. B Smi
    Joined: Nov 13, 2015
    Posts: 1

    B Smi

  4. I am getting ready to ship an AMT, in 1986 they were in Dyersville, Iowa or at least the offices were.
     
  5. mr.m80
    Joined: May 21, 2013
    Posts: 7

    mr.m80
    Member
    from michigan

    Love all the comments. I lived in a seven bedroom Victorian Farmhouse on a hundred acre piece of property directly across a two lane road from the Troy AMT. I grew up building models given to me after a tour of the plant with my brother. As many kits as we could carry if I recall. We would get to sit in the Custom cars from Hollywood by Barris and Winfield and Big Daddy etc. The Silhouette, Piranha, Munster Koach, Dragula, Batmobile, Deora, Ala Karte, the cars would be on display for a few days on the lawn right on Maple road. Lived there from first grade till seventh grade.
     
    lothiandon1940 likes this.
  6. AMT-R2-619-5.jpg 11-13-15-ATM-300x240.jpg
     
    Last edited: May 9, 2016
    Ron Funkhouser likes this.
  7. gnichols
    Joined: Mar 6, 2008
    Posts: 11,413

    gnichols
    Member
    from Tampa, FL

    Very interesting. AMT and Hot Rod Mag started the same year! Gary
     
    lothiandon1940 likes this.
  8. czuch
    Joined: Sep 23, 2008
    Posts: 2,688

    czuch
    Member
    from vail az

    I built tons of those. All of em. AMT Peterbilt car hauler, with sides I made from plastic sheets.
    I had an impressive parts box with two or three of everything. Great way to grow up in the early 70's.
     
  9. Those model car kit companies were a pretty friendly bunch with each other. The guy who developed the 3 in 1 kits while at AMT was George Toteff.

    He went on to found MPC with my cousin (**** Branstner), and some of the kits they produced ended up in AMT packaging.

    They were located in Mt. Clemens, the heart of Chrysler country.

    Between Mt Clemens and Troy, there existed a huge number of tool and die makers - those were really some "old skool" guys with a true love of craft.
     
    Last edited: May 9, 2016
    lothiandon1940 likes this.
  10. loveoftiki
    Joined: Nov 11, 2006
    Posts: 9,174

    loveoftiki
    Member
    from Livonia,Mi

    lothiandon1940 likes this.
  11. KoolKat-57
    Joined: Feb 22, 2010
    Posts: 3,092

    KoolKat-57
    Member
    from Dublin, OH

    AMT models were $1.49 retail and we usually got them for 25-50 cents less on sale!
    Boy those were the days. Now the same kits are $25.00 or more!
    Of course kids have no interest in cars or models of them, their heads are down and their thumbs have calluses on them!
    KK
     
  12. I was wondering how much they were back then. Cigarettes were 25 cents a pack, so for sure $1.49 was still a number for us kids.

    We were also doing model aircraft and ships - I can remember doing the USS Missouri and USS Enterprise - musta set the old man back quite a bit - probably crimped his Prince Albert pipe tobacco purchase for the week.
     
  13. Just an FYI. There was an AMT plant in Baltimore. I have a couple of friends that worked there. If I remember the stories right, it was on Washington Blvd (Rt. 1). Will try to find out for sure. Gene.
     
    lothiandon1940 likes this.
  14. Do 084.jpg You have Prince Albert in a can? Then you had better let him out!
     
  15. mike bowling
    Joined: Jan 1, 2013
    Posts: 3,559

    mike bowling
    Member

    ^^^^^^^ " Good afternoon, Mam. Could you tell me if your refridgerator's running? Well, you better go catch it!" Yuk, yuk. ( 12 year old humor)
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    Revelle had better glue ( I think) ?????

    Bought these at a church bazaar for 2 bucks each- complete, "3 way" kits, with a display base/ pen holder for your desk. The Continental could be made as a station wagon- COOL!
     

    Attached Files:

  16. How fitting: the old man did use PA, and my little brothers liked Rat Fink and anything BDR - which the old man hated.
    ironic - or justice
     
  17. Atwater Mike
    Joined: May 31, 2002
    Posts: 11,618

    Atwater Mike
    Member

    Crank your calendars up to 2,010...then look at ANY Revell '32.
    The frames are 100% scale, bodies (3 window coupe, 5 window, '32 sedan, '32 Highboy roadster) are also like shrunken down from the real thing.

    Revell came out swingin', finally...if a little too late...I can build a scale '32 anything now, without having to Kit Bash something to death.
    Just look back at the AMT '32 Coupe. Looked sectioned, but the top was sorta scale...
    I bashed a Monogram '32 roadster body with the AMT top to get scale cowl and quarters...just to have a scale model of my '32 5 window highboy I had when just a 'nipper'...
    (ex wife burned all my pictures, and I wanted Trophy wife to see how my '32 was. Trophy wife fell in love with the shop, and in 3 or 4 months knew more about '32 structure and lines than most guys...) LOL
     
  18. 5window
    Joined: Jan 29, 2005
    Posts: 9,998

    5window
    Member

    Michigan seems like a dream to me now.
     
  19. 50Fraud
    Joined: May 6, 2001
    Posts: 10,099

    50Fraud
    Member Emeritus

    Dyersville was(is?) the location of Ertl Toys. As I recall, Fred Ertl bought out both AMT and MPC for their tooling, and then sold all the obsolete kit inventory for more than he paid for the whole companies. Such a deal!
     
    lothiandon1940 likes this.
  20. banjeaux bob
    Joined: Aug 31, 2008
    Posts: 6,757

    banjeaux bob
    Member
    from alaska

     
  21. OLDSMAN
    Joined: Jul 20, 2006
    Posts: 2,422

    OLDSMAN
    BANNED

    I used to build them when I was a kid. The address I remember was in Troy, Michigan. They were high quality, very detailed kits.
     

Share This Page

Register now to get rid of these ads!

Archive

Copyright © 1995-2021 The Jalopy Journal: Steal our stuff, we'll kick your teeth in. Terms of Service. Privacy Policy.

Atomic Industry
Forum software by XenForo™ ©2010-2014 XenForo Ltd.