by waaytoomuchintothis » Tue Jun 16, 2015 7:55 pm
Yep, yep, yep. This is a task we all have dealt with, sometimes together in community on HRW, and sometimes, on one of those wonderful 2am brainstorming sessions that produce perfect results you can't remember the method for in the morning, much less explain it to your wife that it was worth doing...
Yeah, okay. From the simplest to the most complex, right? A lot of what follows not only has been posted a lot before, but actually owes inspiration to the above folks a lot of the time.
Method 1- The tires stretch just fine. Put the front tires on the back wheels and sand them just a little. They don't need much, and the burrs on the front wheels are easy to sand off with an emery board. You don't really have to turn them down. Of course, then the back wheels get spun down on the sandpaper, followed by the tires for the back. We all used this method for years and years. Then we got more toys and loved using them.
Method 2- If you want to pull plastic wheels off axles, identify whether your axle is knurled. Many manufacturers use smooth axles and a fine, square fit for the wheels, so that's easy and sure. Scalextric, true to their Tri-Ang and Hornby roots, uses knurled axles and the wheels are seriously pressed on. To remove them, you are taking a chance, but as mentioned above, sleeving the hub with a piece of brass tubing can solve that problem when things go wrong. In general, the technique is to gently turn the wheels while pulling, and let the knurling give way by itself. It sounds tougher than it is. After so many years, I can pull Scaley wheels at will. *and when the hub breaks, I can pop a brass tube on with Superglue so fast no one will ever know*
Method 3- When you remove the wheels from a knurled axle, consider a home made smooth axle from drill blank, precision ground steel wire, etc. This gives you a chance to put on a really fine crown or spur gear (Slot.it, NSR, etc.). The technique for a superglue attachment of plastic wheels is pretty much trial and error, and butt simple. Try it. You'll be great at it. Go for it.