To some younger Gen X-ers and older Millennials, the name Tamiya is synonymous with nostalgic afternoons wiled away at workbenches or in the dirt. Kids would assemble their remote-controlled Wild One ...
Remember when you were a kid, flinging your radio controlled car off a home-made jump in your driveway and thinking how great it would be to shrink down to one fifth of your size and drive the thing ...
Childish glee is still apparent in grown-ups, it just comes out in a lower register, as it turns out. Because this is the kind of car that reminds us all that being childish isn’t a bad thing at all.
The Little Car Company has built a stellar reputation for taking classic cars and turning them into miniature EVs to be driven by adults and children alike. But what happens if you reserve the recipe ...
In a genius tie-up, The Little Car Co - whose usual 75 per cent remakes are of famous classics like the Aston DB5 or Bugatti Type 35 - is building a Wild One you can drive. You get a spaceframe long ...
The Little Car Company has started to make a big name for itself creating driveable fully licensed scale replicas of cars like the Bugatti Type 35 and Aston Martin DB5. But for its latest project, the ...
“And for my next trick,” you can imagine Ben Hedley, founder and boss of The Little Car Company, saying before pulling the covers off his latest creation. Coming after miniature, third-scale versions ...
If you were a kid in the eighties, you will likely remember Tamiya's Wild One - arguably the most recognisable remote-controlled car ever made. And from 2024, you can get your hands on one again - and ...
The Little Car Company, manufacturers of hand-built electric scaled cars, is launching the Tamiya Wild One MAX, based on the popular 80s radio controlled car. And there will be a road legal version.