RE: Tamiya Toyota Hilux: Time For Tea?

RE: Tamiya Toyota Hilux: Time For Tea?

Thursday 30th October 2014

Tamiya Toyota Hilux: Time For Tea?

If this doesn't make you want an RC car really badly then nothing will



This could have been a PH Ad Break in all honesty but such is the quality of this Tamiya production it had to star in the premier PH video slot. It's simply tremendous.

From the outside advertising appears quite simple: show your product doing what it does best, describe its best features and therefore encourage people to buy one. Simple. Catchy music tends to help. This Tamiya Toyota Hilux advertorial does that almost immediately when 14 RC cars are seen pulling an actual Hilux.

Then it's to the sand dunes and canyons, where the Hilux can be seen testing its ability to climb 45-degree slopes and the making best use of the selectable 4WD. It tackles huge jumps unfazed, wades through axle deep water and continues to surmount all obstacles in its path. A bit like the real one in fact.

Even the technology is interesting. There are three gears selectable from your handheld transmitter, metal construction for durability and water resistant elements so you can continue to play in the rain. As a complete RC novice it makes a very convincing case for buying a remote controlled car. Right now. Maybe it's just the jazzy music.

See the video here.

 

 

Author
Discussion

lee,m

Original Poster:

9 posts

208 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
Whos now checking out the prices of these things now? chrissy pres to ones self?

LaurasOtherHalf

21,429 posts

196 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
Great article by that bloke off 5th gear in this months octane on Tamiya, there's a school of thought that says they're one of the biggest reasons for us turning out petrolheads!

Frimley111R

15,623 posts

234 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
I remember these having very hard suspension and looking at the video I think I remembered correctly. Looked better with Blazing Blazer tyres on though. Loved Tamiya in the 80s!

kambites

67,552 posts

221 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
I should really dig out my RC cars. I've no idea where they are at the moment. smile

chonok

1,129 posts

235 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
Massive Tamiya nut here!

My collection is starting to take over the house, although the HiLux is one model that I don't have (yet!)

Davey S2

13,092 posts

254 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
Ace (especially the 70's porno music).

I had a Holiday Buggy then Rough Rider and then a Blackfoot.


itz_baseline

820 posts

221 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
I used to take it pretty seriously as a kid (racing at National Level) when the Schumacher Cat was the car to have.

A friend i used to race with back in the day has recently got back into it. The focus seems to have shifted from 4wd to 2wd now though. The technology has shifted so much its amazing to see, especially with batteries. Quite often back in my day you would gear it slightly wrong and you battery woukd 'dump' with 1 minute to go. Ah the good old days etc etc etc.

daydotz

1,741 posts

161 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
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Wow I want one

Ryvita

713 posts

210 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
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DoctorX

7,268 posts

167 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
I really want the Toyota Tundra, but then I look at the instructions:

http://www.tamiya.com/english/rc/manuals.htm (big tyre models)

..and suspect it would be a £400 ornament.

Davey S2

13,092 posts

254 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
There was nothing worse as a kid at Christmas time after having spend days building it then realising that you only had a trickle charger which took 12 hours to re charge the battery and the fast charger was too expensive for you to have any hope of getting with your pocket money.

Juicetin1

603 posts

190 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
Another Tamiya nut here, mad on them in the 80's. Had a string of them from Rough Rider up to the Hotshot. The latter was heavily modded and was raced quite successfully.
A couple of years ago I picked up a Blitzer Beetle in v.good condition and then I bought a dog Wild Willy off Ebay and have just finished a ground-up restoration.
The Hi-Lux was the cream of the crop back in the day.
www.tamiyaclub.com is sheer porn for fans

Edited by Juicetin1 on Thursday 30th October 17:14

DP33

183 posts

126 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
I remember one of the older kids at school coming back after the Christmas holiday with a Ford Ranger, which he used to take out at break, we used to follow him around like he was some sort of Pied Piper. That was it, I wanted one more than anything - so I went from a Grass Hopper with 380 motor, through a Hornet with a 540(?) to a fully ball-raced Fox.

Could not agree more with the chap who mentioned that article in this month's Octane and how Tamiya Kits probably did more to create a generation of mechanically-interested car nuts than anything else this side of Smokey and The Bandit, The Cannonball Run and William Wollard!

I might see if I can interest one of my daughters in getting one for Christmas - although I'm not holding my breath!

V8Ford

2,675 posts

166 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
RC cars definitely breed petrolheads. I recently bought a Tamiya Lunchbox and it is great fun. Live in the Lake District so no shortage of bumpy tracks to take it along!

djdestiny

6,542 posts

178 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
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Huge tamiya fan here since the early 80's, I've owned loads over the years.
If you fancy treating yourself you're best ordering from www.stellamodels.net you will save loads over UK
Prices even after including p&p from Hong kong. I've spent well over a grand with them over the years and never had a single problem.

The last car I got from them was a rerelease Hotshot, this is it next to my original 80s one biggrin


Ryvita

713 posts

210 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
I bought one for last Christmas, and during the dull moments of an extended family celebration I put it together over the course of a couple of evenings. It was a brilliant way to keep myself entertained.

At one point there was me building on the kitchen table, my brother-in-law and my nephew (3 yr old) playing with some of the bits, my father "supervising" and reading through the instructions with a pint in hand, and my retired uncle who used to be an RAF signals engineer, playing with the R/C setup in the corner of the table.

It was a very happy moment. Buying another one for this year, with the full intention of sharing the building, particularly with the little one as he gets a bit older and more interested. smile

TWPC

842 posts

161 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
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I had a Wild Willy.

TWPC

842 posts

161 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
I was 14 at the time...

TWPC

842 posts

161 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
DP33 said:
Could not agree more with the chap who mentioned that article in this month's Octane and how Tamiya Kits probably did more to create a generation of mechanically-interested car nuts than anything else this side of Smokey and The Bandit, The Cannonball Run and William Wollard!
Totally agree.

Building the diff on the Wild Willy (despite being a Jeep it was only 2WD) was a completely absorbing experience. It also taught me about the issues of unsprung weight and live axles.

My second Tamiya was a Frog - so much more capable than the Willy. It had independent suspension all round, double wishbones at the front and trailing arms behind. And it had oil filled shocks on the rear suspension. Watching the way it dealt with bumpy terrain at speed so much better then the Willy was an education in itself.

billzeebub

3,864 posts

199 months

Thursday 30th October 2014
quotequote all
Tamiya Lunchbox
Tamiya Boomerang
Tamiya Vanquish
Kyosho Optima Mid Custom Special
Tamiya Avante 2001
Tamiya Avante 2011 (re-release)

That's my RC car history.

It's about time I bought another. I love building one over the winter months. It can be done indoors rather than in the garage!