King & Country
1st Lieutenant
- Joined
- May 23, 2005
- Messages
- 4,994
Hi Guys,
Mitch was asking what happened to “Strictly Limited” releases. To give you a little background… We began “SL” back in 2005 with the famous “Winter Tiger” version of the original “Wittman 007” Tiger. Over the years we continued to regularly release all kinds of fighting vehicles and aircraft in that format usually about once every three months.
Most of these were very successful, some more than others. The biggest drawback for K&C was that once an “SL” number was released it was “carved in stone” and, of course, rightly so. But it did not provide either the collector or K&C enough flexibility… And so over the past year or so we’ve moved over to “Multi Optional” which allows us to produce certain numbers of items in a variety of different paint schemes. If one particular version proves more popular we can increase the production run… If another is less popular we can reduce it.
This approach I believe is a “win-win” situation for dealer, collector and manufacturer… No one is sitting on too much stock… and hopefully most folks who want a particular version can obtain it relatively easily.
On a related matter… production runs… Most K&C molds can manufacture 3-400 of any one type before it has to be replaced. Hope this helps.
Best wishes and happy collecting!
Andy C.Neilson
Mitch was asking what happened to “Strictly Limited” releases. To give you a little background… We began “SL” back in 2005 with the famous “Winter Tiger” version of the original “Wittman 007” Tiger. Over the years we continued to regularly release all kinds of fighting vehicles and aircraft in that format usually about once every three months.
Most of these were very successful, some more than others. The biggest drawback for K&C was that once an “SL” number was released it was “carved in stone” and, of course, rightly so. But it did not provide either the collector or K&C enough flexibility… And so over the past year or so we’ve moved over to “Multi Optional” which allows us to produce certain numbers of items in a variety of different paint schemes. If one particular version proves more popular we can increase the production run… If another is less popular we can reduce it.
This approach I believe is a “win-win” situation for dealer, collector and manufacturer… No one is sitting on too much stock… and hopefully most folks who want a particular version can obtain it relatively easily.
On a related matter… production runs… Most K&C molds can manufacture 3-400 of any one type before it has to be replaced. Hope this helps.
Best wishes and happy collecting!
Andy C.Neilson