Gerald Wingrove

Gerald Amery Wingrove MBE was a model engineer and author from the United Kingdom. He is best known as a modeller of cars.

Gerald A. Wingrove

Gerald Wingrove
OccupationModel Engineer
Websitegeraldwingrove.com

Career

Wingrove left his job as a lathe operator to create models full-time in November 1967, and launched himself as a freelance model engineer,[1] since which time he has hand crafted in metal almost 280 automobile miniatures in the scales of 1/20 & 1/15th, primarily in 1/15th scale. Most of these were commissioned by the vehicles' owners.

The first sale of his work by a major London Auction House was by Christies on 2 August 1967 with the sale of 2 models of sailing ships in 96th scale and a SE5A aircraft model (1/20th scale) in brass and silk.

Further sales of his work were with Brooks (later amalgamated with Bonhams) of London, 21 Lots, in (Sale 112) on 4 December 1999 - and Bonhams (Sale 1793) with 74 Lots on 1 December 2003, in London.


In July 2000, Wingrove was made a Member of the Order of the British Empire for craftsmanship, and "services to Model Engineering"

In March 2005 Wingrove was awarded ‘Metalworking Craftsman of the Year’, by The Joe Martin Foundation for Exceptional Craftsmanship in the USA. [2]

As well as cars, Wingrove has also created ship models and dioramas, the largest being the 25 square feet model of the village and ship yard of Bucklers Hard, commissioned for the Bucklers Hard Maritime Museum.

Publications

  • The Techniques of Ship Modeling (1974) ISBN 0-85242-366-7
  • The Complete Car Modeller (1978) ISBN 0-90456-813-X
  • The Model Cars of Gerald Wingrove (1979) ISBN 0-90456-812-1
  • Unimat Lathe Projects: A Beginners Guide to the Lathe and How to Make Ten Useful Tools (1979) ISBN 0-90456-820-2
  • The Complete Car Modeller 1 (1993) ISBN 1-86126-644-8
  • Anatomy of a Bugatti Royale (1993) ISBN 0-85429-856-8
  • Art of the Automobile in Miniature(2004) ISBN 1-86126-632-4
  • The Complete Car Modeller 2 (2005) ISBN 1-86126-750-9
gollark: It can generate ~100MHz square waves and you can connect up an antenna, which is *basically* what a radio transmitter would do but stupider and worse.
gollark: Yes, a clock or something.
gollark: A quirk of the raspberry pi means it can transmit FM radio with horrible interference because it can only broadcast square waves or something, because of happening to have a somewhat adjustable ~100MHz clock exposed on external pins or something.
gollark: Technically I *could* transmit FM radio. Also technically, I can't transmit it at any significant power and doing so would be illegal.
gollark: idea: replace osmarks internet radio™ with a constant 440Hz buzzing noise.

References

  1. Llewellin, Phil (15 November 2003). "Small is beautiful". Telegraph. Retrieved 13 November 2013.
  2. http://www.craftsmanshipmuseum.com/Wingrove.htm


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