vincegamer
Active member
Does anyone know of a source of nice modern model or toy cars (preferably of the sports car and sedan type) that are in scale for 25-28mm minis?
In Britain, O gauge equipment is produced at a scale of 1:43, which is 7 mm to the foot (using the common British practice of modelling in metric prototypes originally produced using Imperial measurements). It\'s often called 7 mm scale for this reason.
The British 1:43 rail scale gave birth to series of die cast cars and model commercial vehicles of the same scale which gradually grew in popularity and spread to France, the rest of Europe and North America at the same time that the rail models were becoming less popular.
Originally posted by airhead
Now if you take that space marine off of his base, that vette looks a bit big on him - most 6 foot guys have a hard time fitting in a vette, let alone in power armor.
Best I can do is post a pic with some minis from various manufacturers next to a 1:43 scale 1998 Ford Crown Victoria \"National Park Service\" police car.Originally posted by supervike
I was really wondering about the 1:43 scale since and how it would work with minis. I won\'t be using that one for sure.
Heightwise you\'re pretty much correct. Problem is that several figure ranges use a non realistic proportion (less than 1:7 body:head) which makes a figure look a tad short and wide. So, if you put it next to a 1:60 scale vehicle it may look too small while with a 1:48 it looks ok. GW is one of them. I remember something about a company calculating with 1:60 for height and 1:48 for width or something like that. Put a thunderbolt mountain figure next to a 1:60 scale vehicle will give a different impression altogether.Originally posted by airhead
Dang - all this time I thought we were at 1:60 (1 inch = 5 feet for us non-metrics)
Well, it took a while, but I finally got around to the pic.Originally posted by vincegamer
Best I can do is post a pic with some minis from various manufacturers next to a 1:43 scale 1998 Ford Crown Victoria \"National Park Service\" police car.