RE: Pocket Classics Army: PH Fleet

RE: Pocket Classics Army: PH Fleet

Tuesday 26th April 2016

Pocket Classics Army: PH Fleet

And it was all going so well...



Those familiar with Ice Cold In Alex will know the scene where our protagonists laboriously heave their old ambulance up a sand dune with little more than grit and determination. Imagine something similar, albeit relocated to a muddy Yorkshire hillside and with the Chuckle Brothers attempting to prevent a miniature car bouncing out of control through a dry stone wall.


Up to this point the Pocket Classics Army had been all the fun an overgrown child could have wished for. And then my brother and I were stranded with a snapped chain. At the bottom of said hill, Sunday lunch at the top of it.

Obviously our top secret test location was on private land and in no way likely to test the (mainly generous ... you'd speculate) goodwill of ramblers, landowners or any other innocent bystanders. And we'd been invited by Pocket Classics man Ben to give the Army a proper thrashing. But faced with having to manhandle it home my brother and I were rather wishing we'd not been so ambitious, and instead stuck to the disused car park out the back.

The undoing was a rock that flicked the chain off its idler sprocket, it eventually jamming, snapping and dumping itself in the mud. Up to that point we'd been having a whale of a time, the solid rear axle meaning turn-in isn't the sharpest but giving decent traction and mud-flinging drifts on suitably wet surfaces. The centrifugal clutch reaches its limits on steep, boggy inclines but if you're willing to take a run-up and pick the correct choice of the three gears beforehand the Army shows decent tenacity in the rough. And a disturbing turn of pace on harder surfaces. Never has 30-something mph (claimed) felt so exciting.


The gearing is a little odd, first being very low and the leap to second quite big. There's nothing cultured about the huge clunk as the sequential shifter bangs home the next gear, a slight lift smoothing things out a tad. After a dousing in some mud the hydraulic disc brakes - two dinky ones up front, a big one on the rear axle - have bedded in to the extent a combination of engine braking and pedal give sufficient confidence to tackle some serious downslopes. The only real fear is being bounced out, a death grip on the wheel the only thing holding you in place. To wit I'm glad I replaced the chocolate bolts holding it on with more secure stainless items, secured by Nyloc nuts. There are lap belts but, frankly, if it goes that wrong I want to be able to leap clear rather than be pinned underneath. Which could happen if you were stupid enough to attempt doing doughnuts on a grippier surface and discover it'll tip over before the rear tyres let go. But only an idiot would try that...


Fixing the chain involved wheeling the Army up to the motorbike shop at the top of my mum's road, sharing some amusingly sweary banter with the mechanics and accepting both their advice to visit a local industrial supplier and an invitation to bring it back once running. Y'know, so they could just check it over and all. Their recommendation of Spen Bearings was bang on, the Keighley branch had a suitable split link and for a couple of quid out of my pocket and some skin off my knuckles the Army was back up and running. If it had been more involved Pocket Classics would have picked up the tab as part of its no quibble mechanical support for the first year of ownership; as the thread following the last story picked up there are apparently similar products in the market for less cash but back-up like this is reassuring. And, no, we aren't getting special treatment in this regard.

A slightly more epic shakedown test than my brother and I had envisaged then. But, as per Ice Cold In Alex, the beer at the end of it was appreciated with suitable solemnity and reverence.


FACT SHEET
Car
: Pocket Classics Army
Run by: Dan's inner three-year-old
On fleet since: We located the crate
Mileage: A few, a broken chain, then none
List price new: from £4,995 (£5,995 built)
Last month at a glance: Ice Cold In Alex re-enacted in Yorkshire, in perfect half scale

Previous reports:
Dan clears his old toys out of the garage ... then fills it with a new one

 

 

 

 

Author
Discussion

pozi

Original Poster:

1,723 posts

187 months

Tuesday 26th April 2016
quotequote all
We need videos smile

anonymous-user

54 months

Tuesday 26th April 2016
quotequote all
Best "dab of oppo" pic ever!




laugh

Blackpuddin

16,515 posts

205 months

Wednesday 27th April 2016
quotequote all
Great little story.

V8RX7

26,859 posts

263 months

Wednesday 27th April 2016
quotequote all
How many people are spending £6k on a kids toy ?


Hellbound

2,500 posts

176 months

Thursday 28th April 2016
quotequote all
Awww...I actually like that. I remember back when I first heard about these things and forwarded the link PH thinking they'd be interested. They were, and promptly ran a story on it. Soon after a PHer got in touch with the manufacturers and started importing the little things.

I like to think I'm entitled to at least 50% of the business. biggrin

badgerracing

114 posts

229 months

Thursday 28th April 2016
quotequote all
Ah - you were the original source. Thank you.
Not sure we can do 50%, but we can give you a go next time you're nearby if you like?

Hellbound said:
Awww...I actually like that. I remember back when I first heard about these things and forwarded the link PH thinking they'd be interested. They were, and promptly ran a story on it. Soon after a PHer got in touch with the manufacturers and started importing the little things.

I like to think I'm entitled to at least 50% of the business. biggrin

X5TUU

11,939 posts

187 months

Thursday 28th April 2016
quotequote all
V8RX7 said:
How many people are spending £6k on a kids toy ?
they can be bought (near identical cheaper) ... I looked at these but they weren't available to order yet, so bought:

- a used grass-track chassis and running gear - £75
- a new shell in the shape I wanted (Hot Rod and Offroader - swappable) - £300 each

and am in the process of the overhaul and build, I have a nice flat bottomed steering wheel from my TT to fit and will make up the seating etc... and get a friend to do the upholstery as he does interiors etc...

It'll take a while dont get me wrong but its just a pet project, and my daughter is only 18mths so doesnt need/want this immediately anyways, so there is no rush.

I will get them wrapped rather than sprayed for ease (probably barbie pink for her) and get some plates made up in miniature of the private plate bought for her before she was born - def dont need to spend £6+k