Hi Mark,
In fact, the Strombecker 1/24 "motorized" models are very nice, especially for the time (ca 1960) and build up into very handsome slot cars - a lot of them were converted at the time, along with many of the Merit models from England. Let me see if I have one in my photo library (and remember, I'm not a great model maker!). A Strombecker Aston Martin DBR1 I converted many years ago (before I learned that the AM green is a very particular metallic shade, and before I found a good friend who is really good at painting):
I've seen lots of others, for instance this Maserati (it finished first in Concours d'Elegance one year in Bordo).
To answer your earlier remark, who knows why some model kit manufacturer made simplified cars like this? I assume to get them on the market quicker and make the whole design process easier. AMT offered a line of 1/32 cars with vac-formed bodies that were truly "blobs" as was said at the time.
Thanks for all the photos Martin, you've got an impressive track record there. A rather self-interested question: how big was the Corvair engine in the Genie, and when did it run? I'm asking because I race in a 1/24 race for under 2 liter cars, and if I could sneak a Genie in there I'd be very happy!
They are rather small, but having seen a Lotus 11 up close, I'm no longer amazed - boy is that thing small! I'm almost 6 ft, and I'd have a tough time even getting into the driver's seat, much less staying there for any length of time... None of the model manufacturers has really captured the Lotus stance...
Don