by waaytoomuchintothis » Fri Jun 19, 2015 4:48 pm
Its true. I have a Chevron and a Lola T70 that are actually too fast for my track. They are mostly Slot.it or NSR beneath the skin, and they really fly, so to speak. The wheels are all turned aluminum with the original plastic Fly wheels cut down for inserts, new gears, tires, bushings, guides, etc. I only did two, just for for fun, and I have the same cars untouched, still in the cabinet, but those two are eye-poppers that didn't cost much or take fancy tools.
Here's a tip: The pivoting sidewinder "pod" that Fly used for years is easily incorporated into a scratchbuilt chassis. At one time, Bruce at Cincyslots had bags of them. I wish I bought more than I did.
When all is said and done, the most devastating blow to slot cars in many years was the crash of Fly/GB Track. The old ways of running a business in post-Franco Spain just couldn't stand the strain of a worldwide financial shock. Fortunately, they made huge quantities of the cars which kept the cost down for us and assures us that will be lots of them around for many years, so start picking them up, guys. They are wonderful, and easily repairable, and the bodies are just great. Also, whatever quagmire the remains of Fly are in currently, they are cranking out some beautiful cars now, if they can ever get their price structure figured out beyond "get all you can get", we may see a lot of the old molds back at work again, and perhaps for long into the future.