Pinewood Derby sales were a pretty big thing at the hobby shop that I worked part time at. We couldn't get a Boy Scouts of America dealership to sell official BSA stuff, we sold the after market stuff from Woodland Sceneics. They have a great line of accessories and parts. With most of the activity in my area, you had to at least use the wheels that came with the BSA issued kit, so that protected their sales of those. Over the years I learned a lot from customers as they figured out easy does it ways to improve performance with what they gave you. I had to deal with the Dad's that were McDonnell-Douglas engineers coming in and claiming that they put their kid's car in the wind tunnel and yada, yada, yada, but in the long run, I learned through my own experience with Sean in his Scout days was to make the car weigh as close to the weight limit as possible ( 5 ounces?? I think? ) and make the car balanced. Make the car roll as straight as possible so it's not constantly banging against the guide strip where it would scrub off speed. They were not allowed to bush the wheels at all, which were really loose and wobbly on the axle nails, so make those as close a fit to the car and the head of the nail as possible to reduce any wobbling. I did this by putting a piece of business card stock on the nail, then the wheel (after making sure there was no flashing sticking out anywhere) then another piece of business card stock on the nail. I took C/C glue and used it to coat the wood on the body where the axles pushed it to harden it and make it slick, and then sanded that as smooth as possible. Push the nail in until there was some draw on it from the card stock, then pull the card stock out. test roll the car and get it rolling straight. When satisfied, reinstall the wheels and secure with glue. next step is to use unscented furniture polish and spray a dab on each axle, and then have the kid spin the wheels for an hour or so to polish everything in. You have to make sure the nails don't have any globs of cadmium or flashing from dipping them on them also. Those simple steps, when done correctly, will yield a pretty fast car. I helped a lot of single Mom's and/or Dad's that never did anything hobby wise get a decent car that won some prizes, and often just using kitchen utensils!! It was much later on that the wheels became a "thing" with some of the parents. Each wheel has a number on it, and that's the number of the cavity that the wheel was made in on the mold. They probably mold 2 dozen at a time as I remember seeing a lot of 2 digit numbers. If the operator sees any defects in the parts, he then knows which cavity to look at and work on. So somebody starts the rumor that you want wheel with the number 17 on the inside! Those were supposed to be like magic!! It didn't matter to them that there might be two or three injection molding machines pumping these things out and all with the same cavity numbers!!It was fun working with people though. It used to be that the Scout Derby season was between Halloween and Thanksgiving, to give all the troops plenty of time to hold their events. Some troops had their own tracks to run on, and some had to share one that got passed around. Last time I checked, it goes a lot longer these days and we even had other types of kids groups doing it so it's almost year round now. What's ridiculous is the clowns that sell "Race Ready, Derby Winning Cars" on eBay for crazy money, and people buy them!! And if you're wondering, Sean DID build his own car! I did the band sawing and such, but he did everything else. It was a Batman car that resembled the movie Batmobile, and he won a trophy for "Best Looking" car. They also had a Dad's Class and I kicked major butt there with one that I patterned after the midget racer my wife's Dad used to wrench on in the early 60's.
Type at you later,
Dan McEntee