E.L.Moore was an author I always looked forward to seeing in the mags back then growing up. He was very creative and seemed to enjoy his creations. So many have become "standards" among modelers over the years like the beautiful plastic kits by Revell. You couldn't find a layout in those days without several of them. Thanks for informing some newer modelers to Mr. Moore and his legacy. Nice job on the kit.
Thank you, Roger. You're right, I think we've been influenced by him more than we know. I also want to do more research on the old Revell kits, I had built a number of them back in the 60s.
@@CassidysWorkshop No, I never did. As I aged, my interested shifting to mid-80’s Chessie System WV mine shifters in HO Scale. Not a lot of room for a brewery! Maybe a moonshine still!
The plastic injection moulds for the 'Brewery' were Made and held by POLA who manufactured in Germany. (Pola is now a part of Faller). There was an additional boxing for Playcraft a UK distributor, they were very original(?) in their numbering and used 806 the same as the Pola part number.
Thanks for the trip down memory lane. I remember seeing E. L. Moore's articles in Model Railroader, but I had no idea that he was so prolific. And it goes without saying, I am *always* a fan of taking an old model out of the box and getting it ready for the layout! Nice job.
I built one years ago - I think it was the kit that was sold by TYCO. I took the wood barrels, sanded the sides smooth, put the barrel lids on upside down, and painted them silver to represent modern metal beer kegs.
Cool, neat idea. Do you remember if your version had molded-in bracing for the legs of the wooden deck? I'm trying to find which one had that. Thanks for watching.
@@CassidysWorkshop - I don't recall my brewery model having the diagonal truss bracing on the platform legs. I still have it somewhere, so I'll look for it and verify if it has bracing.
Mr. Lowe, I'm so glad you said it was OK to use parts of your blog, and that you found my video. I wish I could have given more information about Mr. Moore, but I hope that those interested will visit your blog for more about a legend of our hobby. Thank you for your research and for sharing it. 👍
Another first rate job. Interestingly the Heinz pickle factory is pretty much the same except clapboard instead of brickwork. The late Art Curran wrote a booklet on kitbashing structures and two of these kits were combined to make a completely different structure. I’ve got 2 on my layout. I wouldn’t be surprised if POLA in Germany made all the pieces all along and TYCO, Model Power, etc just ordered a certain number of kits and had them put in their own boxes
Thank you, Jim. Art was right, these are great for kitbashing. I think I read in Mr. Lowe's book that Pola was involved in the design or creation of the first kits put out by AHM. And likely the ones for Tyco and Model Power. But I have seen a couple small differences in them, I wonder how those come about. The more I read about these the more questions I have.
Thank you. I see you did a kitbash of one of the AHM kits. I watched the first episode, I'll sub and go watch the rest. I respect seeing one of these old kits brought into the 21st Century.
@@CassidysWorkshop Thanks, I started out with the idea of kitbashing a Tony Koester model then went a different direction. I love these old kits, it's what i had when i was a kid.
@@hoscalemodeltrains1221 Same here, except I remember the old Revell kits more. I think I did a bunch of them. I spend most of my time building craftsman and lasercut kits, but these old plastic ones can be fun.
Thanks. Yeah, I've done some old ones, both plastic and craftsman kits, where you had to almost figure out how to put it together yourself. And that's OK, if you have a photo or drawing showing what both sides should look like. Heck, some old wood kits all you get is a photo. Which can be enough depending on the kit.
We're they stealing his ideas or did he get paid to design these buildings? Today you still see manufacturers, Walters for example, using the same or nearly the same sprues to make a number of different kits. The upside is it lends itself to kitbashing.
No, they weren't stealing them. I don't know all the arrangements yet, I'm still reading some of the entries that James Lowe made, and his book has some of the communication between E.L. Moore, the magazine editors, and the manufacturers. And yes, you're right, these are all great for kitbashing. Thanks for watching.
No, those other manufacturers weren't stealing the designs. AHM manufactured them first, but as time went on the tooling was sold to other to other companies. Over the years some of the kits changed hands several times.
@@30Squares Pola in Germany were responsible for making many/most of the plastic kits for AHM and later Model Power and Tyco, as well as for the UK Playcraft. The cardboard boxes (and instruction sheets) appear to have been the responsibility of the distributing companies using their own marketing sources and individual styles. I can imagine crates of sprues crossing the pond and then being matched into kits then put into the boxes in the US.
@@warminghurst Thank you for the clarification. In my eBook I discussed the events that lead to certain E L Moore projects becoming plastic kits, but had no information on the business aspects of the production of those kits. Your information helps to put the whole story together.
E.L.Moore was an author I always looked forward to seeing in the mags back then growing up. He was very creative and seemed to enjoy his creations. So many have become "standards" among modelers over the years like the beautiful plastic kits by Revell. You couldn't find a layout in those days without several of them. Thanks for informing some newer modelers to Mr. Moore and his legacy. Nice job on the kit.
Thank you, Roger. You're right, I think we've been influenced by him more than we know. I also want to do more research on the old Revell kits, I had built a number of them back in the 60s.
When I was a kid, I always wanted the TYCO brewery kit!
@@clearlycaribbeanreb2895 Thanks for watching. I know the feeling, I always wanted the Revell Switch Tower. Did you ever get it?
