Woodman -
I think you are going to have a lot of fun with that 1/32 JK Cheetah II chassis! We use those and the Parma International chassis for our "EuroSport" sport class at the local commercial track. We utilize PlaFit Fox II motors which are very close to the motor you are using, except according to
http://slotcarnews.blogspot.com/2007/02 ... -list.html the PlaFit motor has more torque.
The ratings there are:
Plafit Fox II (FK-130) 27,000 RPM/12v, tested 26,866 RPM/12v
.7A, tested 208 gcm/12v, tested 14.0W/12v
Pro Slot Euro Mk1 (FC-130) 26,100+ RPM/12v tested 27, 616 RPM/12v CW
155 gcm/12v, 10.1W/12v tested 184 gcm/12v CW, tested
We run the cars on both both a flat road course and a big' banked King track (can be seen here:
http://slotblog.net/topic/8629-marks-mo ... ld-canton/ ). For those tracks, I run a pretty tall ratio of 16:35 (64 pitch) - but I would think with the shorter straights and tighter corners on your layout - you would want to go with a much steeper ratio as it will accelerate harder and have better brakes allowing you to run deeper into the corners. I would think that you would want to go somewhere in the 3.6 to 4.0 to one ratio to get the most out of the car?
You can probably use a stock scalextric car (or any car with a known motor rpm and gear ratio) as a bit of an indicator - if what you are currently running can't ever hit max speed/rpm on the end of your straight sections, you will want a steeper effective ratio than what your "example" car has.
If you want to get fairly technical, you can use this site:
http://www.advanced-ev.com/Calculators/TireSize/ to plug in your motor rpm 18,000rpm), the tire diameter (.830 for a Scaley Cougar) and the gearing ration (3.27 for 11:36) and calculate for speed - gives: 13.6mph top speed.
Similarly, using the details from the car you are building - motor rpm (26,100), tire diameter (.790 for new JK 8712's) if you want to keep the same top speed of 13.6, you can calculate for gearing - which equates to 4.512 which would fall between a 9:37 and a 9:38.
Now the Pro Slot motor you are using has notably more torque than a stock Scalextric motor, so it will accelerate faster to the cars top speed. So if you are already topping out at the end of your long straights using your "known" example car, you will definitely want to look at exploring shallower gearing to allow for more speed.
But conversely if aren't able to get up to full speed with your Scalextric type cars - you may want to try something in the 9:37 area to start and see if the added torque allows you to achieve top speed before the end of your straights - if so, then you can look at dropping back the ratio a bit to get more speed out of the car. :)
That may be more than what you were looking for - but hope that helps!
:D