Showing posts with label colonnade. Show all posts
Showing posts with label colonnade. Show all posts

Wednesday, April 24, 2013

Wouldn't You Really Rather Have A Buick?: 1977 Buick Regal Coupe


Details are scant on this listing, and the picture is poor-quality, but if the mechanicals, body, top and interior are any good, here is a great beginner's classic, vintage daily driver or lowrider fodder. The car has a Chevy 350 V8, rebuilt transmission & carburetor and is said to run great.

The A-Special and Colonnade body GM midsize cars from 1973-77 are only now starting to be recognized as classics, and are a great alternative to a modern or semi-modern sedan (Taurus, Camry, Avalon, Passat, Intrepid, Sonata, etc.) for a daily driver if you can put up with rear-wheel-drive, fewer creature comforts, somewhat worse spare-parts availability and lower fuel mileage.


Wednesday, January 9, 2013

Diecast Car Review: Corgi "Kojak" 1970s Buick Regal (1999 issue)





   

This casting was a 1999 partial retool of a classic 1970s Corgi casting, with added details, and manufactured for collectors. It originally retailed for $36.99, but has been on markdown status at my local hobby store, Eugene Toy & Hobby, for at least two years and was purchased on January 9, 2013 for $18.59. 

Onto the review... proportions are nearly spot-on except for a highly arched roof with no rear vent windows. Tampo details and cast-in details are as much as one could want, save for no detail to the bumper guard rubber and no detail on the stamped rear taillight trim. There is also no glass in the left rear door. But it is a retool of a 1970s Corgi toy car, not a Franklin Mint or other high-end collector diecast, so that is excusable. 8/10.

Interior leaves a lot to be desired, but again... par for the course on 1970s Corgis. The seat and seat upholstery designs are reasonably accurate, the cast-in door panels on the opening front doors are accurate, but the dashboard is quite crude, the steering wheel the typical 70s Corgi four-spoke black plastic piece, and no door panel detail at all for the rear seat area. 6/10.

Fit and finish are first-class and are everything expected of a Corgi diecast. 10/10.

The less said about the included hand-painted white-metal figure of Detective Theo Kojak, the better. Homies minifigures are well-suited to this scale of Malaise Era American diecast and are fairly easy to find (I bought a huge bag of them for 99 cents at Goodwill just before Christmas 2012)

All in all, a decent little casting, and just about the only medium-scale casting of a Colonnade-body GM car available, but be prepared to pay big money for one online, these are not normally available in stores over 10 years after they were issued.