@@CassidysWorkshop No, I never did. As I aged, my interested shifting to mid-80’s Chessie System WV mine shifters in HO Scale. Not a lot of room for a brewery! Maybe a moonshine still!
@@clearlycaribbeanreb2895 😄 Sounds like a good switch. 👍
Small kits are great slump busters! Very nice!
Yep, thanks Gary.
The plastic injection moulds for the 'Brewery' were Made and held by POLA who manufactured in Germany. (Pola is now a part of Faller).
There was an additional boxing for Playcraft a UK distributor, they were very original(?) in their numbering and used 806 the same as the Pola part number.
Thanks for the trip down memory lane. I remember seeing E. L. Moore's articles in Model Railroader, but I had no idea that he was so prolific. And it goes without saying, I am *always* a fan of taking an old model out of the box and getting it ready for the layout! Nice job.
Thanks, Richard. I wish I had read more of his articles back then, but I'm catching up as I can.
I built one years ago - I think it was the kit that was sold by TYCO. I took the wood barrels, sanded the sides smooth, put the barrel lids on upside down, and painted them silver to represent modern metal beer kegs.
Cool, neat idea. Do you remember if your version had molded-in bracing for the legs of the wooden deck? I'm trying to find which one had that. Thanks for watching.
@@CassidysWorkshop - I don't recall my brewery model having the diagonal truss bracing on the platform legs. I still have it somewhere, so I'll look for it and verify if it has bracing.
Nice job Greg! Thanks for history going to look up E.L. Moore.
Thanks, Gary. I appreciate it.
Your model looks great! And thanks for mentioning my eBook on E. L. Moore. He was a fascinating model railroader and an inspiration to many.
Mr. Lowe, I'm so glad you said it was OK to use parts of your blog, and that you found my video. I wish I could have given more information about Mr. Moore, but I hope that those interested will visit your blog for more about a legend of our hobby. Thank you for your research and for sharing it. 👍
Another first rate job. Interestingly the Heinz pickle factory is pretty much the same except clapboard instead of brickwork. The late Art Curran wrote a booklet on kitbashing structures and two of these kits were combined to make a completely different structure. I’ve got 2 on my layout. I wouldn’t be surprised if POLA in Germany made all the pieces all along and TYCO, Model Power, etc just ordered a certain number of kits and had them put in their own boxes
Thank you, Jim. Art was right, these are great for kitbashing. I think I read in Mr. Lowe's book that Pola was involved in the design or creation of the first kits put out by AHM. And likely the ones for Tyco and Model Power. But I have seen a couple small differences in them, I wonder how those come about. The more I read about these the more questions I have.
It seems the name POLA was often molded on the building's base of many AHM structures.
Well done
Thank you. I see you did a kitbash of one of the AHM kits. I watched the first episode, I'll sub and go watch the rest. I respect seeing one of these old kits brought into the 21st Century.
@@CassidysWorkshop Thanks, I started out with the idea of kitbashing a Tony Koester model then went a different direction. I love these old kits, it's what i had when i was a kid.
@@hoscalemodeltrains1221 Same here, except I remember the old Revell kits more. I think I did a bunch of them. I spend most of my time building craftsman and lasercut kits, but these old plastic ones can be fun.
LIONEL MADE THOSE KITS TO FOR HO SCALE.
Thanks, Jeff. I'll have to look into their kit as well.
I've built several old kits by IHC, AHM etc. and the instructions are often pretty bad. Some of them look practically hand-drawn. Great job, though.
Thanks. Yeah, I've done some old ones, both plastic and craftsman kits, where you had to almost figure out how to put it together yourself. And that's OK, if you have a photo or drawing showing what both sides should look like. Heck, some old wood kits all you get is a photo. Which can be enough depending on the kit.
That would make a nice pottery factory or a custom iron works or a craft beer brewery for today's ''hipsters''
Thank you, that's some of the fun of building models is thinking what they might be in real life.
@@CassidysWorkshop Thank you very much for responding to my comment, Much appreciated.
@@michaelquinones-lx6ks Thanks for watching. 👍
We're they stealing his ideas or did he get paid to design these buildings?
Today you still see manufacturers, Walters for example, using the same or nearly the same sprues to make a number of different kits. The upside is it lends itself to kitbashing.
No, they weren't stealing them. I don't know all the arrangements yet, I'm still reading some of the entries that James Lowe made, and his book has some of the communication between E.L. Moore, the magazine editors, and the manufacturers. And yes, you're right, these are all great for kitbashing. Thanks for watching.
No, those other manufacturers weren't stealing the designs. AHM manufactured them first, but as time went on the tooling was sold to other to other companies. Over the years some of the kits changed hands several times.
@@30Squares Pola in Germany were responsible for making many/most of the plastic kits for AHM and later Model Power and Tyco, as well as for the UK Playcraft. The cardboard boxes (and instruction sheets) appear to have been the responsibility of the distributing companies using their own marketing sources and individual styles.
I can imagine crates of sprues crossing the pond and then being matched into kits then put into the boxes in the US.
@@warminghurst Thank you for the clarification. In my eBook I discussed the events that lead to certain E L Moore projects becoming plastic kits, but had no information on the business aspects of the production of those kits. Your information helps to put the whole story together.
Looks like $50 minimum to me,
@@BrianRochon 😆 Thanks, Brian. We'll see.