My old friend Matthew had a tether car when he was about 10 years old, it was a beautiful red racer with a .19 engine, and it ran like greased lightning... However, he didn't want to tether it, so one day he fired it up and turned it loose on the street in front of his house. The car did great for about 50 yards, then veered wildly to one side, spun, and hit the curb. By the time it stopped, it had slammed into the neighbors car, doing about 60 mph. It left a dent and a caused quite a racket, and Matthew got his backside whooped. This was around the Summer of 1968, and these cars were made of metal and were pretty heavy. It looked like their car was hit with a baseball bat. The funny part was that the tether car didn't stop running, and just set there on its top screaming like a weedwhacker while he chased it around and around trying to stop it. Ever since then, it has set on his shelf as a piece of his childhood history, which he tells to anyone who will listen.
I grew up with these things. My Dad was a bad ass u control model airplane stunt flyer. He was a national champion in the 50's. He was also into tether cars from the 50's to the 80's, and raced very competitively in National competitions. You are right. They are almost completely hand made. My Dad would just get the rough aluminum cast car and mill it himself. The fuel tanks and many of the parts were hand made. Once he even made an engine. He was good friends with Dick McCoy, of McCoy engines.
I've got two tether cars from the 1930s. They were my dad's. One is a Dooling Bros. and the other is a Hiller that has never been run. The Hiller I believe is called a "Hornet" and was made by the same company that built full sized helicopters. I've even got the manual for the Hiller. The cars were run in roller skating rinks primarily where my dad grew up in Illinois. He had told me that the cars would have a pole that would protrude vertically from the car much like an antenna. This was connected to a switch that would turn the motor's ignition off. To get the car to stop you would stick a long pole out that would trip that "antenna" and the ignition would cut off, stopping the car. My two cars have pneumatic tires. I also have an engine, new in the box called a "Super Cyclone" which includes a spare cylinder head that, I believe boosted the compression on the engine for more power. I'm not positive, but I believe that the Cyclone engine could be used either in the Dooling car or with a prop for airplanes, with minor modification. I also have some 1930s and pre-war airplane engines, also. One is a Morton M-5, 5 cylinder radial with a 14" prop and an opposed 2 cylinder called an "Elf". There's also a "Denny-Mite" single cyl. airplane motor that was produced by an popular 1930s actor named Reginald Denny. They all use small spark plugs and not glow plugs. Mustie1, you've got some valuable and interesting cars and parts. Thanks for sharing.
Wow, Mustie - sweet find! I had an old, large (approx 17" long, 9" high, 7" wide) silver streamlined racing car w/closed cockpit, open in rear, made of balsa wood. It had been my former brother-in-law's car that I remember from the '50s. No motor, large Bonneville-looking wheels w/hard rubber tires, and two eyelets on the lower frame on the left side. Didn't have any use for it, didn't have a clue as to what it was worth, put it on eBay for a low price ($50) and said didn't know what it was. Didn't take long for buyers to let me know what it was and approximate age ('30s - '40s). Also received some web links about these tether cars, which were tremendously popular at one time - they were even raced on indoor slot tracks, much like the old electric slot car shops were in the '60s. I had no idea, and was completely shocked at what it sold for it over 5 years ago - over $1400.00. Folks, it's really worth looking these tether cars up on the 'net. Who knew????
At 1:40 it was said that these are 19 cc motors. Well they are not as they are .19 of a cubic inch . Their capacity is measured in cubic inches and that would be 3.11 cc. We used to refer to a 60 as 9.8cc were 60 was in fact .6 cubic inches. Hope that this helps.
I used to fly control line model planes with engines like these but I never got into the tether cars..my favorite engine was the Fox .35 with 65 foot control lines and running on a mixture of nitro and castor oil...what a lucky find for you.. congrats
Nice! I flew line control planes with Enya glow-plug engines. Always returned home with a bag of wood splinters and torn doped fabric rags. Great times! Yes, the engines scream! The trick was to know someone who’s Mom was a nurse so you could get a syringe for feeding fuel straight into the cylinder, kinda like that bottle Mustie has.
What a sweet treat to see I was thinking of buying an older 40's .19 that is selling for 10$ and building a car by hand I have alot of aluminum blocks laying around just begging to be casted and machined.
My brother had one of the first style "real McCoy" cars in the very early fifties. We started it by turning a bit over and holding it against the tire while cranking the bike. The one he had was the only engine that I can remember having rings on the piston but I probably just don't remember very well. It would seem that any of the small engines would have some form of rings. The metal "wheelie" tab was not part of the car originally and I remember that the car developed a lot go gouges on the underside, between the rear wheels from the asphalt we were running on They were located right under the rear axel where the tires must have compressed enough to take up all the clearance which was about 1/8 inch. We didn't try to stop the car - just let it run out of gas. I think that the 19 displacement was .019 inches. According to the literature it would run at something nearing 100 MPH actual speed, not scale speed. All I can recall for sure was that it was a challenge to turn fast enough in the middle of the circle.
Dan is right, these cars and the associated parts are worth a small fortune, you scored a big time find... that's antiques roadshow type stuff one or two of those engines might be worth a small fortune by itself. That's one of those once in a lifetime finds my friend!
A friend of mine had an old Cox tether with the .049........I had a p-51 cox plane with the same motor with the spring starter that hooked the prop.... the two tether lines controlled the rear elevator.Man that always made ya dizzy as hell.but was fun.
The one you called Porky was a Rodzy Standard made by American Precision Engineering. It had a .09 engine. I saved up for a year to buy one as a kid. They also made a Rodzy Racer with a larger engine.
hey there .thanks for sharing brings back memories my dad ran this one in the 30-40s.i know how it is about tires going flat. I'm looking for a pair for mine. Mine tether car is a dooling F.
