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  2. Garage kit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garage_kit

    Hobby and comic stores and their distributors began either carrying fewer garage kits or closing down, along with their producers. As of 2009, there are two American garage kit magazines, Kitbuilders Magazine and Amazing Figure Modeler, [7] and there are garage kit conventions held annually, like WonderFest USA in Louisville, Kentucky. [8]

  3. Berkeley Models - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Berkeley_Models

    William L. "Bill" Effinger Jr., founded Berkeley Models in a three-car garage in Brooklyn in 1933 to help support himself through engineering school. The following year he produced his company's first rubber-powered model-airplane kits, the Consolidated Fleetster and the Fokker triplane, and the year afterward introduced the first gas-powered ...

  4. List of scale model kit manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_scale_model_kit...

    ARLO-Micromodels (former - Fabrica de construções ARLO - Porto-Portugal, established in 1939 by Arnaldo Luizello da Rocha-Brito) - Still existing today and as a five generation owned brand, Patent 22130 (discontinued actually), as being the first multimaterial kits produced, using several wood types parts, industrially finely cut and lathe shaped, embossed tinplate parts using cutting dies ...

  5. Cox Models - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cox_Models

    Cox's first contribution to that growing hobby was a cast aluminum midget racer powered by a .09 and .15 engine by Cameron Brothers of Chino, California. Cox Manufacturing enjoyed a large postwar growth due in part to its production of miniature model internal combustion engines and control line model aircraft , finally moving to a new factory ...

  6. List of scale model sizes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_scale_model_sizes

    Popular scale for period ship plans — 1 inch = 3 feet. 1:35: 8.709 mm: Military models: The most popular scale for military vehicles and figures. Used heavily in models of armoured vehicles. It was originally conceived by Tamiya for convenience of fitting motorised parts and batteries. Corresponds well with 54mm figures. 1:34: 8.965 mm

  7. Bowers Fly Baby - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bowers_Fly_Baby

    It is built from plans and was designed to be constructed in a garage using only basic hand tools, by a person of average "home handyman" skill in 1962. The plans consist of over one hundred pages of typewritten instructions and dimensioned drawings. After Bowers' death in 2003 the plans were unavailable for a time.

  8. Macross The Ride - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Macross_The_Ride

    The new models of plastic model kits shown in the hobby magazine were sponsored and manufactured by Hasegawa and Bandai. Garage kits were converted and customized for the new plastic model designs and were manufactured from scratch for the hobby magazine. Dengeki published submitted fan-based garage kits of various variable fighters. [3]

  9. Model car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_car

    They became extremely popular in the 1960s, but commercial slot car racing experienced a rapid decline in popularity late in the decade. By the end of the 1970s, the slot car hobby had diminished significantly, especially public tracks operating larger scale cars, and modeling in general was on the decline (HO Slot Car Racing 1999–2011).

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