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Has anyone here ever put a Slot Car raceway on there layout to create a Freeway.

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Has anyone here ever put a Slot Car raceway on there layout to create a Freeway.
Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 5, 2004 5:05 PM
I know that Tyco had Electric Trucking in the early 80s and that most slot cars are O scale. By the way Slot Cars are coming back espcialy in New England Region.
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Posted by Javern on Friday, November 5, 2004 5:28 PM
i was thinking of having a piece of track near the background somewhere and have the cars loop around a backdrop as to look like a busy freeway. I think at a distance the scale would not be as noticeable
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 5, 2004 6:16 PM
I don't have one now, but when I was a kid I had a slot car track that came with a 9" HO scale train crossing in it. We spent literally hours trying to beat the train with our slot cars and had tons of fun. I have never seen another one since and don't know how many were made, must not have been many. I think it was made by TYCO but unsure.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 5, 2004 6:20 PM
When I was first getting hooked on G scale stuff, I saw a major permanent demonstration layout that had a freeway on it. There were rails hidden in the road (as much as could be expected. I tried to find out more about this layout but was unable. I would like to know more about the cars and trucks that ran on the rails but looked completely like normal vehicles. It sounds like some really cool DCC operation ability to me.
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Posted by simon1966 on Friday, November 5, 2004 7:33 PM
Triang Minic was a brand in the UK in the late 60's / early 70's. I had an OO scale train and slot car combo. There was a ramp leading up to a car loading facility. The slot car could theoretically drive onto a car carrier and be transpored by the train. It never worked very well and in a fit of juvenile rage, I stamped on it!!!

http://www.tri-ang.co.uk/Minic/layout.htm

A quick search revealed this neat web site which has a display layout.

Simon Modelling CB&Q and Wabash See my slowly evolving layout on my picturetrail site http://www.picturetrail.com/simontrains and our videos at http://www.youtube.com/user/MrCrispybake?feature=mhum

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 5, 2004 7:34 PM
Way back in the early 60's I had an Aurora HO race car set on my layout that I used as a Freeway (my dad rewired the track so cars would run in both directions). For a kid, I thought it was great at the time, but being a slot car set, I wouldn't even consider it for a moment today.
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Posted by rrinker on Friday, November 5, 2004 7:52 PM
The slot car/railroad crossing WAS made by Tyco. In fact they sold a set or two that had both slot cars and trains in it.

The Aurora Model Motoring sets from the 60's always could go both directions - they had pins front and rear like the Tyco US 1 Trucking from the 80's. The controllers were like little consoles, the steering wheel controlled speed and there was a forward/reverse switch and something else, maybe a brake button?

--Randy

Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.

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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 5, 2004 8:24 PM
I have some old running gear from a slot car track in H.O. Scale. These have the front & rear pins for the slots. They don't have any mfg. name on them, but I expect they are Tyco. They are actually to big for the scale. I have some pickup trucks that run on the rail
& they are also oversize for H.O.

Larry
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Posted by bcammack on Friday, November 5, 2004 8:27 PM
Way back when, the original Aurora stuff was awefully close to HO scale. Contemporary "HO" tracks are closer to S gauge (1:64?) than HO.

About the original Aurora Model Motoring sets. The very first were actually AC powered. They used a serrated drum on the rear axle and a spring steel reed running forward where it was attached to the chassis. An electromagnet in the center of the cars caused the reed to vibrate coming down and catching the serration on the axle drum. (think how a watch escapement works) These would run in either direction, but there was no speed control. The controller was no more than an N.O. momentary pushbutton switch.

Later, when they went to DC sometime around 1960, they slipped their trademark "pancake" drive motor into a chassis quite similar to the original AC unit.

In either case, there was always a guide pin in front of the front axle, secured to the chassis by the front body-mount screw. There was an optional rear guide pin, but I never used one. Not much challenge to that sort of configuration. [:)]

Whether or not there was a rear guide pin had little to do with running in either direction. DC is DC whether it's a locomotive or a slot car.

Check these guys out for some near-HO slot car stuff (in fact, they're touting a slot car/rr track grade crossing as "coming soon!):
http://www.modelmho.com/
Regards, Brett C. Cammack Holly Hill, FL
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Posted by camarokid on Friday, November 5, 2004 8:47 PM
NO. 9000PQ TYCO "SUPER ROAD & RAIL" SET HO Scale. It came with SF F7's in Warbonnet Red scheme. Included were 4 cars, caboose and a Piggyback Flatcar set. The road racing included 2 cars and enough track for all the configurations of the time. The road/rail crossover section was unique for its day. I still have this set and put it away when my girls lost interest. Someday I hope to use the racing road for a long view(8') background scene. Maybe it won't work but I'll try it anyway. I bought it around 1973?
Ain't it great!!!
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 5, 2004 9:14 PM
I believe Life-Like offers a piece of HO auto track with an HO train crossing. Life-Like also has the broadest selection of adaptor track so you can use your Tyco, AFX, or Hot Wheels. So kids, you still create a layout with a beat the train aspect.
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 5, 2004 10:49 PM
There's been one Aurora HO car kicking around the workbench drawers. I had a bunch of these when I was a teenager with a 4' x16' race track set up in the basement, with full scenery & scratch-built structures.

