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  2. Tamiya Radio Controlled Nitro Vehicles - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tamiya_Radio_Controlled...

    The Tamiya Radio Controlled Nitro Off-road Vehicles entered the radio controlled (RC) nitro engine (glow engine) powered 1/8 scale truck market in July 2002. Produced by the Tamiya Corporation of Japan, these 1/8 scale trucks are designed for stadium competition. Tamiya's first nitro truck, TR-15t, was introduced in 1994.

  3. List of Tamiya product lines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Tamiya_product_lines

    They produce many model car kits including road cars, sports racing cars, World Rally Championship cars, and Formula One racing cars. Usually these are 1/24 scale although the Formula One kits are 1/20 scale. A few street, racing, and F1 kits are also produced in 1/12 scale including the Ferrari 641/2, McLaren Honda MP4/6, and Williams Renault ...

  4. Model engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_engine

    A model engine is a small internal combustion engine [1] typically used to power a radio-controlled aircraft, radio-controlled car, radio-controlled boat, free flight, control line aircraft, or ground-running tether car model.

  5. Radio-controlled car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radio-controlled_car

    Engine size is related to the class of car; 1/10 scale on and off-road vehicles usually are equipped with .12–.18 cubic inch engines, with 1/8 scale vehicles using .21–.32 cubic inch engines. There are exceptions, with many Schumacher and Thunder Tiger/Team Associated RC models being good examples of unusually large engines coming as ...

  6. XMODS - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/XMODS

    The starter kits advertise the ability to change the motor, wheels, tires, trim kit, springs/shocks, and bearings (From nylon bushings to steel bearings), add lighting kits, and, in some generations, swap the crystal to allow the cars to operate on multiple frequencies. Tutorials for modifications are also available on various XMODS forum sites.

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  8. Cox Models - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cox_Models

    Nitro- and gasoline-powered tether cars with .60 cubic inch miniature engines capable of speeds of 100 mph (160 km/h) were quickly becoming popular. Cox's first contribution to that growing hobby was a cast aluminum midget racer powered by a .09 and .15 engine by Cameron Brothers of Chino, California.

  9. Model engine classes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_engine_classes

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