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Kitmaster P3 - Royal Scot Set. Rarest of the rare?
The Club Secretary - Steve Knight - gives you his guidance
on how to value your kit.
So, you might have a couple of old Kitmaster kits in the loft.
What should you do? Sell them and book a Caribbean holiday? Or perhaps just
hope that they fetch enough to lay your hands on that Bachmann shunter you've
always wanted. This is where you find out if your personal stash of plastic
is a pile of junk, or a pile of cash-in-waiting.
The table below is arranged firstly in order of scarcity and
then by value. The research for this has come from detailed records of transactions
among Kitmaster Collectors Club members world-wide over the last eight years.
The scarcity index reflects not the total number of kits in circulation, but
the difficulty of finding them in mint condition. There are many Pullman power
cars around, for example, which have been started.
The value index groups kits into broad bands for valuation
purposes. You can say that if a kit is offered at a price above this band, it
would need to be in exceptional condition and probable still in the acetate
wrapper.
The broad bands indicated here encompass the majority of transactions
logged, but in any set of data such as this, some transactions will fall outside
the range shown. That, however, does not invalidate the list as a means of establishing
a median price for each kit.
This list is therefore a guideline, not a definitive reference.
To General Guidelines for Valuation. (below)
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Kit No.
|
Scale |
Colour |
Name of Kit |
Scarcity index
|
Value Index
|
Key |
|
P2
|
OO |
|
Battle of Britain Set |
1
|
1
|
Value Index
1= up to £200
2= £100-£200
3=£70-£100
4=£50-£70
5=£35-£50
6=£25-£35
7=£15-£25
8=£10-£15
9=£5-£10
10=£0-£5
Scarcity
10 = Common
through to
1 = Scarce
|
|
P3
|
TT |
|
TT3 Royal Scot Set |
1
|
1
|
|
-
|
1:100 |
|
Fireball XL5 |
1
|
1
|
|
28
|
OO |
Green |
Standard Restaurant First |
2
|
6
|
|
31
|
OO |
|
Midland Pullman Power |
2
|
5
|
|
60
|
1:16 |
|
Ariel Arrow Motorcycle |
2
|
4
|
|
3
|
HO |
|
Early American General |
3
|
5
|
|
8
|
OO |
|
Italian Tank |
3
|
5
|
|
16
|
TT |
|
Rebuilt Royal Scot |
3
|
5
|
|
34
|
HO |
|
NYC Hudson |
3
|
3
|
|
25
|
OO |
|
Beyer-Garratt |
4
|
3
|
|
9
|
OO |
|
Stirling 8ft Single |
4
|
5
|
|
P1
|
OO |
|
100 Years of British Steam |
5
|
2
|
|
26
|
OO |
|
J94 0-6-0ST |
5
|
7
|
|
1
|
OO |
|
Rocket |
5
|
7
|
|
2
|
OO |
|
Diesel Electric |
6
|
7
|
|
28
|
OO |
Maroon |
Standard Restaurant 1st |
6
|
7
|
|
4
|
OO |
|
Coronation Class |
6
|
5
|
|
10
|
OO |
|
Deltic Diesel |
6
|
5
|
|
19
|
OO |
|
Baureihe 23 (German) |
6
|
5
|
|
23
|
OO |
|
241P Mountain (French) |
6
|
5
|
|
32
|
OO |
|
Midland Pullman Kitchen |
6
|
5
|
|
33
|
OO |
|
Midland Pullman Parlour |
6
|
6
|
|
KM1
|
OO |
|
Motor Bogie |
6
|
8
|
|
KM2
|
OO |
|
Motor Box Van |
6
|
8
|
|
12
|
OO |
|
Swiss Crocodile |
7
|
6
|
|
30
|
OO |
|
BR3MT Mogul Class 76000 |
7
|
6
|
|
13
|
OO |
Green |
Standard Corridor Composite |
8
|
7
|
|
14
|
OO |
Green |
Standard Corridor 2nd |
8
|
7
|
|
15
|
OO |
Green |
Standard Corridor Brake 2nd |
8
|
7
|
|
27
|
HO |
|
DB 84yge Coach |
8
|
9
|
|
29
|
HO |
|
SNCF A9 myfi Coach |
8
|
9
|
|
17
|
TT |
Maroon |
Standard Corridor Brake 2nd |
9
|
9
|
|
17
|
TT |
Green |
Standard Corridor Brake 2nd |
9
|
9
|
|
18
|
TT |
Maroon |
Standard Corridor Brake Composite |
9
|
9
|
|
18
|
TT |
Green |
Standard Corridor Brake Composite |
9
|
9
|
|
20
|
TT |
Maroon |
Standard Corridor 2nd |
9
|
9
|
|
20
|
TT |
Green |
Standard Corridor 2nd |
9
|
9
|
|
21
|
TT |
Maroon |
Standard Restaurant 1st |
9
|
9
|
|
21
|
TT |
Green |
Standard Restaurant 1st |
9
|
9
|
|
11
|
OO |
|
Battle of Britain Class |
10
|
7
|
|
13
|
OO |
Maroon |
Standard Corridor Composite |
10
|
7
|
|
14
|
OO |
Maroon |
Standard Corridor 2nd |
10
|
7
|
|
15
|
OO |
Maroon |
Standard Corridor Brake 2nd |
10
|
7
|
|
22
|
OO |
|
Class 92000 |
10
|
7
|
|
24
|
OO |
|
City of Truro |
10
|
7
|
|
5
|
OO |
|
Schools Class |
10
|
9
|
|
6
|
OO |
|
Saddle Tank |
10
|
10
|
|
7
|
OO |
|
Prairie Tank |
10
|
10
|
General Guidelines on valuation
It is self evident that mint, boxed kits in the original cellophane
are going to command a premium price, whilst a badly-painted assembled kit with
no box may seem to be "going cheap". As a general rule, the larger
and later the kit was issued, the more it is going to fetch. When assessing
kits, these are the questions to ask. For example, if it is still in the cellophane
wrapper, a premium might reasonably be expected over a similar kit which had
been opened.
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Is the box in good condition?
After 1960 all kits were shrink-wrapped
in cellophane, whilst earlier boxes will show signs of sellotape damage.
|
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Is the kit still on the sprues?
A good clean kit with the majority of parts still on their sprues indicates
a kit that has been properly stored. It also makes checking for completeness
a lot easier.
|
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Is the instruction sheet in good condition?
Kitmaster's larger instruction sheets were multi-lingual affairs and
are often found with the bottom chopped off. This seriously affects their
value, as does over-enthusiastic checking off of the parts.
|
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Are the decals present?
A cut or missing decal sheet always detracts from value.
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Is the original catalogue present?
The 1959 issues were all packed with a small
catalogue showing that year's releases. Whilst a missing catalogue
is not serious, a premium may apply if a catalogue is included. This would
certainly include the rarer overseas issues of that catalogue.
|
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Is the glue present?
Small gelatine capsules of glue were included with each kit. This can
be a double-edged sword, as leaking glue reduces value, but some collectors
like the capsule to be present. If it is one of the rare Kitmaster 1/2oz
tubes of Humbrol glue, or an early branded glue by Airfix, Revell or Frog,
these are now collectable in themselves.
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Is the Peco insert present?
All 1959 UK kits were packed with a small blue/white Peco
leaflet advertising the Railway Modeller. Nice to have, but not essential.
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Are the wire parts present?
Three of the kits, Rocket, The General and the Hudson, were supplied
with metal handrail wire. This is often missing because it fell out of
the boxes easily.
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