I used to play with these things for hours on end. I passed them down to my nephew and he has given them back to me now. There used to be quite a few more but between him and I we reduced their numbers. Still a kinda cool collection though.
I used to play with these things for hours on end. I passed them down to my nephew and he has given them back to me now. There used to be quite a few more but between him and I we reduced their numbers. Still a kinda cool collection though.
I have fond memories of them as well. I'm old enough that the first cars I remember were the original Aurora Thunderjet cars from the late 60's. I still have mine!
Santa brought the kids an AFX race set this Christmas. Four lanes of slot car goodness. It's seeing some use. Amazing how fast the new cars can go compared to the old TJ cars.
Mine are in the attic. Plan on digging them out and adding to the set when the grandkids are old enough.
1988RedT2 wrote: Amazing how fast the new cars can go compared to the old TJ cars.
I think T-jets are more fun... feathering the controller... sliding around corners...
I see more slot cars in my future - I can't wait to get my son involved. He loves anything automotive related, I just need to teach him boundaries. LOL He's 2.5 and likes to try to steal the cars as they go by.
I was forced to pass mine down to my little brother and never saw them again. But I did get to move on to 1/32 Womps, then 1/24 scale Group 20s and onto a little karting and eventually oval track Stock Cars.
I guess one could look at AFX as sort of a gateway drug.
Flyin Mikey J wrote: I guess one could look at AFX as sort of a gateway drug.
Or as a way to get a longer racetrack into the basement than 1/32 Scalextrics require. Do you want pretty cars, or do ya wanna race?
Memories...of the way we were. I wish I could remember where mine ended up, had a huge collection. Thinking they got "recycled" after I went in the Navy by my mom.
I inherited a bunch of Aurora stuff from my older brother. I still have most of them. I have a Cobra, an E-Type, a GT 40, a '65 Mustang, and a couple of '67 Camaros.
The AFX stuff was too expensive when I was a kid. I have a bunch of Tyco stuff in the basement, including the HO train rail road crossing pieces. When my niece and nephews get a little older I might have to set a track up again.
friedgreencorrado wrote:Flyin Mikey J wrote: I guess one could look at AFX as sort of a gateway drug.Or as a way to get a longer racetrack into the basement than 1/32 Scalextrics require. Do you want pretty cars, or do ya wanna race?
I never had a 1/32 track at home, but had a number of commercial 1/32 and 1/24 tracks in the area. Coolest part for me as a kid was that it was a winter sport for the local real life racers. Beating those that I watched from the stands was quite a thrill for a 12 year old me.
In reply to David S. Wallens:
My first slot car set was a 1/24 scale Cox. It came with a BRE 240z and a Brumos 911. It would've been in the early 70's. I don't know what happened to that set but it's probably landfill now.
Woody wrote:David S. Wallens wrote: During our recent Big Cleanup I came across this. Check out the car in second place. I sent a photo to Peter Brock. He was like, Wow, never saw that box art before.I think I have that Camaro too.
If I remember correctly, my set came with the Camaro and Road Runner. That original set eventually grew to nicely cover a 4x8 sheet.
In reply to Wayslow: Are you sure it wasn't a 1/32 scale set with the Bob Sharp 240Z and Peter Gregg Brumos Porsche? I got that set for Christmas in '76 or '77.
My brother and I had aTyco set. We burned up a lot of cars on that, the a commercial track opened in town that my dad and uncle would take us to every week. By the time they closed they had built the most expensive Womps they could. Without the aero of the bigger cars they made nice missiles.
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