by Vintage 1/24 » Tue Aug 05, 2014 7:22 am
Thanks for the comments.
ShotgunDave:: Like Florida Slotter noted, the 401 was not a factory deal for the Gremlin. They did come available with 304cid V8s though. The Hornet had a bigger engined variant running a 360 cid (SC 360 Hornet), and in earlier years there was the 390 cid Rambler (Hurst SC rambler) and of course the 390 powered two-seater AMXs. The interesting thing about the AMC modern V8s was they were all based off the same block. So the 290-304-343-360-390-401 were all dimensionally the same so it was an easy chore to create a 401 powered variant - if the car was V8 equipped from the factory.
Florida_Slotter: Yeah those AMC sixes were amazing. Back in the day most us only cared about the V8s, but that Six was very sturdy and even ran at the Indy 500 in 1978 (with 25 lbs of boost) - Chrysler Jeep kept making them until 2006 - a 42 year run, having been introduced in 1964!
dreinecke: The Pacer is an odd duck - the passenger door was longer than the driver's door! I guess if you squint you can almost see a tall Porsche 928. When they recently re-released the Pacer Annual Kit I thought it would make for an amusing build to rip up on the track. For a race car I think I like the flat hood, shorter grille '77 model a little better than the taller grille '78 style.
TuscoTodd: Thanks - I think the license plate generator is a good tool for modelers, builders etc. Probably should have started another thread just for that. The AMC Pacer is not exactly a subject line that will get a lot of views... anyway the ACME license plate maker is really cool - covering all years and states - very useful. You don't need decal paper of anything, just print it to a color printer - any paper really - maybe put a piece of tape on top to protect it and a dab of glue behind it, and you can add a nice detailed touch to whatever kits you are working on.
Again thanks for the positive comments.