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Slick Strip "N" gauge cars and track; Collect-A-Car Raceway and cars; Match Kit Sports Cars, Military Vehicles, Military Airplanes and World War 1 planes; Pink Panther Magazine Series 1/25 Model Kit; Outhouse Magazine Series 1/25 Model Kit; Milk Truck Magazine Series 1/25 Model Kit; Sand Draggin Magazine Series 1/25 Model Kit; Bathtub Magazine ...
"FUNNY CAR SPRINT" RACE SET: Plymouth Cuda Funny Car; Vega Van Gasser: Original A/FX: Packaged for Sears: 2023: 1972 "MEADOWBROOK RACEWAY" Shadow; Ferrari 612: Original A/FX: Packaged for Sears: 2024: 1972 "PENSKE SPECIAL" RACE SET: Porsche 510K; Matador Stock Car: Original A/FX: Packaged for Sears: 2025: 1972 "BIG BANKED FOUR" RACE SET
1:32 scale racing organizations The International Slot Racing Association sanctions a World Slot Car Racing Championship in a different country every year. In 2004, the True Scale Racing Federation (TSRF) was established by former pro 1:24 racer Phillipe de Lespinay with the goal being to establish a North American "true scale" 1:24 and 1:32 ...
A typical, 1:32 scale, Audi R8R slot car by Carrera Slot cars are usually models of actual automobiles, though some have bodies purpose-designed for miniature racing. Most enthusiasts use commercially available slot cars (often modified for better performance), others motorize static models, and some "scratch-build", creating their own mechanisms and bodies from basic parts and materials.
In the 1960s, TYCO changed its focus from train kits to ready-to-run trains sold in hobby shops and added HO-scale electric racing sets, or "slot car" sets. A wide range of slot cars and repair parts, track sections, controllers and accessories were also available. The slot car rage started in 1963. [3] By the 1970s, TYCO shifted sales and ...
Total Control Racing (TCR) was a toy brand from Ideal which debuted in the late 1970s, similar to slot car sets, with approximately HO scale cars (and smaller scale semi-trailer trucks) that operated on a slotless track.
Powertrack is the brand name for the Matchbox's slot car sets. Introduced in the late 1970s by Lesney Products Ltd, Powertrack models differed from other slot car sets because the cars could be seen in the dark as the cars had headlights. Matchbox's H0/00 (approx. 1:64) cars were smaller than Scalextric 1:32-scale cars. In the United States ...
Motorific is the brand name of a line of battery-operated slot car toys and related accessories marketed by the Ideal Toy Company from 1964 to the early 1970s. It differed from traditional slot car sets in that the cars were powered independently by a pair of AA batteries, rather than by an electrical connection to the track.
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