ultraclyde
ultraclyde UltimaDork
4/29/21 7:05 a.m.

Oh dear. The Little Car Company is making an electric, single-seat, drivable replica of the Tamiya Wild One RC buggy.

From the company website:

Specifications
The Wild One MAX will have a spaceframe chassis with four-wheel coil-over suspension and rear wheel drive. It gets the power to the ground through 15” off-road tyres on lightweight wheels. The buggy’s braking system includes hydraulic Brembo disc brakes on each corner, backed up by regenerative braking to maximise range.

When taking to the driving seat, customers will find an adjustable composite seat with a three-point seatbelt, digital gauges and a racing steering wheel. This allows drivers between 160cm (5’ 3”) and 195cm (6’ 5”) to get comfortable. There are even multiple driving modes including Novice, Eco & Race, which offer different top speeds, throttle mappings and power outputs according to driver skill level.

Performance
The base Wild One Max comes with a top speed of 48 km/h / 30 mph and a peak power output of 4kW (5.5 bhp). It has a single PowerPack onboard with a capacity of 2kWh and a range of up to 40km (25 miles), depending on terrain and driving style.

However, if you would like to go faster or further, several of the modular PowerPacks can be added to increase the performance and range.

Hop Ups & Upgrades
As any big kid Tamiya fan knows, half the fun following the build of your Tamiya R/C car was delving into Tamiya’s upgrade catalogue to choose your Hop-Ups. The Wild One MAX will be no exception.

30 mph not fast enough? There is a Hop-Up for that. Yearning for a four-point racing harness? The Little Car Company can help. High performance brakes and suspension? They’ve got that covered too.

One more thing….
On top of the individual Hop-Ups for the Wild One MAX, there will also be complete ‘Packs’, which can be added to your buggy. For example, a Tarmac Pack will provide owners with road-biased tyres and mudguards.

And taking it one stage further, for those who wish to roam both off and, on the roads, there will be three Road Legal Packs so that the adventure can continue way beyond the workshop. These packs add the components required to build the vehicle to be compliant with L6e or L7e Quadricycle legislation in Europe, or Neighbourhood Electric Vehicle legislation in the USA. Parts will include brake lights, turn signals, reflectors and rear-view mirrors so you have everything to make your vehicle fully road legal.

Building for the next generation
While it is still early days in the development process, we will be trying to bring back many of the classic elements of the Tamiya build, which fans enjoyed most. For example, do you remember those sticker sheets you used to carefully apply at the end? They’re back, but they’re now as tall as you are!

We really do want to hear from the fans on what they would like to see in the development of the Wild One MAX, so please sign up at WildOneMax.com and become part of the community and tell us what you would like to see on the new car.

“We are massively flattered and thrilled by the launch of the Wild One Max by The Little Car Company under official licence from Tamiya. Tamiya assembly R/C kits, especially our unique buggy range, have captured the imaginations of generations for over 40 years. The prospect of a nearly full-size Tamiya buggy, which can be built and driven, is truly exciting and will be the ultimate vehicle for any Tamiya fan.” Pete Binger, CEO, The Hobby Company – Tamiya UK Distributor

“As a child of the 80s, developing an almost full-size Tamiya model, which you can actually drive, is a dream come true. We are honoured to be working with the Tamiya team on the project to bring one of their most iconic models to life for a new generation. Because it is still early days in the project, we have the opportunity to include the feedback and feature suggestions from the legions of Tamiya fans out there. We encourage anyone with imaginative ideas and feedback around the engineering of the project to sign up to the newsletter at WildOneMax.com. We can’t wait to get these on, and off, the road in 2022!” Ben Hedley, CEO, The Little Car Company

Reserving a build slot
The Tamiya Wild One MAX is expected to cost from £6,000 / €7000 / $8,250 plus local taxes and is planned for global release in 2022. Customers can reserve a build slot from today at WildOneMax.com with a £100 fully refundable deposit. Build slots are allocated on a “first come, first served” basis.

If you would like to hear more about the project and to sign up for the latest news, please visit: WildOneMax.com

Please note final specifications and pricing are to be confirmed before production commences.

