I think die cast armour would look very nice if done right, but the cost for such an item would be very expensive.
I believe that manufacturers are doing everything possible to maintain high quality at the best possible price.
...BTW, anyone know what happened to 21st Century? Are they still in business and what about FOV; have the actually produced anything new this year yet?...
Hi, Carlos, there have been a couple of discussions recently in various threads, about how 21st Century is doing. I don't think anyone knows for sure. It has been noted that they appear to be laying off staff (which info was attributed to a post on another Web forum), but it's also been noted that they've announced new releases, such as aircraft, and armor (for example, their website has such updates). Add to those bits of info, we've all seen how WalMart dropped 21st Century from its toy lines, and again, no one is sure why (poor sales, perhaps? all we can really do is speculate). Upshot appears to be, we don't know for sure.
I always thought that 21st Century provided a product that served as a great entry into the hobby. From the 1/18th aircraft, to the very reasonably priced 1/32 armor, I've always said that if I had kids, I'd give them those things, as toys, and let them play with them. That's a good way to get the next generation interested in modeling, and collecting, and history, letting them touch and play with and yes, even blow them up with firecrackers. If a kid gets his hands on a toy, he'll remember it when he's an adult, and even spend far more money at that point than it cost when he was young.
I think 21st Century might now be sold at Target, but I haven't checked for myself.
Prost!
Brad
I think die cast armour would look very nice if done right, but the cost for such an item would be very expensive.
I believe that manufacturers are doing everything possible to maintain high quality at the best possible price.
With the price of King & Country King tiger being over £200.00 do you think it time there armour should be made in metal / part plastic
For me it would be the dog bollocks in metal![]()
Sorry to be the nay-sayer at the party but I voted NO quite emphatically!
One of my joys is to take 21C and FoV and redetail them or least take out their gross inaccuraccies, I am used to working with plastic and resin - I HATE DIECAST!!!! It is hard to grind (it clogs up Dremel heads), it dulls drill bits, it generally doesn't take detail as sharply and distinctly as plastic, it creates metal filings and shavings all over the place, etc. NO MORE DIECASTS!!!!! I was ever so glad when 21C released their M7 Priest in both metal and plastic bodied versions - I still have a metal M7 to get rid of. Neither FoV or 21C can get the classic Sherman tank right so there's a lot of carving and grinding to get them corrected. This process is indescribably easier with plastic bodies.
Leave the metal out of my tanks except for stuff like gun barrels!
One exception - if you are talking about a nice high-end metal model like Honour Bound then deal me in. That's a whole different world than mass-production diecast. Those were/are gorgeous tributes to the model builders' art.
If you want weight in your tanks but some rocks in the bottom of the hull. For mass production make 'em plastic or resin. Or donate me a Unimat multi-function machining tool!
Gary
Hi Gary
My post is aimed at the high end market
It can't happen in the high end market in this hobby (1:30 or 1:32 scale) as the manufacturer would either have to be able to sell around 50,000 of the vehicle or charge an obscenely high price for it, to defray the cost of the die cast molds. There simply are not enough toy soldier collectors to make die cast vehicles feasable.
Not so sure about that, a friend of mine had a tractor commisioned in 1:16 scale and he was selling them for £59.95. He had 1500 of them made. Britains also commisioned a tractor for our forum (1000 pieces) and we sold them for £19.95. It can be done just have to find the right source.![]()
It is interesting to see the different perspectives on this. I recall seeing but cannot recall the name of an amazingly detailed Tiger with acturate and viewable internal detail. Does anyone know of that one; it seemed to define the art for model tanks?
Thanks Louis. Well it is a beauty; who has one here and what did they go far, if I might ask?That was the Figarti "Shock and Awe" Tiger - it was made of more than 900 parts!
Thanks Louis. Well it is a beauty; who has one here and what did they go far, if I might ask?