In Final Lap, He Wants a Macho Mini-Car
Here we are deep in the Pinewood Derby laboratory, down here in the basement with the spiders and the sawdust and the old bikes. Itâs a damp basement. Spiders live here. Mostly male spiders. Black widowers. Thereâs lots of sawdust, too. Male sawdust.
âThatâs cute, Dad,â the little girl says as we sand her Pinewood Derby car.
âForget cute,â I tell her. âThis is a race car.â
âItâs pretty cute,â she says with a shrug.
So we shave the Pinewood Derby car a little more, the wood so soft I could almost whittle it with my thumbnail, so soft I could almost carve it with my calluses.
Unfortunately, I have no calluses. I have suburban hands, soft hands--hands better suited to holding tennis racquets or remote controls. When I twist off a beer top, it hurts a little. The last time I got dirt under my nails was at a hockey game. And it wasnât really dirt. It was mustard. Lasted about a week.
âWe need a band saw,â I tell the little girl.
âWhatâs a band saw?â she asks.
The little red-haired girl is 7 now and she still doesnât know what a band saw is, doesnât know how to use one, wouldnât know one if it fell on her foot. Worst of all, she doesnât seem to care.
âHavenât you had shop class?â I ask.
âWhatâs shop class?â the second-grader asks, like sheâs never even heard the term.
Now, if you donât know about Pinewood Derby cars, hereâs the deal: They give a kid a block of wood. They give the kid four plastic tires. A couple of small axles. Some screws. From this, each child creates a little race car. Sometimes, dads assist a little.
Then, on a spring Saturday, the troop or tribe gathers and races the little cars down a plywood track. Prizes are given for speed and design. Some cars look like cars. Others look like . . . well, almost anything.
âHow about a shark?â I ask, imagining a race car shaped like a tiger shark.
âI donât think so,â she says.
âHow about a rocket ship?â I ask.
âI donât think so,â she says.
She thinks a moment.
âHow about a zebra dog?â she suggests.
âWhatâs a zebra dog?â I ask.
âItâs a zebra,â she says. âAnd a dog.â
âI donât think so,â I say.
We stand there looking at the block of wood, turning it in our hands, breathing in the pine.
Me, I donât just see a block of wood. I see a Lamborghini Diablo or a Ferrari Daytona coupe, the â72 model with the long front end and spoke wheels. Or maybe a little red T-bird.
Because for years, I have made Pinewood Derby cars. I have made Batmobiles and Corvettes.
Some years, I put graphite on the axles, power brushed them, then put graphite on them again, virtually dusting the car all over with graphite, spritzing the fine powder on like holy water in hopes of making it ultra-fast. One year, we finished as high as fourth.
So this year, I want to make it count. One morning, I go to the Internet for design ideas, looking at Den 8âs Web page, the one in Columbia, S.C., which reportedly reveals all the secrets to winning a Pinewood Derby.
âWhere does the weight go for maximum propelling power?â another Web site asks, then offers to sell me the answer.
Better yet, I ask around the office, which was an Internet of information even before there was an Internet.
âWhat you do,â a friend advises, âis bevel the wheels so only the tip touches the track.â
âReally?â
âThatâs what this guy told me.â he said. âAll the wheels do is keep you from flying faster down the track.â
âThey do?â I say.
âOr,â he says, lowering his voice as if giving a stock tip, âyou carve one wheel so it doesnât even touch the track. Then you have only three wheels on the track.â
But that might not be enough. This may be my last Pinewood Derby car. I want to go out in style. I donât want just performance. I want design too. I want it to be great.
âWhat if,â I tell the little girl, âwe build a giant car?â
âA giant car?â she asks.
âYeah, like a real car,â I say. âA full-sized Pinewood Derby car.â
I can almost picture it. Weâd frame it out first, maybe on an old car chassis. Working late into the night, weâd make a Plymouth Prowler out of plywood, then spray-paint it bright yellow.
Weâd carve and shape, carve and shape just like for the little cars. Except that when we were done, weâd have a real car. With a real engine. Twenty feet long. Bigger than that Ford Excursion. Graphite everywhere.
âYou could be a Pinewood legend,â I tell the little girl.
She thinks about this a moment. It sounds like fun, being a Pinewood legend. But thereâs no telling how this giant car might turn out. It could be a disaster, this car. Her dad doesnât even have a band saw.
âHow about we just build a little blue car,â she finally says, holding up the block of wood.
âA little blue car?â
âYeah,â she says. âHand me that hammer.â
âA little blue car?â I say again.
The little blue car turns out nice. We carve it and sand it, carve it and sand it, then drown it under three coats of hobby store paint.
In one heat, it finishes fifth. The other, sixth.
At night, the car rests on the little girlâs headboard, like the Heisman--one tire slightly smaller than the rest.
âNice car,â I say, when I tuck her into bed.
âThanks, Dad,â she says.
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Name That Team: Next week, the top finishers in the bid to name a new L.A. football team.
Chris Erskineâs column is published on Wednesdays. His e-mail address is [email protected].