A few have asked about how I look at picking my favorite. It's a little long...but I am sort of hopelessly addicted and just get carried away. :)
From a simple home racer perspective. I’ll just emphasize that. I’m not racing in a commercial environment. I have no rules to prevent me from tuning a model to my liking. I don’t claim a car is “best” just based on lap times alone. Some feel that is all that matters. I disagree.
And my personal choice is just that. Mine. We all have our own taste. The “award” is intended to be a fun participation to let others know how YOU feel.
1. Body StyleIs it new? Is it an American style? Maybe not important to some, but is to me. We have plenty of Euro based cars thanks to our manufactures being based there. But American car molds are important.
If not American, then a new mold we have not seen in the last 15 years or so? I like the recent Carrera Capri, but far from original thinking. BMW M1 the same. We only have 2 other versions with Sideways making the performance leader.
2. PerformanceIt might be a great mold of a car, but of it doesn’t run well? It’s wasted tooling. It will take a while for others to discover it, but when they do the “slot car grapevine” activates fast. Not just the club/competition based enthusiasts either. Simple home racers who just want to enjoy a car out of the box can tell if they have lemon or sugar.
Regardless if I have a wood track, I test on plastic with magnet or how the car arrived. Many judge a model based on non-magnet wood performance, but I simply do not. Standard models from Carrera, Scalextric were not designed for our advanced wood tracks and judging them based on that track performance is unfair at best.
If the car runs and is fun to drive then it meets my expectations. On wood I can tell if we have potential for light tuning or we need to scrap everything under the body.
3. InnovationIs there anything truly unique about the chassis/model? A better guide system (ahem)? New gear or drivetrain design? New chassis? Sometimes it is the small things like the extra guide blades Carrera puts in the cases. Other times I appreciate seeing the extra mirrors we know will break. Maybe they made the mirrors or antenna out of rubber?
4. ValueThere are great running cars from all sorts of brands. Some of them with hefty price tags. When we start talking $70 to over $100, this is getting out of the normal realm of simple home racing and into the club/commercial scene. Nothing against these cars and I own several. And my custom built cars have a high admission fee to be sure.
I try to use the old “bang for your buck” perspective.
5. Model ClassesI like to break our current models in two categories:
Standard & Competition.
Standard ready to run offerings from Carrera, Scalextric, Pioneer, Flyslot (or whatever name they change to).
Competition based models like Slot.it, NSR, Sideways, Thunderslot, etc. These brands employ higher quality running gear, advanced pod system chassis, ultra light interiors, etc.
They also carry a premium price. When someone says “This latest (insert brand here) is the best running car ever. It blows away any Carrera or Scalextric I own.”
Well it is SUPPOSED to. It better be a screamer for the price tag. Comparing a $80+ competition level model against a $32 Carrera just isn’t fair to me. And it doesn’t give these cars any edge over standard models when choosing my favorite of the year.
6. Feedback from Enthusiasts, then Mix 1 through 5. Shaken, not stirred.At the end of the year I simply pick my overall favorite just like anyone else with all the above in mind. But even if I like a certain model the most, I read what OTHERS have to say. I look back on the popularity of the product. I watch and see what others are bragging about getting.
So my pick was the Javelin for good reasons. #1 being a mold we actually wanted and that was needed for this series. Some don't like the inline, I just do. And the performance of it matches my older versions on my smaller track.

My second choice is the Policar March. The innovative chassis and exceptional detail level just had me goo-goo eyed.

My two other favorites
were old molds, and did not fit the criteria for "all new" this year but I can't help it. The 57 Chevy and Ford Torino still get me everytime.


One more day of voting but it looks clear to me that many felt the same way on the Javelin.
Thanks all for voting and the input. Great fun.