 

 

TLDR; it's an electric kit car that should operate under Europe's Quadracycle laws or US electric neighborhood vehicle and start under $10k. It's not super fast stock but they plan to offer a catalog of upgrade parts - like Tamiya did for the original. 

I really want one of these. 

 

Feedyurhed
Feedyurhed UltraDork
4/29/21 7:08 a.m.

I like it!!

ultraclyde
ultraclyde UltimaDork
4/29/21 7:13 a.m.

I'm as close as I've ever come to putting down a deposit on vaporware. It's totally impractical and I don't have the $10k in my budget, but wow. Just wow. 

EDIT: I know this is all because my first expereince with auto repair, racing, and hot rodding was a Tamiya Grasshopper buggy in like '85-90. But damn I really want one of these. Nostalgia is a strong drug. 

84FSP
84FSP UltraDork
4/29/21 7:26 a.m.

Very cool - wonder how easily hacked the speed limiter is?

Appleseed
Appleseed MegaDork
4/29/21 8:23 a.m.

I wonder if you can get a scale Thorp ball differential when the stock one explodes?

GCrites80s
GCrites80s HalfDork
4/29/21 9:25 a.m.

^Oooh, and a full set of ball bearings

hunter47
hunter47 New Reader
4/29/21 9:36 a.m.

I was really excited, until I saw the 30MPH limit. 

I know I know, there are laws regarding maximum travel speed of a vehicle that dictates where, when, and how it can be driven but if I wanted to go to the beach in my Wild One 8/10 scale buggy let me drive to the beach in one! 

At the very least, if it wasn't able to be registered, give it speeds that compete with the Polaris RZR and similar UTVs. That would be crazy good fun.

Placemotorsports
Placemotorsports GRM+ Memberand HalfDork
4/29/21 10:01 a.m.

Tesla motor swap

ultraclyde
ultraclyde UltimaDork
4/29/21 10:55 a.m.

30mph is just with the base motor. The upgrades get you more speed. Legality of that speed might be questionable... I agree that without a ripping motor this loses a lot of its appeal, but as a kit car i wold think there are things that could be done.

Did you notice even the front suspension arms look like the molded plastic ones from the original?

Appleseed
Appleseed MegaDork
4/29/21 11:15 a.m.

I'm waiting for someone to pull this off:

A full sized RC10. Can you even imagine?

 

Tyler H (Forum Supporter)
Tyler H (Forum Supporter) GRM+ Memberand UberDork
4/29/21 11:24 a.m.

They'll sell 2x as many if they widen it enough to be a side by side.  This is a golf cart replacement for all those places that are all carts and no clubs.

ultraclyde
ultraclyde UltimaDork
4/29/21 12:48 p.m.

I only need 1 seat, my wife won't even consider riding in a dune buggy with me LOL

I was thinking about the company that makes the adapters to bolt Tesla drive trains to VW bugs - and trying to decide where to stash the battery pack in a rail buggy.  Them making my own replica body. Hmmm...

EDIT: okay, EV West is the company, but it's not a Tesla kit, just electric. Instant 110 torques and 100 mph in a bug.  Also, it's a $17K kit.  I get you could buy a wrecked Tesla AND the Little Cars kit for that...

DOUBLE EDIT: Harbor Freight 22HP Predator (which is 300% more HP than the planned base electric...) for $869.  Bad ideas man, bad ideas....

03Panther
03Panther UltraDork
4/29/21 10:51 p.m.

In reply to ultraclyde :

yesdevilyes

GCrites80s
GCrites80s HalfDork
4/30/21 11:36 a.m.
Appleseed said:

I'm waiting for someone to pull this off:

A full sized RC10. Can you even imagine?

 

It really wouldn't be that hard to make interchangeable body parts to make it look more like an RC10. You would want either the wheels from the ad or solid wheels. Get a wing on there and a gold undertray and you're almost there!

Jesse Ransom
Jesse Ransom GRM+ Memberand UltimaDork
4/30/21 11:39 a.m.

After having seen the giant 3D printer that guy set up to do Project Binky's fender flares, one starts to wonder whether you could just print a 10:1 scale set of RC10 suspension bits and so forth in CF-reinforced nylon...

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