By Matt
Pascarella
Hank
Gagnon first got interested in slot car racing when he was 17 or 18. While he
did stop racing for a short time, he got back into it when his stepson, Jesse
Jordan, became interested in racing slot cars. Jordan’s friend brought him to a
slot car track to see what it was about, and Jesse bought two slot cars and he and
Gagnon started racing after that. “When I got back into it, we got into it
pretty heavy,” Gagnon said.
Briefly, slot car racing the racing of
powered miniature autos that are guided by grooves or slots in the track on
which they run.
“I like
the cars and I like the racing; it takes quite a bit of practice to get good at,”
replied Jordan.
Gagnon
is the owner of Rev It Up Raceway and Black Bear Auto Care, both located in
Windham.
Roughly
three years ago, Gagnon bought a couple slot car tracks, and designed an oval
shaped track called the ‘Maine Monster Mile’ which, end to end is 24 feet long.
Gagnon races 1/24 scale slot cars. He has been doing weekly races for seven to eight
years. Some cars can reach the speeds of 15 to 20-plus miles per hour.
Gagnon
races with other slot car enthusiasts every week where ten to 20 people bring
their wooden compartment cases that hold their various slot cars, along with
supplies and the necessary tools to do any repairs. Slot car aficionados travel
from all over the state to race on Gagnon’s track including the towns of Poland,
Auburn, Brunswick and Greene; “There was even one guy who came up from
Massachusetts,” Gagnon said.
Casco
resident Butch Belanger described how he got interested in slot car racing. “My
dad raced in the late ‘60s, early ‘70s in Westbrook. We got into it 20 years
ago when the track opened down here.
We then got out of it. When I went to work
for NAPA Auto Parts I met up with Hank and he kept trying to get me to come
race. I finally showed up and I’ve been here ever since. It’s been almost four
years. What keeps me coming back is the enjoyment of going around in a circle
having fun and an inexpensive good time.”
George
Allen discovered slot cars at the Auburn Mall. “I was racing real cars and I
was going to start racing remote controlled cars and I walking into the Auburn
Mall and saw a slot car track. I said, ‘I got to check this out,’ so we went
down to the Auburn Mall on a Wednesday night and the rest is history. Me and my
boy, we’ve been racing ever since – met all these great people...it’s a lot of
fun.”
Allen
started the Minot Mountain Speedway after buying some track from a guy in
Massachusetts. “My garage is my track and these guys all come to my house and...it’s
a blast.”
On the
smaller side of slot car racing, Windham resident Jim Hoar started the Maine HO
Slot Car Racing Club in 1999. HO scale is 1/64 which is the size of a matchbox.
Hoar enjoys the comradery of the sport and likes getting new racers involved.
He
describes his club as an ‘eating club with a racing problem’ “When we take a
portable track out to car shows in Portland or Bonny Eagle, people will say ‘I
used to do that when I was a kid.’ Now their kids come and play on our track
and they say, ‘hey mister, this is better than video games.’”
Hoar
has two large tracks and a dragstrip, the only dragstrip in Maine, for racing
HO slot cars, in his basement. Participants come from all around New England,
and a lot of the club members, donate their time and energy; members like Mario
Bosse who donated Poland Spring water to the club as well as was willing to
offer any help.
HO
racer, Brian Valle described racing as ‘therapeutic.’ It’s a five to six hour
escape, where every month the club does a race with roughly 12 to 22 people.
When people of all ages see the tracks, it brings out the kid in them. A lot of
the guys involved in HO racing, are to some degree former car guys or ex car
racers. “From the community standpoint, we would love to see anybody that just
enjoys this as their hobby; that they remember what it was years ago...they can
get in touch with us, and we’ll help them,” added Hoar.
Anyone
interested in learning more or joining the HO club can contact Jim Hoar at
894-5289 or mainehoracing@hotmail.com. You can also join their Facebook page:
Maine HO Slot Car Racing Club.
Anyone
interested in learning more or racing the 1/24 or ‘O’ scale slot cars can join
the Rev It Up Raceway group on Facebook and contact Hank Gagnon through that
page.