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27-03-2020   (12:23:58)

November 2012
Track update
Rally In A Shed 2
Ok not much happening at the moment as the weather has turned a bit chilly and there is no heating in the shed, It never quiet gets to freezing in there as we have a freezer in there and the heat from it just keeps the temprature positive.


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Hair spray seems to have done the trick with the willow trees without any effect on the look of them.

As it happens I don't think the tree bits on the water is a major problems as this would be a fairly stagnent pond so bits floating in it I think only adds to the effect. It's just a shame that you can no longer see the reflections of the ducks in the water.

When I first started the track the idea was for it to be for 1/32 and 1/43 scale cars which is why there are no buildings, however for various reasons the track as become just 1/32 scale. Part of the reason being that I haven't really got on with the 1/43 scale cars and some of the scenery added does not match 1/43 scale.

Another ideal was to keep cost to a minimum and working at a builders merchants helped with the basic build and landscaping. Most of the track came from ebay and a special offer at Argos. I have spent more on scenic items that I would have liked but I have taken the easy option a few times. With the cost saving in mind the latest addition to the track, some more barrier has been done for less the £1. I had to buy the wood for the posts but the 'steel rails' are painted BBQ skewers, and I have to say that I really like the look of this barrier.


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One thing that has surprised me is that with the cold the level of grip from track and tyres seems to have increased. The cars are kept in the shed so they have cold tyres which I assume are all rubber based so should have little grip while cold, but I am finding that unless I accellerate the cars slowly the level of grip seems way to much from the textured paint (tarmac) and the rear wheel jump and bounce. The only thing I can think is that the paint is more solid in the cold giving a rougher surface and therefore high grip for the tyres. I am assuming the the paint has a plastic base and therefore its hardness and flexability changes with the temprature of the shed.

Nothing else has happened this month as it's been just to cold in the shed

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From Keith
21-03-2020   (18:00:20)

December 2012
Track update
Rally In A Shed 2
Finally got my package from China, after four weeks they resent the goods and the arrived in two weeks.

Part of the package was some trees which I have used to line the righthand side of the track. I've also painted the wall on this side as well.


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About a week ago I topped up the water in the righthand pond and it seems to be setting ok but now it's starting to lift or delaminate, I can't tell which yet, not good.

Due to the weather and work on the '"Winter Layout" nothing else got done this month.

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From Keith
18-03-2020   (18:00:20)

The story of 2011
The start of my interest again in slot cars



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From Keith
12-03-2020   (18:00:05)

December
Track update
In December I decided to finally make use of the Ninco World Rally set that I had bought a few years before. Well at least over Christmas and the New Year.



Latest Arrivals
When asked what it wanted for Christmas I said a couple of slot cars and settled on two of my favourite Sixties road cars.

So Christmas day I became the happy owner of a Pioneer Ford Mustang.


and a Revell Lotus Cortina Mk1.



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From Keith
09-03-2020   (18:00:20)

The story of 2005
I but a slot car set



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From Keith
05-03-2020   (18:00:05)

2005
Bought a Ninco World Rally set , I saw it while browsing on eBay and bought it on a whim as I thought it would be perfect for a lone slot racer with it's two rally loops.


It arrived a few days later and after playing with it a few times and trying a few different layout designs it was boxed up an put away.

Next time it came out was 2011...
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From Keith
20-02-2020   (18:00:20)

The Early 1970's
1969 - 1975
Apart from my first Scalextric set, which I only had for short while, I had no had any interest in slot cars until in 1969 I got a "new school" and maths teacher. My school got a new building on a new site, although the old school building was still to be used, and a new name. I was now at Cecil Jones High School but still in the old building. There was also an influx of new teachers along with the increase of pupils. One of these news teachers was our maths teacher who had an interest in slot cars. He has a couple of wooden track, one a hill climb, and decided to start a slot car club as an after school activity.I can't remember much about the original track but it was a basic layout , which was good for most of us. Most of use used the club cars which were VIP F1 cars. I found it quite good fun and then I got a chance to have my own car. The teacher was after some Meccano, which I had but wasn't using, to build a new lap counter. The offer was for a Revell car kit in exchange for the Meccano and I got my first car a Revell Mercedes 300SL.
The tracks lap counter was built using a system of Meccano bars, rods, leavers and cogs. The counting was done by someone simply pulling on a cord as a car crossed the line, one person per lane.For the following Easter Monday, 1n 1970, the standard track at Wonderland Raceways was hired for the afternoon and was my introduction to Wonderland. By now I had acquired a couple more slot cars and I managed to "kill" one of these that afternoon. I had a Scalextric Ford GT, but don't ask which colour it was.
The Ford wasn't the fasted car being used and I was pushing hard on the track at the front of the picture below, What you can't see here is that as you came of the climb just by the bridge there was a short straight then another steep climb leading in to a sharp 90 Deg right hand turn then another climb goining in to a lefthand 180 deg hairpin and the steep down to a left hand bens and back on to the front straight seen in the picture. You can just about see this in the second picture.
Anyway pressing hard I left it to late to brake going up the just out of sight climb and the car took off at the top of the climb and came down on the track border on the inside of the decent on the other side. This brock one of the motor mounting brackets on the body.

