Review of Replicas & Miniatures '29 Ford Model A Roadster Kit (RMCM Part Number B-8)
by Bernard Kron
06/03/08


These are my initial impressions of the Replicas & Miniatures Co. Of Maryland’29 Ford Roadster Model
A Kit (RMCM Part Number B-8). This is a transkit based on the Revell family of ’32 Model Fords such as
the recent Tudor Sedan, the Goodguys 3-Window Coupe and Goodguys Roadster. All these kits feature
the same basic chassis and suspension and this kit, which consists of the parts to build a ’29 Model A
Ford Roadster as a highboy up on ’32 Ford frame rails, uses the driveline parts, steering and
miscellaneous parts from any of those kits. No wheels or tires are provided.

The transkit consists of the following parts :
1 ’29 A body shell
1 modified Model A engine cover (integrated hood and sides)
1 ’32 Ford grill shell with 2 radiators, but no grill.
1 modified ’32 Ford frame set
1 3 piece tuck and roll interior set.
1 interior floor.
1 2 piece firewall set.
1 set of door handles and rumble seat handle.
2 sets of modified windshield and dashboard with 1 piece of clear acetate.
Detailed instructions and descriptions for the use of the parts in the transkit.








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The main body is based on the AMT ’29 Roadster, which is actually already a very well detailed shell.
The AMT kits can be readily obtained on e-Bay for around $25.00. Unfortunately, the molds for the AMT
kit are several decades old and the kits are a nightmare of flash. The plastic was often molded in odd
colors and the body has to be be sealed to paint it. The rest of these kits are often horrible late 70’s
street rods with poorly made engines, goofy wide front tires, and crude “hot rod” suspension parts. It
doesn't even come with a dropped front axle! What one buys these kits for is exclusively the body. For
this reason, as you will see, the RMCM kit is quite interesting, being based on a far more contemporary
approach to plastic kits and modeling in general.

The first thing you notice when you examine the kit is the very fine quality of resin casting. The resin is
exceptionally thin; indeed I would say that the parts are far more fragile than the equivalent parts found
in the Revell donor kit. The result is an exceptional fidelity and crispness of detail. However the parts
all require very careful handling. In fact there are two sets of printed instructions referring specifically
to the thinness of casting. The first is advice on storage of the kit if you aren’t going to use it right
away. The advice is to store the parts on a flat surface, not on top of other parts. To quote “ We cast
our bodies and other parts thin, but this means the resin is susceptible to being pulled out of shaped
by gravity.” Additionally there are painting instructions indicating that the parts could be distorted by
differing shrink rates on paint surfaces on the inside and outside of the part, so that you should paint
both sides with equal numbers of coats of paint.

I would say that the parts in this kit are superior in appearance and finish to any equivalent styrene kit I
have seen, such as for example the Revell ’29 Model A Pickup kit. Surface quality of all parts, large and
small, is immaculate, with no pits, lows spots, or distortions that I was able to find. There is very little
flash, and what there is very thin and will require very little effort to remove, leaving no damage to the
underlying surface to clean up. In fact I detected several places where the body and frame had already
been gone over and some surfaces cleaned up! Very impressive.

The kit is engineered to be a fenderless highboy. The gas tank has been removed and the rear frame
horns shortened so that they are tucked inboard of the stock rear body valence. The kickup of the
frame rails tucks in behind the wheel well panels and the body rests at the front squarely on the frame
rails. On many highboy kits the front of the main shell at the firewall sits just outside the frame rails, so
it is clear that when the frame was narrowed to fit the body shell, specific adjustments were made to
provide for a perfect fit. Again, very impressive!








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On the original AMT kit the windshield is vertical in relation to the firewall whereas the Revell Pickup in
its roadster version, features a slightly raked windshield frame which is very attractive. Unfortunately
this thin, delicate part cannot be easily adapted to the AMT shell. RMCM, however, has included two
sets of windshield/dashboards, one with the two integrated into one piece, and then one set where
each part is separated. In both instances, the windshield is slanted back slightly, about 11 degrees. The
dashboard itself is completely blank, allowing for whatever gauges you wish to use. RMCM also
includes some acetate and a pattern for the windshield.

The hood and engine side covers were re-done to mate with the included ’32 Ford style grille shell.
They are cast as a single piece with a fine accent line cast in on each side to mark the joint between
the side cover and the hood. Otherwise they are completely smooth, without even a hinge joint down
the middle of the hood. This piece is slightly longer than the equivalent hood from the original AMT kit
it’s based on so you can’t easily adapted the original louvered AMT piece to this transkit. In addition to
widening the end that mates to the grill shell, you would have to add a small amount of material to the
engine cover as well. For me the hood is one of the few weaknesses of the kit. I understand why this
approach was taken – after all it is designed for the advanced builder. But the basic appearance of the
hood and sides is plain to a fault. It would have required very little to include at least a hinge line down
the middle of the hood, and perhaps some nice 3” louvers on the side!