Hi Mustie 1. You are right !!! I am an old fool of 83 that can go back to about 1947 when I first saw such a car, how wonderful that you have found them. Someone had a lot of cash to have had such great models, I have a book on Model Cars and I think some are in it. Like me, the book is old, I could never afford a car. Some were produced by 1066 Models in kit form..I bought a chassis wheels diff and some chassis fitings hoping to construct a mode MG, wasn't clever enough still have some parts somewhere. Thaks for the memories
We raced theme on a tennis Court. And yes they were really fast. If you are interested in all this---let me know. By the way, we held on to them using a length of kite string. Where we raced them starting side by side rolling along in a circle. The track had to be swept clean so as not to flip end over end. You found someones entire kit. Now go have fun.
The Motors remind me of the old Cox Airplanes that you would pilot in a circle with Guide Lines. They may be similar (starting wise) to the Nitro Methane RC cars like a friend of mine Raced in the early 70s. The Planes required a Battery Pack that would plug onto the Glow Plug and you would spin the prop to start it, then pull the battery wire off the motor. The Cars had Battery Packs in the car, and used a (external) High Speed Spinning Wheel to rotate the tires, or a Fly Wheel under the car till it fired up. My friend mounted a motor and wheel in a Foot Locker type Box, and would lower the car onto the wheel to start it.
When I was a kid in the 60's I had a Dan Gurney Eagle Indy car that was a tether racer. I use to start it on the overturned wheel of my bicycle. Ultimately they were boring since it seemed to be a matter of how many circles the thing would do on a tank of gas..
What a cool parts kit. Looks like an upgraded version of an erector set. I’ll bet Mustie could put that bigger engine together with all those parts in that kit.
I remember seeing an ad in a model magazine in the late 1950's for a car like yours . The one aluminium coloured one, with the pointed front in Britain .
Wow that some really rare cars you just dont find a nice and valuable collection like that. Mabey 1 car but 5 awesome cool. I would have to say about $800 Mabey more on rarity. Thx for sharing
My father used to have some kind of dealings with similar engines, for racing model airplanes. The older ones were all spark ignition. He told me about one super-tuned engine that ran 40000 rpm and gave 5 hp, made by Ball iirc. Not sure what the displacement was, but not at all large. Being 2-strokes and cranked by flipping the propeller, the engines would sometimes try to start backwards, which could take off a finger when the sharp trailing edge hit mere mortal flesh and bone.
These are beautiful, much faster than you probably expect... the "19" is a little over 3cc....I suspect these tether cars would be too unstable for free running!
I saw these run when I was a kid in a elementary school. The guy pounded a large nail into the asphalt to hold it in place and we stood by about 75 feet away. When h got it started and it ran in a circle they went insanely fast and it was scary loud.
I know...Glow fuel which is Nitro methane and caster oil...I was into model planes most my life...Still have a lot of the old engines and planes...That ole timey car has a Cox engine in it...The one with the oval cylinder..
Very cool...I used to go to a tether car circuit back in the 70's...The engines burn up real fast because they become leaner the more they go around until they are shut off with a broom..or a Kaboom..!..lol
Today I am mr very jealous! Those are a real delight. Dream about going to a flea market or garage sale and finding a box of treasure like these! Not an insignificant value there.
Sizing-wise, I think they're like model aircraft engines. For example : a "19" would be 0.19 cubic inch, a "40" would be 0.40 cubic inch etc. In the UK, our early engines were 'diesels' (no spark) these were rated in cc's. Later, we had 'Glow-plug' engines. These had a tiny heater filament that would glow when attached to a low voltage battery (about 2v I think). Once started, you could disconnect the battery and the heat of combustion would keep it going. Even earlier, (20's and 30's ?) the spark ignition ones like you've got there were common. There should be a contact breaker driven off the crankshaft plus a coil and condenser set-up somewhere else. I think the modellers of the day used fairly large 12v lead-acid cells for starting and dry cells for operating once started.
Yes... they never put the decimal point on the cast crankcase body so my McCoy "Redhead" 19 is actually a .19 Cubic Inch displacement and my Vivell 35 is actually a .35 Cubic Inch displacement in the combustion chamber on my antique model airplane engines, which is the cubic area of the bore diameter and stroke length for the air/fuel mixture's effective volume for combustion.
On the cars with no obvious fuel tank, could they have used pen bladder tanks which would have been filled outside the car then attached to the carb fuel intake just before the race?
They are glo-plug motors. A six volt battery would be attached to get the plug hot then a spin of the motor would start it an run till the fuel ran out.
The weird pistons are actually Schnurle type deflector pistons. The ramp causes the fuel air mixture to be looped (the Schnurle loop effect) into the top of the cylinder, pushing the exhaust gases out of the opposite exhaust port. Deflector piston opposed port 2 stroke engines produce around 30% less power than conventional 2 stroke engine of the same displacement. This type of 2 stroke engine produces only around 30% of the power output of a conventional transverse ported flat top piston 2 stroke engine because it is so inefficient. They appeared in the 1890's and the last motorcycle produced with a opposed ported deflector piston engine was a French 5.5 HP 125cc in 1958 (at a time when transverse ported 125cc motorcycles produced 10 or more HP). In 1944 Jawa secretly invented and experimented with transverse ported flat top pistoned 2 stroke motorcycle engines. right under the noses of the Nazis. In 1946 Jawa produced the 250-11 Perak, the world's first production transverse ported 2 stroke motorcycle, which could attain the then unheard of (for any 250cc) top speed of 75 MPH. All other post 1946 transverse ported 2 stroke engines, with flat topped pistons, are descended from this motorcycle.