Maisto Tech Harley Davidson Rc Truck Review 1/6 Scale

Maisto
Maisto brand logo.png
Product type Die-cast model cars
Possessor May Cheong Grouping (1988–pres.)
Country China
Introduced 1988; 34 years ago  (1988) [1]
Markets Worldwide
maisto.com

Maisto is a brand of scale model vehicles introduced and owned by May Cheong Grouping, a Chinese company founded in 1967 in Hong Kong past brothers P.Y. Ngan and Y.C Ngan. The company has too subsidiaries in the United States (based in Fontana, California), France, and People's republic of china.[2] MCG also owns other model car brands such as Italian former company Bburago (acquired avails and right to make in 2006)[three] [4] and Polistil.[v]

The visitor has as well manufactured a number of Tonka products under license from Hasbro. Products under the Maisto brand includes die-cast scale model cars.

Company history [edit]

May Cheong Group
Formerly May Cheong Toy Visitor
Blazon Private
Founded 1967; 55 years ago  (1967)
Headquarters Hong Kong

Key people

Ngan family unit, founders
P. Y. Ngan, CEO
Katherine Ngan (President)
Products Die-cast model cars
Brands
  • Maisto (1988–)
  • Bburago (2006–)[3]
  • Polistil
Subsidiaries
  • Maisto International Inc. (US)
  • Maisto France
Website maycheonggroup.com

The company was established in Hong Kong in 1967 as "May Cheong Toy Visitor" by brothers P.Y. Ngan and Y.C Ngan.[6] Products were initially commercialised nether the "MC Toy" (using the initials of the visitor) brand.[7]

Some of the first MC Toys products were directly copies of Matchbox cars, although the business firm had original designs equally well. Before long later on, European cars were added to its range of products. MC produced European models non made past Matchbox or Hot Wheels, and the make became popular helped by its cheap prices.[6]

In the belatedly 1980s, MC Toys' vehicles increased their qualify, becoming more realistic and accurate to existent models, in contrast with other counterpart companies that produced toy-ike cars.[6] In 1990, the company introduced the "Maisto" make of diecast cars.[1] Through the 1990s, Maisto was considered the US division of Master Toy Co. Ltd. of Thailand with May Cheong being the Kowloon, Hong Kong, subsidiary.[8]

The May Cheong Grouping products are made in China and Thailand.[9] The factories in Communist china and Thailand industry i:12, 1:18, 1:24, 1:25, 1:27, ane:43, 1:31 and 1:64 calibration replicas. About models are officially licensed products, based on popular vehicles. Others, however, are fantastical rod and custom creations more in line with the Hot Wheels formula. The Us warehouse and distribution heart, aka Maisto International, Inc, is located in Fontana, California.

In 2006 the May Cheong Grouping acquired the avails of the famous Italian brand Bburago.[3] Later, the firm also obtained the Polistil name, another well-known Italian scale model manufacturer that had previously gone bankrupt.

Automobiles [edit]

Maisto gained popularity around 1988, mainly competing in one:18 scale with Italian Bburago, Polistil and the more expensive –and often more spotty– Franklin Mint Precision Models. Past 2000, a whole host of companies like Yatming, Ertl, and even Mattel'south Hot Wheels had entered the larger scale 1:18 fray. Especially since Bburago failed (being at present a function of May Cheong itself), no other company overall has been able to compete with Maisto at the larger calibration, except perhaps Jada Toys. Even and so, the 1:18 scale market is not as prevalent every bit it was. Circa 2010, ane:24 is withal popular, just the larger scales have waned in retail stores.

Maisto vehicles of ane/18 calibration commonly have all features open up with nicely appointed engines and interiors. Models have almost perfectly proportioned bodies and commonly have excellently researched detail considering models are mass-produced in the hundreds of thousands. Still, pigment awarding may be too thick or not uniform, and details that should be chrome are often painted silver.[10] Body panels may be uneven, lights unrealistic, and trim rather thick and gaudy.[11] Muscle Machines magazine noted that the 1963 Dodge 330 Hemi was completely devoid of any indication of a gear shift of any type (even push on the dash).[12] Collectors wanting finer crafting in this size must look to AUTOart, CMC, or Exoto at the higher dollar finish of miniature modeling.

1/64 scale Maisto die-cast models are comparable in quality and details to Matchbox, Hot Wheels and Johnny Lightning, but new models in this calibration are not released very frequently. Even some models employ like castings from older Matchbox and Hot Wheels models. Newer lines offer vehicles in more customized themes. One such line is the AllStarz which features custom rims, special paint jobs, lowered break and super upgraded in-car entertainment systems. Another line is Pro Rodz which uses the same themes but consists of archetype American musculus cars. Both lines are in directly competition with 'Jada Toys' 'Dub Metropolis' and 'Big Fourth dimension Muscle' brands that started the 'bling' trends in auto toys.

Around late 2010, Maisto toys sold in Wal-Mart stores took on the proper noun 'Hazard Wheels' on all Maisto packaging with reddish-orange and xanthous golden box and blister pack colors with black trim.

Maisto produces many licensed properties that reflected gimmicky promotional and industry trends. For example, it is an official licensee of Harley-Davidson Motorcycle Visitor. Chrysler is a large user of Maisto for promo models - one example was the offer of three dissimilar versions of the PT Cruiser (stock, sport and panel) made available first to auto journalists, but later sold normally in Walmart and other stores.[13] The brand was popularly seen in Sam's Club until about 2010.

