And we’re off...
That’s right! Scalextric have two brand new Ayrton Senna Lotus F1 cars in the 2021 catalogue – the black JPS 97T Renault he drove to his first win at the 1985 Portuguese GP and the 1987 Camel-sponsored 99T Honda from his first Monaco win. It’s pure nostalgia – these two cars imprinted in our memories, both with Senna at the wheel and as classic Scalextric models from the late 80s.
The Scalextric design team are giving these two models plenty of love and attention. The 97T is scheduled for a summer / early autumn release and the 99T is in the final quarter. At the moment, there’s only a 3D artist impression of the 97T and a photograph of the 99T. Both will have the F1 slim-can motor and magnatraction – the established set-up for Scalextric single-seaters.
Next is a rather tasty1976 British Grand Prix triple pack, which contains all three cars that finished on the podium – James Hunt’s McLaren, Niki Lauda’s 312T2 and Jody Scheckter’s six-wheeler Tyrrell. No new tooling, but the M23 and the 312T2 were crying out to be re-released - they will set you back much more second-hand than this triple pack costs brand new. The 312T2 mould was produced under license from Ferrari back in 2007. That license lapsed, but it looks like Scalextric can still produce cars from the mould if they drop the manufactures name. They have done the same with the “412P” in recent years.
The Classic F1 triple pack has the iconic cars, three F1 world champions and all the drama of the race and of the 1976 season. You can watch Rush for the Hollywood treatment…
This is the only limited edition pack in the catalogue – only 1,500 units are available. It is scheduled for a first quarter release and may be worth a pre-order, even for people (like me) who don’t normally indulge in that pre-order malarkey.
Two re-liveries round of the Classic F1 section. Jim Clark dominated the 1962 British Grand Prix in this little Lotus 25. He took pole position, fastest lap and very comfortable second Grand Prix win in what would be the last British Grand Prix at Aintree. The car has an odd yellow front right wheel – the pictures of the race show the yellow wheel and Simon confirmed it with Classic Team Lotus. This is another first quarter release.
Arriving right at the end of the year is the Tyrrell P34 that Ronnie Peterson raced to third place at the 1977 Belgian GP in Zolder. The blue and white First National City livery is one of my favourites on a Tyrrell (the 008 was my Scalextric F1 car of choice as a kid). The tooling of the Scalextric car is the 1976 P34, not the 1977 P34B with the bulbous engine cover. However, this is authentic. The P34B proved a ponderous car – not helped by a lack of front tyre development by Goodyear. Tyrrell swapped back to try the older P34 mid-season and Peterson scored the team’s best result of the year – the only time two Swedes have appeared together on a Grand Prix podium. Gunnar Nilsson won the race in a Lotus.
Classic GT, Touring and street cars next?