
Monogram first released a Ramcharger kit in 1981, a year after the SUV actually got a bit of a revamp by turning into a shorter, higher Dodge Ram pick-up, although now I type this, it always was exactly that . But it’s pretty much everything the first generation had to offer; quad headlights, rear bench seat, 400 cubic inch V8, so forth. Now in ’81 it was released as a “High Roller” kit, just like the GMC Sierra back then, a moderately detailed kit front to back that goes together rather well start to finish.
Though holy hell do I appreciate it. The kit’s gotten some serious love from Revell, with the inclusion of two totally different yet still somewhat realistic versions. One’s the normal two tone Ramcharger, with the decals to properly do all the plastic trim on the side that separates the colors and the second is a very eighties three stripe set-up in the lovely shades of brown, red and orange(y’know, quintessential late seventies/early eighties colors!) on a white background. But they added some really nice extra’s too besides the trim, indicator lights, side-lights, emblems, so on.
I adore it when Revell re-releases kits and properly updates them through and through, with a fresher quality plastic that isn’t brittle, less flash on the sprues and a massively updated decal sheet. Round 2 models could learn something from ’em honestly.
From the get-go I wanted to make this an all satin black car, without any chrome left and to offset the black with giant white letter decals on the tires. I uh, I’m beginning to realize I seem to do this a lot with late seventies and early eighties cars, the ’78 El Camino and the upcoming ’78 Monte Carlo, but hey, it just makes it look mean in my opinion. Though, regardless, the intention was to make it look like a brutal all terrain machine that could take bumps, scrapes and even wrecks and just brush it off.
The kit has a lot of cross-love with the ’77 GMC kit, for instance the frame’s the same(even has the prongs for the GMC’s quad suspension set up), the transfer case and driveshafts are the same and the tires are too even though luckily the wheels are not. But generally the design’s the same; interior bucket sits on the frame as the top of the chassis, the body sits snugly on the interior bucket and they’re all kind of held together by the bumpers which are connected to the frame as well as the body. And just like the GMC, the car is massive. I mean, holy crap, it is a giant ride. Of course, part due it being 1/24th in scale and part due to the Ramcharger being massive(but short) in real life too, but I put it next to a similarly scaled El Camino for reference. It’s huge!
There’s hardly any bad things I can say about this kit. It’s simplistic, yeah, but that’s not really a bad thing. It is kind of clunky in terms of how the frame is attached to the interior tub, but it does work in the end. The front is so heavy that the wheels actually bend inwards some, but it doesn’t really detract anything from the finished model, so even that’s not worth complaining over. It might just be one of those kits that just… feels right, goes together right and looks right once finished, no matter what you do to it.
’80 Dodge Ramcharger specifications:
Kit: #85-4372
Skill Level: 4
Parts: 96
Molded in: White
Scale: 1/24
