Category:Aurora AFX: Difference between revisions

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{{Toymaker|Date1=1971}}
The '''[[Aurora]] AFX''' range of [[slotcar]]s (1971 - 1983/1984) were scaled to blend in with popular 00/H0 model railway systems, and could be thought of as the technological successor to Aurora's '''[[Aurora Model Motoring]]''' range.
Since AFX didn't appear until the 1970s, it's a bit out of the [[BTMM|Toy Museum]]'s date range.
==Origins and development==
The original ancestor of the range was the 1:76 00-scaled '''[[Playcraft]] [[Highways]]''' range, originally manufactured for Playcraft by [[Jouef]], which Aurora acquired and improved, replacing the original "buzzy" push-pull "solenoid-and-ratchet" motors with something more sophisticated, until finally bringing out the '''A/FX''' or '''Aurora Factory Experimentals''' range in 1971, with standardised chassis that took clip-on bodyshells (the longer 1973 "speciality" chassis also took a fixing screw). 
==See also:==
* '''[[Aurora Model Motoring]]''' – ''the predecessor to Aurora AFX''
* '''[[Highways|Playcraft Electric Highways Model Motoring]]''' – ''the predecessor to Aurora Model Motoring''


==Links:==
==Links:==
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[[Category: Aurora]]
[[Category: Aurora]]
{{Slotcar}}
{{USA}}
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{{WIP}}

Latest revision as of 15:51, 22 December 2018

Toy Brands and Manufacturers

Aurora AFX

1971 -     

The Aurora AFX range of slotcars (1971 - 1983/1984) were scaled to blend in with popular 00/H0 model railway systems, and could be thought of as the technological successor to Aurora's Aurora Model Motoring range.

Since AFX didn't appear until the 1970s, it's a bit out of the Toy Museum's date range.

Origins and development

The original ancestor of the range was the 1:76 00-scaled Playcraft Highways range, originally manufactured for Playcraft by Jouef, which Aurora acquired and improved, replacing the original "buzzy" push-pull "solenoid-and-ratchet" motors with something more sophisticated, until finally bringing out the A/FX or Aurora Factory Experimentals range in 1971, with standardised chassis that took clip-on bodyshells (the longer 1973 "speciality" chassis also took a fixing screw).

See also:

Links:

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