Author Archives: admin

How a childhood Tamiya Fox brings someone to bash through the desert in VW-powered off-roaders in 2017

By Davey G. Johnson

If Baja California resembles a dog’s hind leg, then Ensenada would lie near the top rear of its thigh, while La Paz finds itself nestled in a crook at the top of its toes. In 1967, a motley crew of dudes set off down the peninsula in search of glory and bragging rights. There wasn’t much in the way of cash involved; the level of danger was high, the chance of mechanical failure, very high. Twenty-seven hours and 38 minutes after leaving Ensenada, Vic Wilson and Ted Mangels crossed the finish line in La Paz in a Meyers Manx, having covered 950 filthy miles in the little Volkswagen-powered buggy.

Class 11, the choice of strident retronauts and staunch masochists.

Then, as now, a variety of vehicles contested the race, which began as the NORRA Mexican 1000 Rally and morphed along the way into the SCORE Baja 1000. Modern off-road racing vehicles have been divided into classes, and the most rudimentary of them all are the Class 11 cars. Stock-bodied air-cooled VW Beetles running a 1600-cc engine that could’ve been just as easily built in the late Sixties as it could be today, Class 11s are slow, violent, a hoot, and an enduring testament to the fundamental toughness of Ferry Porsche’s basic design. They can, at least, utilize the independent rear suspension introduced by Volkswagen at the end of the 1960s. The Class 9 cars make do with the old-school swing axle.

More obvious than the swing axle, however, is the 9’s bodywork. There isn’t a whole lot of it, and it shaves about 1000 pounds compared with the weight of a Class 11 machine. There’s a lid over your head that also happens to serve as the door, some flat pieces attached to the tube frame, and well, that’s about it. A near stock Bug suspension is bolted to the front, and a tight little gearbox sits in front of a 1600 built to the same restrictions as a Class 11. In the car I was to drive, there was a total of eight inches of suspension travel out back—four compression, four rebound—and the ride is even more violent than that of a Class 11. On the upside, the light weight means that it has a tendency to skip along the tops of whoops. And out on the 10-mile course laid out for us by Cody Jeffers of Mojave Off-Road Racing Enthusiasts, if there weren’t rocks, there were whoops. Sometimes there were rocky whoops.

The apple of our dusty eye: the stalwart, archaic, and brutal Class 9 buggy.

Class 9s have another interesting tendency: They’ll basically high-side themselves. Motorcyclists know the high side and fear it. On a bike, it happens when the rear wheel starts to slide out from underneath the rider, gets traction, and then the suspension quickly compresses and unloads, throwing the rider from the motorcycle as if he’s been launched by a trebuchet. Wonderfully, a Class 9 buggy is capable of a similar feat. In sketchy sections under too much power, the car gets a disconcerting side-to-side oscillation going. If it gets wild enough, one side of the suspension quickly loads, then unloads itself. Combine this with the light weight of the thing (somewhere in the neighborhood of 1500 pounds dry), and it’s easy to see how it could potentially end up on its roof.

After watching my performance in the Class 11 car, which basically consisted of pushing it as hard as I could and hoping for the best, Cody Jeffers took me aside and kindly and calmly suggested that such tactics wouldn’t work in the 9. As he was doing so, a fellow journalist rolled in, lamenting the yellow little car and finally, in a fit of dusty exasperation, exclaiming, “Just bury me in it.” Another had become disenchanted after stalling it in a wash. I wasn’t sure what to expect. I did, however, reach into the bag on the back of my motorcycle and pull out a pair of Alpinestars SMX-1 summer riding gloves, figuring the thin palms would do a decent job of approximating driving gloves, given the steering kickback the others had complained about.

The wee shifter is over there on the right.

I clambered up on the wheel, onto the fuel cell located between the seat and the engine, and down through the roof. I fiddled with the five-point harness while Cody hooked up my radio and plugged the fresh-air blower system into my helmet. Racing clutch to the floor, I fired up the old flat-four and putzed out of the pits.

It felt a little bit like that first live performance with a new band. You’ve practiced, you’ve screwed up, you’ve practiced a bit more, and now you’re on a stage with nothing but wit and skill to guide you. But letting a crowd down is one thing. Hanging upside down from a racing harness while the guy whose buggy you’ve rolled comes to extract you is another.