This particular car is more out of scale than most of their later-model cars ("later" being the 1960s.)



The guide pin is missing on this car. Rear guide pins were for "woosies" and prevented "fishtailing" which was an important tactic in races since you could send an opponent crashing into the wall. The rear threaded axle, wheels & tires were added on.

The metal brushes are showing wear which was common and took seconds to replace. (It was fun to open one of these up for the first time in maybe 35 years.)

Brett, I had forgotten about the early AC cars. They were hard to soup up. I don't remember them being manufactured long beforethey changed to a DC system. That was a huge improvement. We used to remove a lot of wire from the armatures to make them run faster.

Fun times. We had a racing league at the hobby shop, racing these and then larger scale cars. A cool place to hang out & wait for girls to wander by.

Not sure I'd want to incorporate these into an HO layout, though.

Wayne
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Posted by Anonymous on Friday, November 5, 2004 11:17 PM
I don't know.....as crappy of slot car driver as I am that would be terror on the layout with my slot car projectile driving skills! Some of my hard scratch built stuff would need some serious beefing up! ;)

5150[B)]
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Posted by rrinker on Saturday, November 6, 2004 8:29 AM
Well, you certainly wouldn't use the rear pin to actually RACE, unless you were a cheater. But you can't run a slot car in reverse very well without a rear pin, it will just veer off the track. I recall that Aurora had some track sections that were more like a typical road than a race track, like intersections (basically a track switch) - or maybe that was some other brand, but I remember seeing something like that eqipped with traffic lights and all.

--Randy

Modeling the Reading Railroad in the 1950's

 

Visit my web site at www.readingeastpenn.com for construction updates, DCC Info, and more.

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Posted by lupo on Saturday, November 6, 2004 10:07 AM
the car Muddycreek shows was also available as the Faller AMS sytem, HO sized cars and tracks available in the '60-'70ies
the Faller AMS system had all options available to build in cars on a HO layout



FYI: I found this picture on Webshots album http://community.webshots.com/album/13542612nOwkivhcnz


L [censored] O
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Posted by easyaces on Saturday, November 6, 2004 12:07 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Clevelandrocks

I know that Tyco had Electric Trucking in the early 80s and that most slot cars are O scale. By the way Slot Cars are coming back espcialy in New England Region.
Hey ,don't that go along the lines of the old TYCO and Aurora mini- slot car sets that were sold back in the mid 60's. They had train crossings for the slot car tracks. Used to be great fun running the cars into the trains and vice-versa!
MR&L(Muncie,Rochester&Lafayette)"Serving the Hoosier Triangle" "If you lost it in the Hoosier Triangle, We probably shipped it " !!
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, November 6, 2004 12:50 PM
So were would I get a slot car switchtrack in HO scale or O scale...By the Cool Photos of Model Car layouts we may start a new hobby here. MRR should do a artical on this stuff.[8D]
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, November 6, 2004 3:36 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Clevelandrocks

So were would I get a slot car switchtrack in HO scale or O scale...By the Cool Photos of Model Car layouts we may start a new hobby here. MRR should do a artical on this stuff.[8D]

I believe that in the '60s Model Railroader had some articles about having slot cars in a layout.
Jaime
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Posted by Big_Boy_4005 on Saturday, November 6, 2004 3:41 PM
Both Tyco and Aurora made the grade crossing section with HO track crossing an HO scale roadway. Those sections of track were both discontinued in the late 70's, as it was deemed to be sending a bad message to future drivers about racing trains.

At one point Tyco was actually packaging trains and roadrace together in some of their largest sets.

The photos of the Faller system above are very interesting. They remind me, a lot, of the Aurora model motorway, which also had single lane and turnoff track sections.
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Posted by bcammack on Saturday, November 6, 2004 4:32 PM
That URL I listed: http://www.modelmho.com/
is a company that is repopping all of the Aurora Model Motoring cars, parts and track. I get quite nostalgic looking at the stuff they're selling.

