1/24 Willys Jeep MB "80th Year Anniversary"
SKU
Ita3635
Out of Stock
RUBBER TYRES - COLOR INSTRUCTIONS SHEET

In 1940, after World War II had broken out, the US general staff ordered various factories to design a light multi-purpose vehicle with all-wheel drive. The American Bantam Company, Willys Overland, and Ford Motor Co. competed with each other. Willys prototype was chosen, which, after an initial run of 1500 vehicles, went into mass production at the beginning of 1941 and reached a total output of 640.000 units out of which 277.000 pieces were produced by Ford under a licensing agreement. This shows that the Jeep was the most widely produced light vehicle of the war industry during World War II.

Scale 1:24

What's in the Box:
Plastic sprues and decals, 5x rubber tyres

Box Dimensions: 34.5x4.8x24.2cm

Description

Details

RUBBER TYRES - COLOR INSTRUCTIONS SHEET In 1940, after World War II had broken out, the US general staff ordered various factories to design a light multi-purpose vehicle with all-wheel drive. The American Bantam Company, Willys Overland, and Ford Motor Co. competed with each other. Willys prototype was chosen, which, after an initial run of 1500 vehicles, went into mass production at the beginning of 1941 and reached a total output of 640.000 units out of which 277.000 pieces were produced by Ford under a licensing agreement. This shows that the Jeep was the most widely produced light vehicle of the war industry during World War II. Scale 1:24 What's in the Box: Plastic sprues and decals, 5x rubber tyres Box Dimensions: 34.5x4.8x24.2cm
Additional Information

Additional Information

Subheading Text No
Short Description RUBBER TYRES - COLOR INSTRUCTIONS SHEET In 1940, after World War II had broken out, the US general staff ordered various factories to design a light multi-purpose vehicle with all-wheel drive. The American Bantam Company, Willys Overland, and Ford Motor Co. competed with each other. Willys prototype was chosen, which, after an initial run of 1500 vehicles, went into mass production at the beginning of 1941 and reached a total output of 640.000 units out of which 277.000 pieces were produced by Ford under a licensing agreement. This shows that the Jeep was the most widely produced light vehicle of the war industry during World War II. Scale 1:24 What's in the Box: Plastic sprues and decals, 5x rubber tyres Box Dimensions: 34.5x4.8x24.2cm