The other car was a Tamiya Lotus 30 1/24th scale kit and was bought when I visited the Hamlet Court Road shop, in Westcliff, with some friends. For some reason this was the only time I went to the Hamlet Court road center and never used or even saw the track.

Having discovered Wonderland I also discovered slot car parts and vac formed bodies and with in a short while the Revell chassis was wearing a vac Ford Capri body..

I also bought some Scalextric track but sold this and bought some Airfix track as this allowed me to test my cars with deeper guide without catching on the Classic tracks bars in the slot. I also bought some Airfix cars and converted so kits.


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The Matra was a High Speed car while the BRM was a kit built Clubman Special and the chassis ended up under the Mercedes. The Mini was a standard car with the full plastic underpan, while the Porsche was a standard High Speed car. The Ford was a converted kit, I also converted a Airfix 917 kit.

During 1972 or '73 I had a few Friday night races on the banked track. I had bought a 1/24th scale brass chassis, probably a Champion, This was run with a representation of a Cam-Am car with big plastic side wings stapled to the body both sides. As I could never afford the "good" gear I stopped after a few weeks.

During the 1973/74 school year I bought a Parma Womp Womp and this helped me to come second in the school club champion ship. There was three classes on the main Wednesday evening, 1/32nd scale enclosed wheel cars, 1/32nd scale open wheel cars and 1/24th scale. Once I bought the Parma I started to win most races in the 1/32nd scale enclosed car class but the other two classes where a bit of a lottery. I like a lot of people was using a Scalextric car with a powersledge and due to a lack of track power anyone could win in the 1/24th scale. There was also Monday evening racing and this was an open even and I was using the Airfix Clubman Special chassis with the Mercedes body and was doing well as a lot the other racers used the club cars.

My final year at school was 1975 and I was determined to win the school championship.

My cars for this final school year for the first term were the Parma Womp Womp chassis now sporting a red vac Porsche 917K body for the Main closed body class, I was now using the Clubman Special Mercedes in the open wheel class and in the 1/24th scale class I had built a special car for it. For the open Monday class, which was three races each on the three lane track, I now had a AJ's Winwagon Porsche 917/10, I went for this car as the body is quite flexible as could take all the knocks you would get on a Monday, as a lot of the races weren't club members or proper racers, and was quite fast.

The special 1/24th scale car turned out to be a stroke of genius. The chassis was a 1/24th scale version of the Parma Womp Womp steel chassis and I had taken the motor out to use in something else. I replaced the missing motor with a standard 16D type motor which was quite low powered and I now had the slowest 1/24th scale car. However we all now the story of the tortoise and the hare and this was the case here. The track was supplied from, I believe, a single power supply with separate thermal overload trip switches for each lane and these only ever cut in with the 1/24th scale cars, which is why I said above that the race result as a lottery. At some point at least once if not more the cars would start to slow down and then the cutouts would start to trip and you had to wait until they reset themselves. You also had to try and avoid the hinge were the track folded on the outside of the main straight. My car with it's low power motor would slow down a bit but never tripped the power and as the chassis was a bit narrow it was easy to avoid the hinge. Therefore I would end up winning every race.

At the end of the first term I was in second place just behind the leader, he was only really doing better than me in the open wheeled class.

For the second term I made a new car for the open wheel class, I bought another Womp Womp and cut the side pans of the chassis. I then bought a Lotus Turbine vac body and fitted it to the chassis with tape and was sure this would be a class winner. To make things even easier the boy who was winning left the school before the second term started. The Lotus was indeed the class of the field and I won every race with it and had a very clear lead in that class as I did in the 1/24th class. Although I was picking up nearly maximum points in the classed body class so were other people, as this was the main race class. The Monday night racing was still a bit of a lottery as although I had by far the quickest car you could get bumped of quite a bit and the marshalling could be a bit slow at times. By the end of the second term I was leading but not by much.