The first stretch of the course saw me bounding down a straight path. The wheel bucked and kicked, but with a little hand pressure to keep it on line, the car tracked true while desert scrub whipped by on either side. A right turn, and I was up into the rocks and whoops. Baseball-sized rocks could be driven over; basketball-sized rocks were to be avoided. My breathing went shallow, and I couldn’t seem to make it any deeper until I aced a section at speed and involuntarily Wooo!ed in delight. After that, the breaths came normally. Apparently, if you need to kick-start your lungs in the desert, impersonating a twentysomething female hepped up on pumpkin spice lattes and Fireball whiskey does the trick.

The technique for dealing with whoops is as follows: punch the gas up the micro-hillock to lift the front; let off to let the car float down the other side. In practice, the technique has you tapping the throttle almost like a mid-tempo kick drum. I got a little too aggressive, and the car started the side-to-side oscillation Cody had warned me about. I gently backed out of the throttle, let the car calm down, and dug back in. Later, I mentioned to an off-road racer friend that taming the car and getting back into a rhythm made me feel like a hero but that I didn’t know whether that was because I was a newbie. She replied, “No, I totally do.” Knowing that it’s a lasting feeling makes me want more.

Our course was marked by black arrows marked on blaze-orange placards, and while I’d been around the track as a passenger and a driver in the Class 11 machine and then suffered through an exhibition lap in a Class 5 Unlimited Bug—a tube-chassis Beetle powered by a hogged-out flat-four capable of more than 80 mph in this terrain—I didn’t have it entirely memorized. I missed a turn, came to a stop in front of a sizable creosote bush, thought that I didn’t want to deal with finding reverse in the tight transmission, then realized, “Hey! I’m in a freakin’ buggy!” and just drove over the poor plant to get back on course.

When I was 10 years old, there was nothing in the world I wanted more than a Tamiya Fox R/C buggy. So I scrimped and I saved for the better part of a year, bought the car the day after Christmas 1986, spent the rest of my school break building it, and then had to wait eight more months until I had enough money to purchase a radio, battery, and charger. In short, the 1/10-scale buggy was one of the prized possessions of my childhood. Eventually, I put a ’67 GTO body on it, because I am from the Central Valley. At one point, tearing up a hill in the Mojave Desert, I had a thought: “I’m in the Fox! I’m the little plastic dude I painted 31 years ago!”

I knew the hill with the jump at the top was coming soon. The smooth face of the serious rise in front of me looked like it. I was about 90 percent sure it was the jump. Perhaps foolishly judging that 90 percent is the better percentage of valor, I committed. Cody’d warned me to get out of the throttle if I left the ground. Hammer down, the small yellow buggy bounded up the hill, crested the rise, and caught sweet, sweet air. Right foot up, stuck the landing, back into the power, and on toward the last bit of the course. Tearing toward the pits, there were a couple of nature-made drainage ditches to be aware of, not easily visible in the desert sun. In the interest of avoiding calamity, I dialed back the pace.

Into the pits, engine off. I’d been so occupied out on the course I hadn’t realized just how stupendous the whole experience had been. It was akin to the night Bob Mould invited me onstage to sing “Makes No Sense at All” because he’d blown his voice out. After the song ended, I stepped off the stage and just stood there with my hand over my mouth. A guy smiled and said to his date, “He just realized what he just did.”

Power- and weight-wise, a Class 9 car isn’t that far off a loaded up Harley-Davidson tourer, yet the experience is like riding a four-wheeled dirt bike. Throttle-induced weight transfer rules the day, steering inputs alone are largely suggestions, getting a buggy around the course requires merging with both the machinery and the landscape. Eyes down the course, foot in the gas, make the thing skitter and dance across the terrain instead of plowing through it. I was geeked; I hadn’t been so utterly thrilled in a vehicle in a very long time. It beat lapping Daytona in a Ferrari 488, or ripping around New Jersey Motorsports Park on a Yamaha YZF-R6. Cody unfastened the roof hatch, and I clambered out gracelessly, fairly well pummeled after 40 miles around the course during the afternoon. Jeffers allowed that most of the people who drive Class 11s are in their teens and early twenties. I’m 41. I asked anyway. “Cody, how much does one of these things cost?”

“About six grand.” “Don’t tell me that. I can afford that!”

The 2017 Baja 1000 starts in Ensenada on November 14. I won’t be there, but, man, am I ever dreaming dreams of Class 9 glory.

