| Date of Review |
January 2005 |
| Manufacturer |
Revell |
| Subject |
'70 Chevelle SS 454 Easy Kit |
| Scale |
1/25 |
| Kit Number |
1932 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Great fit |
| Cons |
Stickers vice decals |
| Skill Level |
Beginner |
| MSRP (USD) |
$15.25 |
History
The 1970 Chevrolet Chevelle SS 454 was one of the most powerful
muscle cars that came off the production line. The 454 was
rated at 450 horsepower, which could push the Chevelle through
the quarter mile at around 13 seconds and 110 mph. If you're
looking for a muscle car, the Chevelle is an excellent option,
though at these gas prices, you'd best leave it parked!.
The Kit
The Revell '70 Chevelle SS 454 kit is out of their new "Easy
Build" line
which takes the old Snap-Tite kit to a higher level of sophistication.
The kit comes with the body molded in blue, the chassis
in black, the interior parts molded in gray, and the grille,
bumpers and wheels chromed. A one-piece front and rear window
is molded in perfectly clear styrene.
Revell says this kit will go together nicely with no glue, no paint,
and in virtually no time. Since I've been getting depressed lately when
I see the child warning on kit boxes that state 8-10 years, I know they
really mean that is when I'll get the bloody thing finished these days!
With that in mind, I decided to give this a test of instant gratification.
Construction
While they provide some nice instructions, this is still what you'd
classify as a no-brainer kit. The interior parts snap together, the
window snaps into place inside the body shell, followed by the interior
tub. The bumpers go into place before the chassis is snapped into location.
This whole assembly is then held together with two screws which lock
everything down nicely.
The low-rider-styled tires slip onto the chrome wheel hubs, and the hubs
friction fit onto an metal axle. Before attaching both wheels on the axle,
you must choose which holes in the chassis you'll install the axle through.
One set puts the car at normal street height, the other sets the car as a
low-rider. Install the axles and wheels according to taste.
Some nice clear headlight lenses and red tail light lenses
slip into place to complete the job. I had to open up the holes
in the chrome light frames as they had been closed over in
the chroming process.
The kit is completed with the help of stickers, not decals.
I really wish they'd provide both so the builder has a choice.
The stickers are a bit of a pain to apply, but the white hood
and trunk panels are stickers. These appear to want to stay
put after application, but alignment and getting bubbles out
was interesting.
While the assembled model looks not bad as-is, I opted to
apply a drop of Tamiya Transparent Orange on the front turn
indicators and added a touch of a black oil wash to the front
grille to get some contrast, but that was all the painting
done to the kit. The more detail-oriented builder might want
to take a little more time with painting details.
Conclusions
Revell was absolutely correct about this kit. It goes together quickly,
painlessly (except for the stickers) and is indeed instant gratification
for the adult builder. This would be a great kit to sit down with your
child and build together as it is rugged enough for play upon completion.
If you don't have kids of that age (and can't borrow one), then this is
still a quick build that might be something different to get your creative
juices flowing again.
My sincere thanks to Revell-Monogram for this review sample.
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