The full height ’32 Ford style grill shell comes with two radiators, again proportioned for a highboy
application. Both radiators are finely detailed on both sides. One radiator is detailed to accommodate a
single coolant pipe as used in modern engines, while the second radiator is designed for a Ford
Flathead. Patterned after the Revell ’32 radiator, the RMCM radiators are superior in every way to the
Revell piece in both detail and fit.

The transkit does not come with a grill. The shell is engineered to accept the Model Car Garage p/e grill
MCG-2091 or MCG-2092). If you want to use the stock grill from the Revell donor kit you will have to
remove a small ridge on the inside of the shell which positions the MCG grill.

The firewall comes in 2 pieces. There is a finely detailed exterior upper firewall patterned after the
original Model A piece. It attaches to the outside body edge and determines the placement of the hood.
The second main firewall is patterned after the Revell ’32 Ford piece and is blank. It attaches behind
the other firewall on the interior of the body via locating strips molded into the body.

The kit comes with 2 tiny resin cast door handles and a tiny rumble seat handle. These need to be
painted or plated. Holes are drilled in the doors for the door handles, and an indentation in the
underside of the body can be opened up for the rumble seat handle.










(click thumbnail to enlarge)

The interior is extremely simple, consisting of two tuck and roll side panels and a simple tuck and roll
seat. There is no interior bucket as such. The side panels are designed to be glued directly to the body
sides. The seat is located by a strip of styrene which you glue to the underside of the rear of the
passenger compartment so that half its width is revealed. You then glue the seat back to the strip.

The interior, while not objectionable in any way, is certainly very basic, although in keeping with the
classic hot rod approach of the kit. To my eye the heavy wide pleats of the seat don’t match the side
panels very well. If you want to use some other seat or use bucket seats, you will probably face a fair
amount of fabrication.

The floor piece is textured to resemble carpeting and has a nicely made floor hump to accommodate
more contemporary transmissions. It has indentations to receive the clutch and brake pedals from the
Revell kit. Two holes match up to locating pins in the chassis top to accurately locate the floor and
interior in relation to the body and chassis.








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The chassis is very finely cast and very clean with no low spots. It includes a crossmember which must
be glued in and engine mounts which appear to be placed to use the Ford engine from the Revell
Highboy or 3-Window kits. As mentioned earlier, the frame assumes you will use the entire running
gear from your Revell donor kit.

The chassis is the other area that I consider slightly disappointing. While the front suspension of the
Revellogram ‘32’s is just fine, the rear suspension has always left something to be desired, with it’s
funky little airbag doo-hickies. Given the decidedly old-school flavor of building a ’29 highboy in the
first place, one would have thought that they would have redesigned the rear to use a transverse rear
leaf spring. The answer lies in the fact that the RMCM ’29 A Roadster kit was originally released in
October of 2000 when the Revell ’32 was a very welcome new tooling indeed. Since then RMCM has
had Rik Hoving master a lovely revision of the Revellogram ’32 frame (RMCM Parts number RH-418)
which accepts the front suspension from the Revell Model A kits and uses a combination of the Revell
Model A rear suspension with the ’32 traction bars. Substituting something like a modern rear axle
trimmed to fit is a pretty simple conversion. I wish RMCM would offer a revision of this kit that includes
a narrowed version of the Hoving chassis.








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Overall I am delighted with this kit. The construction, engineering, fit and finish are exceptional on
initial examination. The highboy implementation is flawless. My intention is to build this kit “OTB” in the
sense that I will stick pretty close to the kit plus Revell donor kit approach. I plan to build a highboy, to
use the Revell driveline, and the only concern I have right now is with the engine. I have never liked
the Revell Ford particularly and it’s tempting to put something more interesting under the hood –
perhaps a nailhead Buick. Also the hood and sides, which I would like to use, will require some work.
The interior represents enough additional work that I will probably retain it as is. As regards the rear
suspension, I have a copy of the Hoving chassis which I could narrow but I don't plan to use it on this
initial build. It’s lovely but appears awfully fine and fragile, so I think on my first build I’ll leave the
Revell setup in place and worry about something more authentic for later! Here’s a picture of the
Hoving chassis:








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Replicas & Miniatures Company of Maryland
Maryland’29 Ford Roadster Model A Hot Rod Kit
RMCM Part Number B-8

Replicas & Miniatures Company of Maryland
317 Roosevelt Ave., S.W
Glen Burnie, MD  21061

Tel: (410) 768-3648
Monday through Friday 9AM – 5 PM EST

replmincomd@aol.com
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