Source: Car and Driver

Toyota builds a modern, full-size Tamiya Bruiser


During the 1/10-scale, off-road RC boom of the 1980s, toymaker Tamiya’s bread and butter came from the demand for such memorable machines as the Frog, Grasshopper, Fox, Hornet, and Blackfoot; but the company also sold more mechanically advanced radio-controlled cars, like its all-wheel-drive Porsche 959 replica and, of course, the Toyota Hilux–based Bruiser, a metal-framed beast with a leaf-spring suspension and a three-speed gearbox. In a fit of nostalgia, Toyota commissioned a full-size replica of the radio-controlled pickup based on its current Hilux offering.

American kids weren’t the only ones who went nuts for Tamiya’s plastic models and radio-controlled cars, buggies, and trucks during the Reagan administration. The youth in Thatcherite Britain had quite a soft spot for the things, too. While the Hilux moniker has long ago fallen into disuse in the USA—its role now filled by the Tacoma—British ’Yota enthusiasts still do their four-wheeling Hilux style. And in a goofy genius move, Toyota cribbed cues from the Bruiser that was introduced in 1985, upsized them, and applied them to the modern truck. To wit, the thing features a to-scale antenna pole mounted in the bed, wound in a loose spiral with cable, just as an RC car’s receiver wire would be wrapped around the little car’s aerial rod.

Also mounted in the bed is a replica of the Bruiser’s utilitarian on/off switch. Other, accents, however, are a bit more in the realm of smoke and mirrors. Unable to source and unwilling to fabricate rear-window louvers for the modern Hilux, the backlight makes do with a vinyl appliqué. And while the full-size Bruiser sports a correct double-tube rear bumper, the front wears only a tubular bull bar, while white stripes on the bumper evoke the rest of the toy truck’s front-end treatment.

To pay lip service to the Tamiya truck’s monstrous stance, Toyota went to Arctic Trucks for their AT35 conversion, which includes Fox shocks and a set of 17-inch wheels shod with 305/80 BFGoodrich Mud-Terrain T/As. Unlike the original, which the hapless builder had to prep and paint on the outside (unlike the less detailed paint-on-the-inside Lexan bodies so many RC cars wear), Toyota went with a Diamond Blue Metallic vinyl wrap wearing the Bruiser’s livery. It did, however, make use of a domed gel to replicate an era-correct embossed Toyota tailgate. Rather than an electric motor, the full-size Bruiser carries a 2.4-liter diesel engine to do its saintly rock-clambering, forest-bashing duty. Is it nerdy? Absolutely. Is it fun? For certains. Does our demand for ’80s-style Tamiyayota accuracy have us looking wistfully at the reissued Bruiser kit? You bet your charging boar it does.

Sources: Car and Driver and Toyota UK

Some Tamiya Mini 4WD releases that will be presented at Tamiya Fair 2017


95234 MS Color Chassis Set (Purple/Green)
95235 MS Color Chassis Set (Silver/Pink)
95347 17mm Aluminum Bearing Roller w/Plastic Ring (Red)
95368 Lightweight Plastic Spacer Set (12/6.7/6/3/1.5mm) (Blue)
95369 Large Dia. Hard Low Profile Tires & Carbon Reinforced Wheel
95370 Super X/XX Large Dia. Hard Low Profile Tires & Carbon Reinforced Wheel
95371 Hard Large-Diameter Low-Profile Tires & Carbon 6-Spoke Wheels
95381 Carbon Intension Rear Double Roller Stays (3 Attachment Points) (White)

Some Tamiya static releases that will be presented at Tamiya Fair 2017

14132 1/12 Ducati 1199 Panigale S Tricolore
25414 1/32 F-35A Lightning II (w/JASDF Mark)
35356 1/35 British Self-Propelled Anti-Tank Gun Archer
36211 1/16 German Pz.Kpfw IV Ausf.J – with single Motor

Tamiya Fair 2017 Information

Tamiya Fair 2017, November 18th (Saturday), 19th (Sunday)

Hobby’s festival, held this year too!

Tamiya fair was established as a hobby event in autumn of Shizuoka. Last year we had over 22,000 visitors. This year, which is the nineteenth time, we will also exhibit noteworthy new products, various events that you can participate in by participating in the customer, you can also sell limited items that can only be purchased at the venue and corners such as spot sale of bargains Expand. Tamiya’s hobby festival is held again this year!