For the final term I was still using the same cars but I took a bit of a rise to start with and fitted a more powerful motor in the 917 Womp Womp. With a few more people having left over the Easter holidays things got a little easier and I finally won the school slot car championship.


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Above is the AJ's car as used on the Monday evenings. The Ford GT40 body used on the "special" 1/24th scale car but with a different chassis, which I believe is from the Tamiya Lotus 30. The car i Was using in 1/24th scale before the Ford GT40 "special". The style of body I used on the open wheel Womp Womp chassis. The shield awarded for winning the championship.
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From Keith
11-02-2020   (18:00:05)

The story of 1960's
My first slot car set and Minic slot cars




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From Keith
29-01-2020   (10:24:22)

1963/64
My first slot car set
Long ago for Christmas one year I received a Scalextric set the only thing I really remember about it was that it had a red shark nose Ferrari in it

and the track was a figure eight .Having done some Google searches it would seem that this had to be set GP33 the only one to contain the Ferrari 156 which was only available in 1963.

So now I know when I first started to slot race as a seven year old in 1963 opps that's let my age out.The set was setup and used over Christmas day and Boxing day but after this it did not get a lot of use.My friends at the time did not have a lot of interest in slot racing and as an only child I had to just drive one car around and around or hope that my dad would have time to play but most times it just took to long to set it up and so it didn't get used. It also didn't help that to start with it was being run from battery packs.
The following year for my Birthday or Christmas I received a train set and with that came a mains transformer so no more batteries. In the end after a year or so the set was sold and thus ended my early introduction to slot cars





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From Keith

Late 1960's
The Triang Minic days
I'm saying the late Sixties but I have to admit that it could have been the early Seventies when I next had a slot car set. I obtained a secondhand Minic Motorway set, this was not a racing set but a roadway set. Minic did do sports car racing sets and the cars came with racing numbers. Anyway I'm not sure if it was bought for me or I bought it myself. If I bought it myself then it would probably have been in 1970 when I started doing a newspaper round.

Here a few thing I found on the web that I know I had.



One of the track sections I bought was the Humpback Bridge. This did cause a few problems...



The Coach was always interesting to drive but when the humpback bridge was installed the coach became a real problem as it would bottom out on the top of the hump. As the coach had a metal chassis this would short the track and trip the transformer. This was solved with use if insulating tape but the coach would still bottom out.



I also had a lorry which I seem to remember as an articulated unit for some reason. The pages above show some of the lorries made but I just can't say if I had any of these. I know that it did get stuck on the hump back bridge like the coach.



I had some of the traffic lights which could be used at the crossroads.



I also had a set of road signs as the ones above or it could have been the one's shown opposite. Minic made a whole set of roads signs including direction boards which I seem to remember I also had.

I was lucky that near to home was a shop that sold Minic cars and accessories, this was not a toy shop as such but a baby shop. They mainly sold prams, push chairs and cots but also had a small toy section selling Minic, trains sets and scalextric



One of the cars I had was the Humber Fire Chief's car in red with Fire on the sides. This was one of the first cars I had and I don't know if it came with the set or I bought it.



I'm sure that the Jaguar Police car came with the Motorway set the I had and I'm sure that the set also contained the



Jaguar E-Type this made it a chase set as apposed to being a racing set. I can't remember what colour the E-Type was.



Another picture of the Coach, mine was purchased separately and came with the box as shown.



I had both the crossroads track section and the hump back bridge but as I bought lots of extra track, the original set could have been either of the layouts shown above.



The signs I had could have been the first set shown or the set above. I only had one set but couldn't tell you which one.



I did have a lot of borders which are made to look like pavement sections. These units are made the wrong way round as the pavement goes against the track and the grass forms a slopping verge down to your baseboard. In England you will find lots of slopping verges but these are between the road and the footpath. Why pavement, well you have to remember that Minic was designed to be used with Traing railway sets. You could get a unit that had road and rail and let you build a train car transporter loading platform. You could also get a railway crossing and I did have one of these.

Power was again provided by the transformer that had been bought for my original Scalextric set and kept to power the train set I had after the Scalectrix was sold.


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