Tue Oct 07, 2014 5:17 pm
Tue Oct 07, 2014 6:32 pm
tom d. friedman wrote:that can't be a topping made model, they were long out of business when the warthog was created. still worth a nice buck though!!
Tue Oct 07, 2014 8:02 pm
JohnB wrote:tom d. friedman wrote:that can't be a topping made model, they were long out of business when the warthog was created. still worth a nice buck though!!
They were made by Precise, the successor firm to Topping.
The current Topping still has spare parts for the A-10 model.
Scroll down this page:
http://www.precisemodelsllc.com/Pages/M ... rSale.aspx
I have two A-10 models and some other stuff from my A-10 days...
Tue Oct 07, 2014 8:37 pm
Tue Oct 07, 2014 8:59 pm
tom d. friedman wrote:I always thought that revell models bought all of topping's molds, rights, etc.
Wed Oct 08, 2014 4:41 pm
Snake45 wrote:tom d. friedman wrote:Back in the '70s, MicroScale marketed a few unassembled desktop promo airplane kits, but I don't know who made them originally. I don't think it was Topping. Two that I have are the A2D Dark Shark (turbo Skyraider, basically), and XF-92. I think there were a half-dozen or so offered in all.
Wed Oct 08, 2014 4:43 pm
Snake45 wrote: Dad has a C-119 that Mom has managed to break most of the prop blades off of in dusting, over the years. Not sure I wanna spend $10 apiece to replace those. I didn't pay $10 for most of the whole model airplane kits in my stash. He has a C-123 in the same condition.
Fri Dec 19, 2014 5:39 pm
armyjunk2 wrote:We can thank folks like Leo Polaski of Northport for taking the time to scan around 4500 Grumman and Republic photos for us. He must have spent days and days doing this. If you want to save history you have to do it yourself, waiting for someone else to do it usually doesn't work.
http://tinyurl.com/yz6pxmh
Sat Jan 03, 2015 2:48 pm
Sat Jan 03, 2015 3:04 pm
Tue Jan 13, 2015 1:05 pm
Tue Jan 13, 2015 3:37 pm
Thu Jan 15, 2015 4:03 pm
barnbstormer wrote:Back in 1987, while at my desk in Riverhead, I opened the Long Island Newsday newspaper, and saw a large photo of a huge dumpster filled to overflowing, with the archives being thrown out of the closed Republic buildings. They mentioned that the material was all destined for the landfills.
I contacted someone-I forget who, as per the newspaper's reference mentioned. and volunteered to pay the disposal costs that they would obviously have to pay, for loading and transporting dumpsters to the land fill, *IF, the dumpters could be loaded and emptied at MY Riverhead location, instead of the landfill. They replied that since I was not a recognized library or archive, they could not agree to do this, and it all went to the DUMP, instead!!!!
There is a fascinating article in June 2013 Air & Space magazine, of how a very frustrated museum curator managed to save ONE document from the doomed archive.
I DID manage to collect and save numerous other important aviation company (and history maker's) archives, over the past 45 years. Some very important ones are now in major public aviation museums, intact.