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Airfix Austin Maxi 1500 1/32 scale (M 304 C)


ARfan

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Something I've wanted to do for a while; build a 1/32 scale Airfix Austin Maxi. Managed to source a complete, unbuilt kit in original box from auction. Finally accomplished it. Took me a few weeks, just doing small sections at a time. Followed the instructions to the letter. After carefully detaching, bagging and numbering each part from the sprues, I then primed and painted them individually before assembling with poly cement. /media/tinymce_upload/778bc332023b8bb42fa2cf38b946de95.JPGNot exactly an easy kit to do but all came together well in the end and I'm pleased with the result.

Pattern No: M 304 C

Made in England. Released, I believe, in 1971.

Austin Maxi 1500 (pre-facelift, cable change model) 

The colour and trim options for the very early Maxis were, as follows:

Tartan Red with Black interior

Blue Royale with Galleon Blue interior

El Paso Beige with Tan interior

Fawn Brown with Tan interior

Conaught Green with Tan interior

Porcelain Green with Porcelain Green interior

and

Cumulus Grey with Galleon Blue interior

I like all the above options so after much deliberation, decided on Fawn Brown with Tan interior. My model is a replica of a real pre-facelift Austin Maxi from 1969/70. With permission, I've used the same registration number as well: BYN 457H.

I'm told that this was one of the first brand new Maxis, released into the car showrooms.

I hope Airfix release the Maxi as a 1/32 scale kit again. If they could do highly accurate and detailed things like this in 1971, then they can certainly do it today.

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  • 2 weeks later...

Hi ARfan

Very interesting set of photos and a good read. Another good British idea that didn't seem to go anywhere. Only the British could do a Brown car and expect it to sell, you model really shows the retro style of the original car.

Thanks for posting, and hopefully we'll be seeing a few more cars in the near future.

Remember we do this for fun                       John the Pom

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Hi ARfan

Very interesting set of photos and a good read. Another good British idea that didn't seem to go anywhere. Only the British could do a Brown car and expect it to sell, you model really shows the retro style of the original car.

Thanks for posting, and hopefully we'll be seeing a few more cars in the near future.

Remember we do this for fun                       John the Pom

Well, a bloke who lived near me bought a "hearing aid beige" Nissan Bluebird (U11 series) with a bodykit!

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@Gordon @Ratch - I don't know which way you searched, but the "registration database" will only show up active registrations. For example, I think "JAG 1" will show as being on a "Jaguar D-Type" (well-known racing car which was road registered with this number in the 1950s). "JAQ 1" may well show on a Jaguar Motors registered car, "THE 911S" might show as a Porsche UK plate (I'm deliberately picking plates that were last heard of by me on famous and/or company owned vehicles).

 

Checking the DVLA "plates for sale" portal might show up "presently unallocated plates", such as maybe "R4 TCH"?

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the "registration database" will only show up active registrations

That's what I suspected. I was searching for SMV 906, the registration on my dad's old Rover. Obviously they do not retain historical data, so the Maxi Reg BYN 457H won't come up either.

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@Gordon @Ratch - I don't know which way you searched, but the "registration database" will only show up active registrations. 

I don't know that's entirely accurate? I use 'Check if a vehicle is taxed', a Government website, and have found an old H registration car (that is, the 1960s H) and it found it correctly, saying that there is no MOT and untaxed since 1982, which would pretty much tie in accurately to my knowledge. That said I tried a 1960s G registration and there was no information at all. Another K and R registration (1970s) were also correctly identified. So I think this particular website can query its database at far back as H though no presumably earlier. Whether or not those cars or plates still exist I don't know but the website also nots SORN and I can't beleive that the cars I have tried all exist still. That said I concur, the Maxi plate wasn't found on the database; but I wonder, could that be because it never existed?

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"Over 300 kits" according to that complaints slip.  A quck count on the website (simply adding the total at the bottom of each category page i.e not ignoring out of stock and double counting items which appear in more than on category - eg starter kits) gets to about 187.

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  • 2 years later...

Wow, it looks like a real Austin Maxi!  😆

 

I love the engine under the bonnet. It looks good.

 

I wonder if in real life, an Austin Maxi was registered with the registration of 'BYN 457H'?

 

GNR-Gordon-4

Thank you. Yes, they are great kits and very interesting to do.

To answer your question; yes, this was indeed a real Maxi from 1969/70. BYN 457H was the actual number plate. 

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