TL;DR: Messerschmitt scale models here are 1:18 diecast from Revell, covering the tandem-seat KR-series bubble cars of the 1950s and 1960s. A single-manufacturer, single vehicle-class niche within the Micro segment, valued for its unmistakable canopy silhouette rather than breadth.
Messerschmitt's postwar pivot from aircraft to three-wheeled microcars produced one of the era's strangest and most recognizable shapes, and Revell's diecast captures that tandem-cockpit canopy design at 1:18 scale.
Messerschmitt Model Cars and the Micro Vehicle Class
Revell's diecast construction gives the KR-series its correct proportions: the narrow tandem cabin, the aircraft-style canopy, and the third-wheel rear layout that made these cars legal to drive on a motorcycle license in period. As a Micro-class subject, the model reads as a novelty piece as much as a design study, small enough to anchor a themed shelf without dominating it.
- Single manufacturer, single material: Revell diecast only.
- Era coverage spans 1950s and 1960s production.
- Compact footprint suits mixed-era microcar displays.
Where a Messerschmitt Model Fits in a Collection
Because the range is narrow by design, a Messerschmitt piece works best as a conversation-starting addition to a broader postwar European collection rather than a category to build depth in on its own. Pair it with other Micro-class subjects to tell the story of Europe's austerity-era mobility solutions, where aircraft and appliance manufacturers alike turned to building small, cheap transportation.