Lines [edit]

Vehicles [edit]

Some Maisto models, fltr (above): Contrivance Super 8 Hemi concept, Ford bus, Cadillac DeVille, Ferrari F50, Porsche 550, Mercedes Benz SL

  • Exclusive Edition- College finish vehicle range featuring extra levels of detail. These include photo-etched badges, extra coats of paint, and effectively painted details in the interior and engine bay
  • Special Edition - Mid-range vehicle replicas. 1:18 scale models are mounted on plastic display stand.
  • Premiere Edition - Vehicle replicas with clear plastic casing over brandish stand. No existent quality difference over Special Edition.
  • Assembly Line - Ready-to-build diecast vehicles. Includes Ferrari models.
  • GT Racing - Replicas of race cars from the Deutsche Tourenwagen Masters (German Touring Machine Championship) and 24 Hours of Le Mans series.
  • AllStars - Calibration replica 'bling' vehicles with lowered break, larger wheels, custom interiors and special pigment jobs. Formerly marketed as Playerz.
  • AllStars Cerise - Target-exclusive lineup, which consists of 100 different models.
  • Pro Rodz - American muscle cars with custom wheels, interior and pigment jobs. Some 1:18 and 1:24 models are as well available as assembly kits.
  • Pro Rodz Pro Street - American musculus cars modified with larger engines and thicker tires for drag racing.
  • TLUGZ - 1:24 scale plastic vehicles with two½" cake character figures.
  • Hummer World - Maisto'south exclusive lineup of Hummer vehicles.
  • Musculus Machines - 1/18,1/24 and 1/64 scale get-go produced by Funline in 1999, then taken over by Maisto. Cartoonish, but accurately detailed rods with swollen wheels and large engines.
  • Show Stoppers - 1:18 scale prepare that includes a towing vehicle, a trailer, and a vehicle being towed.

Motorcycles, bicycles, and aircraft [edit]

  • Motorcycles - Lineup consists of Harley-Davidson official licensed products, MotoGP racers, Vespa scooters, stock motorcycles and the Dodge Tomahawk Concept Cycle.
  • Wild Rides - Custom choppers with matching helmets.
  • Tour de Maisto - i:12 calibration replica bicycles.
  • Fresh Metal - Tailwinds - 1:87 dice-bandage celebrated and mod-era armed services helicopters and airplanes. Plastic stand with aircraft name included. Also some ~1:550 scale diecast airliners.
  • Tow and Show - 1:xviii scale motorcycle and motorcycle trailer sets. Consists of Harley-Davidson official licensed motorcycles.

Railroad [edit]

  • Maisto On Track - A diversity of railroad engines and rail cars in N scale.
  • Maisto Power On Track - .

Smaller scale [edit]

  • Tonka Classic - Replicas of classic Tonka vehicles.
  • Chuck & Friends - three" drawing vehicles that are part of the Tonka Collection.
  • Fresh Metallic - Power Racers - four.5" die-cast vehicles with pull-dorsum motors.
  • Gascaps - Super-deformed vehicles, similar to Jada Toys' Chub City line.
  • Need for Speed: Surreptitious - Promotional die-cast for Need for Speed: Undercover game. Each machine has a cheat lawmaking to unlock the in-game version of the car.

Radio-controlled vehicles [edit]

  • Custom R/C Shop - Radio-controlled versions of AllStars and Pro Rodz vehicles.
  • Street Troopers: Mobilized Attack Vehicles - R/C vehicles that can transform into assault modes and fire foam projectiles.
  • Monster Migrate RC - R/C vehicles with hard plastic tires and 4 bike drive, optimized for drifting.

See also [edit]

  • Bburago
  • Polistil

References [edit]

  • "Review: Maisto Bugatti EB110 GT and Jaguar XJ220". Diecast X Change - Diecast Auto Forum. March 27, 2010.

Footnotes

  1. ^ a b Maisto brand on MCG website
  2. ^ Almost us on MCG website
  3. ^ a b c Bburago brand history
  4. ^ [http://world wide web.motorabilia.biz/Bburago.htm Milan, Italy (February, 2006) MAY CHEONG ACQUIRES Assets OF BBURAGO
  5. ^ May Cheong on GoliathGames
  6. ^ a b c "The History of Maisto Diecast Cars" on Capital letter Diecast Garage, Aug 9, 2013
  7. ^ Maisto history on Hobbytalk.com
  8. ^ Johnson, Dana (1998). Collector'south Guide to Diecast Toys and Scale Models (2nd ed.). Padukah KY: Collector Books (Schroeder Publishing). p. 119. ISBN9781574320411.
  9. ^ Rixon, Peter (2005). Miller'south Collecting Diecast Vehicles. London: Mitchell Beazley (Octopus Publishing Group). p. 64. ISBN9781845330309.
  10. ^ Strohl, Daniel (January 2005). "Small-scale Cars: 1/18th-scale 1953 Studebaker Starliner". Hemmings Classic Car. No. 4. p. 74.
  11. ^ "Maisto Catalogue 2010". Scribd.
  12. ^ Strohl, Daniel (December 2004). "Mini Muscle: i/18th-scale 1963 Contrivance 330". Hemmings Musculus Machines. No. 15. p. 14.
  13. ^ Doty, Dennis (August 2000). "1965: The Year in Miniature (Collectible Calibration Motorcar Section)". Collectible Automobile. Vol. 17, no. 2. p. 88.

External links [edit]

  • Official website Edit this at Wikidata

burtonoffected1959.blogspot.com

Source: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maisto

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