My grandson Leo is now 7 years old, has joined the Cub Scouts. The Pinewood Derby is on, and parents (and grandfathers) are allowed to "help" complete a car. My problem, of course, is that a 7-year old isn't really up for a long-term project and has a different level of quality expectation in the final result and a different patience level. It's a good reminder to those of us who just might be too anal in our expectations... Just have fun!
So, I did finally convince him that a Studebaker Indy car could make an acceptable Pinewood Derby car, though he wanted Day-Glo orange as the color. I did direct the creation of the pattern and the rough cutting, but Leo filed, sanded, painted, and put decals on. I used the 1935 drawings from Ray Kuns' article scaled to the 7-inch length of the Pinewood cars, with adjustments for the actual axle locations dictated by the Scouts' rules. I think he's ready to take his Studebaker to the pack meet and show them how a Studebaker can be still be competitive.
If anyone else wants to use the "Studebaker Spl" or the logo decals, I can supply them for other Pinewood Derby cars at about 1/24 scale. It does make a great grandfather-grandson project.



So, I did finally convince him that a Studebaker Indy car could make an acceptable Pinewood Derby car, though he wanted Day-Glo orange as the color. I did direct the creation of the pattern and the rough cutting, but Leo filed, sanded, painted, and put decals on. I used the 1935 drawings from Ray Kuns' article scaled to the 7-inch length of the Pinewood cars, with adjustments for the actual axle locations dictated by the Scouts' rules. I think he's ready to take his Studebaker to the pack meet and show them how a Studebaker can be still be competitive.
If anyone else wants to use the "Studebaker Spl" or the logo decals, I can supply them for other Pinewood Derby cars at about 1/24 scale. It does make a great grandfather-grandson project.
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