Icons of Scale: The Coolest Chevy Model-Car Kits of All Time
Plus some blooper and blunder kits released along the way.
For enthusiasts of a certain age, building a model-car kit—or multiple kits—was a rite of passage. But regardless of when you were born, it's a fact that many car fanatics from Detroit designers to local mechanics still slap together scale versions of their favorite cars. They're often a first point of entry into enthusiasm for a brand, and they're also an excellent way to exercise car-tinkering instincts when we're otherwise unable to do so. I've been a model-car fanatic for nearly half a century, and my very first model car kit was a Chevy (as mentioned below). Though I've built models of plenty of other machinery, here I've conjured a humble list of what I consider to be the five most influential Chevy-themed model kits. Read on to rekindle fond memories, learn about some models you've perhaps never heard of before, or maybe even trigger a model-car purchase.
Badman '55 Chevy Gasser by Monogram
As if its bright-yellow plastic parts, Boss 302-inspired "vertagonal" fender graphics, mile-long traction arms, front beam axle, wheelie bars, and chromed in-grille Moon tank weren't enough to bend my 10-year-old mind when I first saw it in 1974, the 1:24-scale Badman gasser's key features were its translucent red windows and hood scoop. Taken together, the finished kit tickles the retinas without the need for paint.
Like most Monogram custom car kits of the early 1970s, the Badman was designed by Tom Daniel, one of the team that "put the hot in Hot Wheels" a few years earlier at Mattel. Though mature eyes now see the kit's many inaccuracies—its 6-71 supercharged V-8 is connected to an incorrect three-speed manual transmission and the "396" engine has conjoined exhaust ports like a small-block—none of it takes away from the Badman's overall cool factor. I've purchased at least 10 of them over the years.
The original box art (on right in the top photo) featured brightly colored illustrations with a fictional Winternationals cover showdown against another '55. Around 1977, kit photographs replaced the box art illustrations as President Jimmy Carter's administration bolstered truth-in-advertising laws. The goal was to crack down on misleading packaging in toys and other items targeted at kids. Moving forward, kit makers were forced to show the actual contents of the box—for better or worse—thus the photographic depiction on the newer box that's on the left.


