That Willy's coupe suffers, scale-wise, because they only had one chassis, so stuff sorta got scaled up or down to fit comfortably over it. The wheel base was adjustable, by moving the front axle to on of the other pairs of holes.
Regards, Brett C. Cammack Holly Hill, FL
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Posted by fishplate on Saturday, November 6, 2004 5:12 PM
If you got some buddies who would be more into this sort of thing, you could
have a operating session. With the railcrossing added, time road freight with
trucks could be done. Rules of distance, destination, and time (speed) would
need to be applied. All of course to meet the demands of the RAILROAD.
Just a thought. [2c]
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, November 6, 2004 7:48 PM
Tyco still lists the slot car and HO Train track. Part number TYC 6727 9" Road-N-HO Train Rail (1 piece) . About $13. Available at several places on the Internet.
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Posted by Anonymous on Saturday, November 6, 2004 11:26 PM
therios,

are you refering to the garden layout at the LA county fair by any chance?
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Posted by KenK on Sunday, November 7, 2004 1:01 AM
Some years ago I saw a letter in Circle Track magazine where a guy sent in
a picture of his HO race track. It was a scratch-made 3-lane oval with winged
Sprint cars on it............and train track next to the back straight.[:D]

Yes, it's too bad slot car scales aren't the same as train scales, although I think
Motorific stuff is about O scale.

Now, that old Tyco electric trucking stuff might look close to HO. The trucks used
a chassis similar to the HO race cars, so they were proportionatly smaller than the
race cars. This would also work in with trackside industries, IF you can find the
stuff.

Do some searches on slot cars. You'll find lots of stuff, sometimes it seems like
more than what you find on trains!

BTW: Scalexctric and Carrera now have DCC slot cars (1/32 scale).

One man with courage is a majority!

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Posted by Anonymous on Sunday, November 7, 2004 1:59 PM
I am looking for a slot car switchtrack in O and HO scale
Slot cars would be great to model a Piggyback yard with lift..
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Posted by lupo on Sunday, November 7, 2004 2:22 PM
QUOTE: Originally posted by Clevelandrocks

I am looking for a slot car switchtrack in O and HO scale
Slot cars would be great to model a Piggyback yard with lift..


FALLER made something like that:

more pics and it's for sale at :
http://cgi.ebay.de/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&category=30676&item=3759994153&rd=1&tc=photo

L [censored] O
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Posted by Anonymous on Monday, November 8, 2004 10:55 AM
That was my plan back in the late 70's to mid 80"s of colleting TYCO trains, US Trucking and some of the slot car sets. Then combining them all into one big set-up, so that way several peeps could play along. It still is, since I have been able to hold on to all that stuff, without it getting lost or sold off. Sooooo, someday in the future it will happen. However, I still have way to much to learn, before I can even think about that....
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Posted by mcouvillion on Monday, November 8, 2004 11:31 AM
I still have the Aurora Thunderjet 500 slot car set from the 1960s that I used with my trains when I was a kid. We built a slot car track and added a small oval for the train. It was very apparent back then that cars lose to trains in ties at railroad crossings. The cars go flying and the train keeps on going.

In college, we had a four-lane slot car track in the dorm. Most of the guys were electrical engineering students. One guy had a Tyco that must have gone 1000 scale miles per hour, but it was either ON or OFF and he could never make the curves. My Aurora car had a wide wheelbase with big fat rubber tires that I did rubbing alcohol burnouts with before flying down the track. For two laps those tires were attached to the roadbed, with no fishtailing on curves regardless of speed! Boy, that was fun.

Oops, this is a model trains site. Sorry for the diversion.

Mark C.
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I have - sort of
Posted by Anonymous on Thursday, November 18, 2004 9:24 PM
I have been working on a track design to incorporate both slot car and HO train in a single layout. I have most of the parts that I need (except DC power and proper controllers and more cars for the train) - and I have laid out various portions of it test the design - currently don't have enought space to set it up. I have posted a jpg of the design at http://homepage.mac.com/mattwolanski/SlotCarTrack.jpg (if you get an error message try hiting enter to reload the page) that shows the slot car track - have not yet added the train to that layout - I am using a program for track layout http://www.railmodeller.com in which I had to design my own track parts. I will post updates as they are available. The train design will have an outer loop and an inner dual loops with switches connecting everythign together. The jpg above shows in white where the cars cross the train. I also plan to get a tiny wireless camera to make video from on board the train.
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Posted by Texas Zepher on Thursday, November 18, 2004 11:10 PM
I've had several, all toy class. The first one was basically a shared board where the slot cars just looped through the town's main street inside of the railroad loop. That was the closest to a free way.

All the others were spagetti as I tried to fit as much track (car and train) into a small space. On one layout I actually had 11/16 smiles of slot car track that crossed the railroad twice. It worked well. I had another on a 4x8 sheet of plywood where the car loop was too short. The cars even at the slowest speed could make their loop before the train cleared the crossing. The funnest ones were those just assembled on the floor for a one time use. Four or six lanes of cars for the train to try to hit.

The rules were the locomotive driver switched to the car he was able to blamm off the track. If a car driver ran into the side of a train they had to give up their car.

Most fun I've ever had. The Model Motoring collectors will cringe as I relate the original 1964 Mustang Convertible and Batmobile flying off the edge of the board after being booted by the Athearn F7.

I still have all that equipment but haven't set it up for several years. I believe the last time was my son's 14th birthday.

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