| Date of Review |
October 2005 |
| Manufacturer |
Glencoe |
| Subject |
Tyrannosaurus |
| Scale |
1/25 |
| Kit Number |
7906 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
Simple build |
| Cons |
|
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$14.98 |
Background
Back in the 1950s, ITC made a kit based upon the skeleton in the
New York City Museum of Natural History. In fact, when the museum
was in the process of redoing their exhibit, the person working
with the disassembly of the Tyrannosaurus exhibit made the scale
patterns for this kit directly from the bones being removed and
tagged for later reassembly. These kits were later sold at the
museum for patrons to have a souvenir of their visit.
The Kit
The Glencoe Tyrannosaurus kit is a result of rescuing the ITC
molds and keeping them maintained. The kit is molded in tan styrene
and is comprised of 47 parts. Fortunately ITC and the museum experts
involved with the project kept the breakdown of the skeletal structure
in either large individual bones or in subassemblies of smaller
bones.
As you can see in the accompanying photos, the kit consists of
a display base in addition to all of the bones. A nicely illustrated
instruction sheet walks you though the seven steps to having a
Jurassic Park star on your bench.
Conclusion
I've always enjoyed the science kits growing up and this is an
excellent model to build with your child for a science project
or just for fun. You can always build one of these to keep on your
desk at work as a symbol of your respect to upper management.
This kit is definitely recommended!
My sincere thanks to Glencoe for this review sample!
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