Back in the early 1990's Revell molded the 1986-1989 Roush Mustang, that was driven in both the IMSA GTO series as well as the SCCA Trans AM series with different drivers for different sponsored cars. This kit started out as the Black JPS Mustang, but I decided that I wanted to do the Folger's IMSA GTO sponsored car. Bill Elliot and Ricky Rudd drove this Roush Ford Mustang to a 5th place finish at the 1986 12-Hours of Sebring. What makes this even more interesting is that both drivers are Nascar stock drivers, and were excellent road racing drivers as well who dominated the then 2 road races per season.
The Mustang is what is commonly known as a Silhouette car, where only the body shell looks like the actual street car, and is bolted to a custom tube chassis.

Revell has chosen to mold the shell in two parts: the front clip and the rest of the body. This makes sense if you want to build and add a little detail to the engine/transmission/front suspension. The rear clip is molded to the center section, but the rear window gives the viewer a pretty good view. I've decided to build the kit with the front clip separate for this reason.
Revell has done a very nice job in reproducing the tube chassis. They've also used the same exact chassis and suspension for their Camaro series cars, which just a different engine/transmission. Fortunately for me, I've got one of them also in my stash with Slixx decals for it.
I've decided not to follow the kit instructions, and instead opted to paint, decal, detail paint, and gloss coat the body shells 1st.
I bought the kit on ebay and it was opened and tinkered with, but it looks like all the parts are there. The body shells were really scratched up, so I had to spend considerable time sanding & polishing them to get ready for primer.
The primer coats are with my favorite primer: Mr. Hobby's #1500 thinned with their #400 leveling thinner.



I gave the primer a full day to cure, then a easy rub down with Tamiya 's #3,000 sponge wet.
Next up was the color coats. My usual go to paint companies: Gravity and Zero really have nothing listed for American road racing, so I found and tried MCW paints that has the Folger's Red after talking to the owner, Mike. The paint needs to be applied over a gray primer, so that's another reason I went the primer route I did. MCW paints are true auto Lacquers and are pre-thinned to the nth degree. The paint comes in a 2 oz bottle, and I used more then 80% of it for the two shells and the sides of the chassis pan. But the coverage is what counts.


Next up is the prep work to start decaling.
Joel