Presentation of new products of Tamiya, exhibition (North / South Building)
We will display Tamiya’s new products such as scale model, RC model, mini 4WD and so on which will be released from this autumn to early next year at once. Please have a look and have a look.

Tamiya product sales corner (North / South)
We have all Tamiya products and original goods on sale now! If you purchase more than 1,000 yen you get a discount voucher that you can use at the venue! (※ The discount ticket is effective only at the Tamiya Fair 2017 period venue, shopping with discount tickets alone is not possible.)

Electric RC car World champion decision game! (North Building)
In addition to the 14 domestic competitions in Japan, representatives who have won the preliminary contests in nine countries and regions in Asia, the United States, Canada, Europe, and each area gather together, and the world’s best match of the Tamiya Electric RC car will be held. We develop a super close match that competes for 0.01 seconds. Even just watching the race development full of speed, it is powerful to hold sweat in hands. I can not stop sending cheers. A big race at a large special circuit is a must-see!

SUBARU WRX STI NBR Challenge exhibited (North Building)
German circuit known for harshness, Nürburgring. Since it is also used as a development course for sports cars, you will often hear names in Japan. SUBARU challenged from the year 2008 for the 24 hour endurance race to be held here and won 4 class wins. Based on SUBARU’s high performance sports sedan WRX STI, the WRX STI NBR challenge was finished for this race. NBR represents the Nürburgring. (Cooperation: Subaru Technica International Co., Ltd. )

Shizuoka Joint Work Exhibition (North Building)
Plastic model production This year also held joint work exhibition centering on clubs active in Shizuoka prefecture, Japan. Hundreds or more works centered on scale models such as airplanes, tanks, and cars will be gathered.

1/1 Mini 4WD actual vehicle project Aero Avante exhibition (South Building)
A dream big project to make Mini 4WD “Aero Avante” a real vehicle. Please see the powerful style at close range!
⇒ 1/1 Mini 4WD actual vehicle project (YouTube)
⇒ 1/1 Mini 4WD · actual car version Aero Avante & F1 TYRELL 019 Suzuka Circuit running image (YouTube )

RC Tank Owners Meeting held! (18th · South Building)
Radio control tanks such as Tiger I, Sherman, KV – 1, etc, which attract the ultimate realism that reproduces sound and light, as well as actions unique to tanks, are active. Match battle of tension done in one to one, competition against the team where combination is key of victory is done. All the tank fans, please come.
⇒ The details of the event are here!

Mini 4WD event (South Building)
“Mini 4WD Station Champion Decision Battle 2017” “Mini 4WD World Challenge 2017” held!
On Saturday 18th (Saturday) more than 400 shops nationwide, held the “Japan Mini 4WD Champion Decision Battle 2017” by a racer elected by “Mini 4WD Station Challenge” held over 900 meetings (3 lanes Use type). On the 19th (Sunday), “Mini 4WD World Challenge 2017” held by overseas representative racers gathered from all over the world and about 100 top racers in the country held! Do not miss it! * Participation in the race will be only for players who have won participation rights.
Contest Deregans Excellent Work Modification of exhibition
machine, painting contest “Competition Deregans”. At the Tamiya Fair venue, we will exhibit excellent works of each Japan Cup 2017 Tournament.
Free Participation Event (Saturdays and Sundays)
As a “Minna 4WD Plaza”, we will accept exhibits of everyone on Saturdays, Sundays
Free participation event (Sunday)
19th (Sunday) Japan Cup 2017 Official course “GREAT CROSS CIRCUIT 2017” can be opened as a free practice course and anyone can run on your own machine.

Hebokon Craft Workshop (charged) (South Building)
Let’s challenge the topic “Hebokon” on the street! It is a robot competition that you can participate even if you do not have experience of work. This time we will use Tamiya’s RoboCraft series. As Tamiya staff will support the production, it is okay. Produce an original machine by freely decorating the machine with abundant materials. After completing, we will do a tournament style robot sumo competition. Children who are not good at work are OK. Please join us.
⇒ What is henbokon? (Hebokon Official Website)
⇒ Hebokon Official Rule (Hebokon Official Website)
Schedule November 18 (Sat), 19 (Sun)
Three times a day (Production required time 2 hours)
● 9: 30 ~ 12: 00 ~ ● 14: 30 ~
* Because there is a closing at 16:00 on the last day 19 (Sunday), there is no time of 14: 30.
◎ participation fee 1,382 yen (decorative material, with battery) ※ ornaments bring Allowed
◎ use kit mechanical Giraffe (71105) , mechanical pig (71111) , mechanical Racehorse (71112) one of the selection.
◎ Recommended Elementary 3rd grade or higher recommended.
* If parents can help you to complete by co-production, you can join even if they are under 2 years old.
◎ Capacity Eight first arrivals each time
⇒ Advance reservation required. Please click here to apply. (Currently under preparation) “Hebokon” is a project born from the popular site “Daily Portal Z”.
※ This event is not hosted by Daily Portal Z.
⇒ Daily Portal Z

