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1962 Ferrari 250 GTO Techno-Promo
Mint: | CMC |
Year: | 1962 |
Make: | Ferrari |
Model: | 250 GTO Techno-Promo |
Color: | Unfinished |
Scale: | 1:18 |
Year Released: | 2016 |
Limited to: | 500 |
Part #: | M-173 |
Issue Price: | $321.00 |
Shipping: | Unknown |
More Info:
I believe it is important to read the description below, which was copied word for word from the CMC site; I found it to be both informational and exciting, you decide.
Our GTO is a metal model primarily built of zinc alloy. Working with this material, one is constrained by the limits that it sets to the minimal thickness and die-casting of a complex contour. This entails that we figure out a way to capture a sophisticated form faithfully and still uphold the benchmark quality of CMC
Indeed, common sense has it that sophisticated body forms do not lend themselves to conventional zinc die-casting unless compromises are made in regard to wall thickness and contour quality. But people at CMC found this view disagreeable and resolved to break new ground.
Following the new approach developed at CMC, a sophisticated body form is to be dissected into sections that allow for precision casting. If a section is of a particularly complex shape, certain parts may have to be cast separately or made of other metal before the section can be fitted together. To join the parts, gluing or soldering may do the job, but we opt for a more stable and lasting solution — use of screws. With this technique, it is possible to manufacture the top and bottom parts of a body individually and then have them joined as a whole. The same process applies to the making of the front and rear ends of this replica.
Now consider the air vents and funnels behind the front and rear sanders. How do we manage to assemble these independently-made pieces seamlessly? Once the parts are fitted into place, the crevices, including the screw heads, are filled with a special putty before they are carefully sanded, polished, and leveled. A test of form stability will be performed to finish the production process. The result is a flawless, perfectly shaped contour surface with a wall thickness in the desired range of specifications.
This is what we call "innate value" -- a painstaking craftsmanship that becomes invisible in the finished product, but contributes significantly to its acquisition of a flawless beauty and unmatched quality.
Please visit the CMC web site for more information and ordering. And be sure to mention that JSS Software sent you while you're at it.