Stan; Yes, Hoquat had these buses available maybe 20+ years ago? Possibly Jeff W. can chime in here. The caster who provided the buses also, offered a few trolley bodies. The castings were thick and well, not very detailed.
Jeff Sankus On Fri, Mar 15, 2013 at 1:30 PM, trainsjeep88 <[email protected]>wrote: > Some years back this style bus model kit was sold maybe by Hoquat???? > Long and short versions. Stan > > --- In [email protected], Jeff Sankus <nyow55@...> wrote: > > > > Michael; > > It would be nice to have a choice of 1940ish Chevy /Ford/Dodge trucks > with > > interchangeable beds.( Buyers choice) > > As Bill L. mentioned buses of this era would be nice too. Similar to the > > photo I attached. > > > > Jeff Sankus > > > > On Fri, Mar 15, 2013 at 12:30 PM, Michael Eldridge < > > meldridge@...> wrote: > > > > > ** > > > > > > > > > I'm curious how much interest there would be in older S Scale > automobiles. > > > It seems like even in the "transition" era so favored by model > railroaders > > > there is not a lot available. > > > > > > I have been considering making some patterns for trucks (Mack, Ford) > built > > > in the late teens / early twenties. I would only cast the basic parts, > and > > > then individually build the beds, boxes, tanks, possible even cabs, > that > > > rode on the chassis. > > > > > > This is total vaporware (that's software engineer speak for it's on the > > > someday list), but I'm curious if I got around to this if anybody else > > > would want to share the setup costs in order to get some parts. > > > > > > -Michael Eldridge > > > > > > --- In [email protected], Bob Werre <bob@> wrote: > > > > > > > The other view is of some vintage cars. I don't recall ever seeing > > > > anything like that in our favorite scale except maybe some of the > > > > RailMaster vehicles might be close. > > > > > > > > > > > > > >