SDF Shizuoka District Cooperation Headquarters Corner (South Building)
The Shizuoka District Cooperation Headquarters familiar with the Shizuoka Hobby Show will also participate this year. On that day, a chance to see the real SDF vehicle closer! And please take this opportunity to talk with the SDF person. It also answers simple questions carefully and gently.
※ Scheduled exhibited vehicles: 96 type armored cars, light armored mobile vehicles, motorcycle for reconnaissance

Tamiya’s latest RC car “triple wheel series Dancing rider” experiencing running meeting held (free) (South Building)
Tamiya’s latest RC car experiencing running meeting will be held. It features an affordable speed and a cute body. It is a new sense of three wheel RC car that cornering by tilting the car body. Since operation is easy, women and children are also welcome. Please experience it.

Sweet Decoration Production Experience Corner (charged) (South Building)
“Sweets decoration” which is becoming popular among women now. Why not challenge the hobby to make real sweets like clay and other ingredients? Both girls and mothers’ participation are welcome as well. You can take home the completed work. ※ Works can not be eaten.

In addition to this, a lot of experience corners are prepared at the venue !!
RC trailer passenger experience corner (South Building) (free)
Let’s take a 1/14 size RC trailer. We will conduct trailer riding experience for primary schoolchildren and below.
Mini 4WD Workshop (South Building) (charged)
Make it on the spot and let’s play! ! Receiving at any time! We also have a circuit to run the finished machine. For assembly, the staff gently talks about lectures.

Separate event – Let’s enjoy with parents and children. Assembly class for the latest RC Touring Car !!
Visit Tamiya Fair 2017 and run at Tamiya Circuit, Hobby Zankei’s weekend! “Tamiya RC Tour with TRF” held
We planned “Tamiya RC Tour with TRF” of Hobby Zamani with TRF (Tamiya Racing Factory) staff. You can enjoy RC car assembly class, RC run at Tamiya circuit, Tamiya fair venue and Tamiya head office visit. Please join us with parents and children.
⇒ detailed content, please click here. 

List of exhibitors / cooperating organizations (unordered)
Tamiya fair has been exhibited by many manufacturers and cooperating organizations. Manufacturers of scales models and RC relationships, as well as many unique manufacturers are exhibiting, so please check each booth.
Mazda Co., Ltd. / UMA (moving model lover association) / Kyoto Machine Tool Co., Ltd. / Kondo Science Co., Ltd. / Sanwa Electronic Equipment Co., Ltd. / Futaba Electronics Industry Co., Ltd. / Mizuho limited company / Marto Hasegawa Works Corporation / / Tamiya Plastic Model Factory Shimbashi Store / Tamiya Plastic Model Factory Torresa Yokohama Store / Fine Mold Co., Ltd. / SWEET (Suite) / Limited Company Emmp / Shimomura Alec / Co., Ltd. Shiokawa Kodeno / Central Packaging / Shizuoka Joint Work Exhibition / Shizuoka Joint Work Exhibition / SDF Shizuoka District Cooperation Headquarters / Public Interest Foundation Corporate Planning and Tourism Bureau / Showa Print Processing Co., Ltd. Limited company / Rau pen model / ( ) Modeling Village / Co., Ltd. Ito-Yokado / pilot ink Co., Ltd. / match mower racing Corporation / Twilight Model / Subaru Tecnica International Co., Ltd.

■ The pattern of the event is taken with still images, movies, etc., and it may be published on each media related to Tamiya, such as printed matter and homepage. Please acknowledge your participation. ■ The organizer will pay attention to accident prevention, but we can not assume the responsibility in case of accident, theft, injury or other damage. ■ Please refrain from drinking in the hall. Moreover, those who did the troublesome acts of other customers and those who do not follow instructions of the staff may be sent out. Please note.