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We sell collectable pre-owned and vintage model vehicles

04 Jul

Lovely old Greyhound Bus

Posted by Andrew Wood in Bus, Coach, Corgi, Diecast models

This is a model of a Greyhound Bus from the USA. It's made by Corgi and is a Yellow Coach 743 built in the 1930s exclusively for Greyhound Lines.

These old US buses & coaches are very stylish and iconic, Corgi made a fair range of them back in the 1990s, this one was produced in 1994 in 1:50 scale. I've two versions of this in the shop just now and another two on eBay.

This one can be yours for £14.99 if you follow this link: http://little-wheels.net/products/23073

05 Apr

Corgi 211 Studebaker Golden Hawk

Posted by Andrew Wood in Corgi, Diecast models, Little Wheels

Mettoy launched the Corgi Toys brand in 1956, the year I was born - which maybe explains why I've always been so fond of it. They began with six British saloon cars, good solid fare like Rover, Austin & Hillman. These cars were in stock colours for the real cars, sensible greens greys & beiges.

They quickly learnt that boys wanted something a little more exotic in their toyboxes and began to use not only brighter colours but more exotic cars, ones we didn't see every day on the British roads. In February 1958 they launched their first of many American cars - the Studebaker Golden Hawk. it was interesting of Corgi to choose an oddball maker like Studebaker but typical of their quest for innovation and engineering novelty

There are three versions of the Corgi Studebaker Golden Hawk. The first two in 1958 were a freewheeling version in blue with gold painted side flashes and the white mechanical one with the friction flywheel motor. Both had windows but no suspension or seats.

Later in 1962 it was given the S treatment receiving seats and suspension and also becoming truly golden, being vacuum plated in gold or with a painted gold finish, both with white side flashes.

Rootes Group in the UK were heavily influenced by Studebaker in the styling of their Audax family of cars - the Sunbeam Rapiers and Humber Sceptres of the early 60s have several design cues from this car, the central square grille with the small grilles to the sides, the line of the front wings and the wrap around rear window with the reverse slope on the C pillar all reflect the American car.

It was an excellent call by Rootes.

26 Mar

Featured Car: Corgi Juniors 21-C; B.V.R.T. Vita-Mini 1300 Mini-Cooper S;

Posted by Andrew Wood in Corgi, Diecast models

Like me when you first look at this little Corgi you could be forgiven for thinking it's just a bad piece of modelling. Not so. It is a model of a car which actually looked like that.

Quoting from http://mk1-performance-conversions.co.uk/vita_min.htm "The car is a Vita-Min, a Mini - Minisprint with a BVRT 8 Port head and supercharged fuel injection. It is so quick that Jeff rarely gets out of second gear - & that's at 105 mph! This incredible little device undoubtedly the fastest Mini in the world - develops around 180 bhp @ the flywheel& weighs less than an F3 single seater." (1968)

This must have been a truly remarkable little car and it is worth following the link to read all about it. Probably not that practical for the school run.

Click here to open up the item in the Little Wheels shop http://little-wheels.net/collections/frontpage/products/5745

24 Mar

Odd 1970s Matchbox Superfast

Posted by Andrew Wood in Diecast models, Matchbox

I was 14 in 1970 so most of my growing up was done in the decade of purple and orange, we hadn't learnt that just because you could make things out of florescent yellow plastic it was no reason for actually doing it.

So place yourself in the range planners' chairs at Lesney. Hot Wheels were seriously having your lunch, having appeared from nowhere a few years ago and you were surrounded everywhere with tasteless tat. Is it any surprise that they came up with the weirdest cars in the whole history of the brand?

Take a look in the Matchbox/Lesney Collection in the Little Wheels shop at some of the cars uploaded today. There's a serious German grand tourer - the BMW 3.0 CSL, painted orange with blue windows & yellow seats and one of the cars that just came out of someone's head - the Tanzara, one of about a dozen made-up vehicles in the range at the time, really odd. Put alongside these the Streakers versions of a couple of concept cars you have as much wild design and clashing colours as you could wish for.

Who came first? Erica Roe or the Matchbox Streakers?

19 Mar

Rally Cars by deAgostini

Posted by Andrew Wood in Diecast models

deAgostini have some great series that make fine collections and they generally get the models made by really good suppliers like Ixo & Universal Hobbies. They are sold new with magazines on a subscription basis but they pretty quickly find their way on to the second-hand collector market. At this stage it becomes a fun project for collectors to track them all down via on-line shops like mine and on eBay. I've handled the Rally Collection a number of times and I'm part way through listing a complete set I bought at auction recently.

They are selling so quickly though that the range on display in the deAgostini collection page of the Little Wheels shop shrinks as fast as I can add more cars.

I suppose it is a function of age that I like the older cars best, the old Saabs & Fords from the 60's & 70's in particular. The second-hand Volvo PV544 which won the 1965 Safari Rally driven by a couple of privateers is a great model with sponsorship stickers from local tractor dealers and the like.

I've still got about 30 more cars to add so keep coming back to see the new additions every day.




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