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Hot wheels are there own thing imo. Now a 1/10 of a hot wheel.You are talking about Hothoopty ,he collects everything ,including hot wheels!..
1/10 hot wheels would be sick I bet someone can 3d print on or do the metal printing thing i dont know what I’m talking aboutHot wheels are there own thing imo. Now a 1/10 of a hot wheel.
Thing would be tiny. Is a matchbox the same size as a hot wheel? I think that was a car too.1/10 hot wheels would be sick I bet someone can 3d print on or do the metal printing thing i dont know what I’m talking about
YesIs a matchbox the same size as a hot wheel?
I've accumulated 3 nice 1/10 scaled crawlers, all within the past 10 months, and for the past 4 months, the only things I want to grab and play with are my 5 SCX24s.24 vs 10. I consider the 1/10 to be a real rc. I classify the 24 as play toys. Buying a 1/24 is adding a toy. Getting a 1/10 is a rig.
Plus, crawlers rarely break parts, and *usually* don't get as filthy as bashers for the same amount of run time, oh, and speaking of run time, crawlers have long run times!Both vehicles will be absolutely fine for a beginner. As a matter of fact, any crawlers will be absolutely fine for beginners. Crawlers are purposely slow moving machines. For this reason, the learning curve is very, very low. Even if you ran them full speed into a wall, there's not likely to be any damage. Even if they take a straight drop from 2ft up, it's unlikely going to cause any detrimental damages.
A 1/10 scale will need big space. Crawling around in your backyard over your wood pile will get boring very, very quickly. Most people's backyard are perfect for a 1/24.
However, in your case, it's going to come down to budget. You simply don't have the budget, at this point, to be able to modify and truly enjoy a 1/10 to it's full potential.
Members here have been recommending, over and over, for you to get an SCX24. There's a reason for that. They are outstanding crawling machines!
I completely disagree here. The SCX24 is far from a toy in my opinion. It does the exact same things it's bigger brother does, just on a smaller scale. It's like model railways. There are lots of different scales, and they get more complex as you go down in scale. When you see a Z scale layout in a briefcase, with working signals, switches, sounds, realistic train movements, it's pretty damned impressive. That's the way I feel about the SCX24. It's even more impressive that they are as cool as they are, in such a small scale.24 vs 10. I consider the 1/10 to be a real rc. I classify the 24 as play toys. Buying a 1/24 is adding a toy. Getting a 1/10 is a rig.