| Date of Review |
May 2006 |
| Manufacturer |
AMT/ERTL |
| Subject |
1967 Pontiac GTO |
| Scale |
1/24 |
| Kit Number |
38491 |
| Primary Media |
Styrene |
| Detail Media |
Styrene |
| Clear Media |
Styrene |
| Pros |
It’s a GTO! |
| Cons |
Cannot be built stock. Box art different from kit |
| Skill Level |
Basic |
| MSRP (USD) |
$14.99 |
The 1:1
The year 1967 was a great time for Pontiac and the GTO. The GOAT
was very similar to the previous model year with only minor changes
made to the front grill pattern, tail light assembly and lower
body trim. Sales figures topped the 80,000 mark and the GTO was
making a definite name for itself on the street and the strip.
Engine options to include the Ram Air package and the HO package
were touting 360 horsepower and were available with the brand new
400 CID engine. Other new available options were front disc brakes
and the “his and hers” shifted transmission. While
the famed tri-power was gone, Pontiac lovers still had plenty to
talk about with the GTO.
Models lovers also have plenty to talk about with the release
of the AMT ERTL MUSCLE 1967 Pontiac GTO. I have fond childhood
memories of building a few of these 67 GOATS in the late 80s and
they were a fun and somewhat easy kit to assemble. I’m anxious
to give it another shot in the mid 2000s, but that review will
be at some point in the future.
The Kit
Engine: The kit has 19 engine pieces and features chromed
valve covers and an open element air cleaner (air cleaner will
fit inside the included Ram Air element) that can be assembled
to create a stock engine. Also included are 8 parts for the optional
blower/injection assembly for builders wishing to modify the stock
appearance of the engine. A two-piece radiator, a firewall and
a battery are included in the kit; no radiator hoses are present.
The tooling from almost 40 years ago doesn’t compare with
the detail of today’s newer Pontiac kits, but it still makes
for a presentable engine compartment.
Interior: The interior has 19 pieces with 10 of them being
for the race version of the kit. The front seat pattern still doesn’t
match the rear pattern and a stock steering wheel is not included
in the kit. The door panels and rear seat are molded into the main
interior piece and have subtle details. The clear front and rear
window plastic is one piece and a chrome rear-view mirror is included
with the kit.
Chassis: The chassis is basically one piece with only the
rear springs and exhaust/rear-end piece separate from it. Lower
control arms are discernable and so are frame and chassis detail
and all of this helps to create an easy to assemble chassis. A
metal axle is used for attachment of the rear wheels and plastic
pegs are included to attach the front wheels.
Wheels/tires: Custom style mag wheels and BF GOODRICH radial
T/A tires are the only options available.
Body: The body has adequate and accurate detail. The age
of this mold requires deepening of the door and trunk-lines, but
flash and mold lines are kept to a minimum on this kit. The front
and rear end are nice to include separate grill inserts and brake
lights.
The stock hood is not offered, but the hood from the XXX kit with
the separate hood scoop rounds out the appearance package. Well
detailed maroon custom body accent decals would be a nice touch
with the right exterior color.
Conclusions
If you want a nice model that is a blast from the past, then this
is the kit! Its 100 or so pieces definitely don’t have the
details of other newly tooled kits like the REVELL 66 GTO and AMT
62 Catalina because the tooling is almost 40 years old. It’s
unfortunate that AMT ERTL does not at least offer the correct front
seats, steering wheel, tires, wheels and hood to make this a nice “stock” kit.
This is basically the XXX kit repackaged with box art depicting
an unavailable steering wheel, hood and wheels. This is an exciting
kit though and a great way to add a custom 67 GTO to your Pontiac
collection.
My sincere thanks to RC2 for this review sample!
Greg Morgan is a member of Front Range Auto Modelers.
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