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Bryan,I agree about the wheels on the pre-production samples. If they don't improve them on the production models, they should be rather easy to change out with wheels from Trainworx.
The 1974 Buick Estates Wagons are now available at hobby shops/online etailers. The models capture the look of a full-size American station wagon before Detroit started downsizing their full-sized cars. The prototype was 231.1 inches long!
I recall from my college student days that my theater lighting prof had a late 60s Pontiac (IIRC) wagon that he bought because with the back seat folded down, you could load several 4x8 sheets of plywood, lay them flat and close the tail gate. Nowadays, you can't do that with many pick ups, much less station wagons.
What surprised the lumberyard loader was putting 8-foot lumber in a Geo Metro hatchback - and closing the hatch. I had to lay the front seat back, fold the back seat back down, and stick the lumber into the foot space under the dash, but it could haul quite a few 2x4s and 2x6s.
My '93 Caprice wagon could fit a 4 x 8 if you put the front seat all the way up and zero reclined. It was a marketing feature in the sales brochure. Really nice family vehicle with a V8 engine. I bought it for kids safety (vs. a mini-van). I'm sure somebody could figure out how to roll one of those but it would have been really, really hard.
If they look like molasses-covered crude-looking models, I'll pass. At the prices they charge, CMW needs to start producing better-looking vehicles (like Kato, Tomox, Wiking, etc.)
Hmmm, this conjured up some movie memories.My cousin Vinny (metallic mint green) and vacation. (Similar looking Station wagon) (Attachment Link) (Attachment Link)
It has been reported that five Trucksters were built for the movie and the whereabouts of the original cars is currently unknown.
An original wagon went on the auction block at a 2013 Mecum auction with no bites on its $35,000 price tag. The same wagon was later snatched up from Hemmings for nearly $40,000.
Achieving a final bid of $91,000, lot number 375 at Barrett-Jackson's Collector Car Auction in West Palm Beach Florida on April 12, 2019, was a replica Truckster that was based upon a 1981 Ford LTD Country Squire.