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Ford Model T; Horse and buggy; List of motorcycles by type of engine; List of motorcycles of the 1890s; List of motorcycles of 1900 to 1909; List of motorcycles of the 1910s; List of motorcycles of the 1920s; List of motorcycles of the 1940s; List of motorcycles of the 1950s; List of motorcycle manufacturers; List of motorized trikes; Safety ...
The 1932 Chevrolet kits were made in phaeton, roadster, and coupe versions. Another venerable model was the 1930 Packard, offered in Sport Phaeton, Dietrich, Roadster, Victoria, and Boat-tail variations, while the Duesenberg SJ was available as a Speedline Phaeton and a Town Car.
Model name: Engine: First year: Last year: Note: Model L: 349 cc 1923 1935 Overhead-valve, sidevalve & sloper versions Slopers: L 349 cc - S 493 cc - H 557 cc 1927 1935 L 27-28 only, S 27-35, H 28-33, various configurations, OHV, SV & Twin Exhaust A30-1, A30-2 175 cc two-stroke 1929 1930 Unit-construction model in two-speed and three-speed ...
Minic – Tin models made by Triang in Britain, 1930s. Plastic cars and trucks through the 1960s [65] Minichamps – German-owned manufacturer of die-cast zamac or resin models. Many different cars of all types. High quality models, originally 1:43, now also in other scales (especially 1:18). Also makes Motorcycles. Owned by PMA (Paul's Model ...
The product achieved considerable commercial success, and ESCI was able to invest its new resources in 1:9 scale motorcycle kits. The first plastic production kit was the BMW R75 with sidecar, [ 3 ] followed by the Harley-Davidson WLA , and the Zündapp KS750 , all hand-crafted by the famous creator master modeller Manuel Olive Sans.
By the 1929/30 the engine carried a twin-port head, and the OHV joined by a less-popular side-valve model; these models also had extra chrome. From 1932 all were equipped by a 4-speed gearbox. [ 1 ] From 1930 there was an optional sporting kit for £10, including a high-compression piston, hardened valves and springs, and a racing sparkplug ...
The Pyro Plastics Corporation was an American manufacturing company based in Union Township, NJ and popular during the 1950s and 1960s that produced toys and plastic model kits. Some of the scale models manufactured and commercialised by Pyro were cars, motorcycles, aircraft, ships, and military vehicles, and animal and human figures.
The main competition for the Matchless Silver Hawk in the top end 4-cylinder British luxury motorcycle market at the time was the Ariel Square Four, which was £5 cheaper, but 100cc smaller (in 1931). Manufacture of the Silver Hawk was expensive and sales were slow - the Hawk was discontinued in 1935.