Heller 1/43 Citroen ZX Rally Raid
KIT #: | 80191 |
PRICE: | $10.00 |
DECALS: | Oneoption |
REVIEWER: | Richard F. |
NOTES: |
|
HISTORY |
The Paris-Dakar rally is world famous. It started
back in 1978 and has run every year except 2008. The route has changed from time
to time and from 2009 it has actually been held in South America, because of
concerns about terrorism in Mauretania, which was the reason 2008 was cancelled.
Given that Paris is in France, Dakar is in Senegal, and neither of those places
are in South America, it's branded as the "Dakar Rally" now.
Not popular
with the people who actually live in the African countries where the rally route
is, or was, the event and its drivers apparently had a flamboyant attitude to
running over camels and livestock that villagers depend on. The ridiculous
quantities of dust that the teams leave behind them didn't go down well with
locals either. The rally is nonetheless big business. At least 190 countries
take the live feed and more than 1,000 hours of footage is generated, including
from 6 TV helicopters.
Citroen, the French car maker, has a pretty glorious rally history. In this
century, Citroen Racing started competing in the World Rally Championship. With
Frenchman Sebastien Loeb, it won the Drivers Championship 7 years in a row -
2004-2010. The team took the annual Manufacturer's Title in 2003-05 and 2008-10.
That's an amazing record, but not the full story.
In the 1990s, Citroen Racing ran the ZX Rally Raid in cross country rallies like
the Paris to Dakar. It used a tricked-out version of the regular ZX. Well,
"tricked out" is a bit of an understatement. The production ZX had a range of 3
door and 5 door models. The most powerful of them managed 110 kW or 148 bhp from
its 2 litre engine, the least powerful a measly 43 kW or 57 bhp from a 1.5 litre
motor.
In its Rally Raid form, the Citroen ZX had buckets of power from its 2.4 litre 4
cylinder turbo engine - 250 kW or
330 bhp. Its top speed was 205
km/h. For comparison, a mid-90s Porsche 911 with a bigger engine (3.6L) only put
out 200 kW or 272 bhp (for American readers, a 2010 Ford Mustang V8 only manages
235 kW or 315 hp from a 4.6L donk).
With the mighty ZX Rally Raid, Citroen dominated the cross country rally scene.
It won the Rally Raid Manufacturer's Championship each year from 1993 to 1997,
scoring
36 victories in 42 races between 1990 and 1997 and five consecutive wins in the
World Cup for Cross Country Rallying.
Legendary Finn Ari Vatanen won the Paris-Dakar in a ZX in 1991, his
third-consecutive and fourth total win after winning in 1990, 1989 and 1987 for
Peugot. In 1993, Citroen competed again in the Paris-Dakar, coming second with
Frenchman Pierre Lartigue and his navigator and compatriot Michel Perrin and
third with Auriol and Picard. In 1994, 95 and 96, Lartigue and Perrin won the
Paris-Dakar (94) and Granada-Dakar (95-96) in their red ZX Rally Raid, with team
second places in 94 and 96.
All in all, this little red rocket is a pretty awesome car.
(Rally fans or American readers might know of Ari Vatanen as the man who took
the Peugot 405 Turbo 16 to the top of Pike's Peak in world-record time of
10:47.77 on dirt
in 1988 in the award-winning short film "Climb Dance". This is pretty fast - in
2010 the record for 2WD was set in a Porsche 911 GT3 Cup at 11:31.095 on
sealed
road. Ari's overall record has since been beaten by Rod Millen in 1994 (10:04.06
on dirt
in a 4wd Toyota Celica) and today's record-holder Nobuhiro Tajima in a Suzuki
XL7 Hill Climb Special at 10:01.408 on
sealed road. The link to
"Climb Dance" is below - it's only 4 minutes long and well worth a look)
THE KIT |
This kit is simple, with only 37 parts. Nicely moulded in red plastic
and with tinted clear parts, you could probably get a pretty decent result
without opening a single can of paint. I suspect these kits are partly aimed at
younger modellers, who might follow rally driving on TV. A comprehensive decal
sheet gives plenty of cool markings to break up the monotony of the red body.
Interior detail consists of a steering wheel, two racing seats, a dashboard with
instrument panel decals, a gear stick, and a one-piece engine cover that goes
under the rear window. The tinting is so dark, it's just about impossible to see
inside.
CONSTRUCTION |
Building
this puppy is easy too. The wheels click onto the pan chassis, and are
free-wheeling so you can rally raid across the kitchen table or over your
suitably coloured bedspread.
I painted the car's body and the spoiler and front fender area before putting
the car together. The windows are one piece that fits in from the inside. The
interior is only about 7 pieces - two seats and a few other bits go onto a
floorpan, which then pops into the underside chassis pan.
I actually made some seatbelts for my driver and navigator but you cannot see it
unless you put your eye right up to the windows.
From there, you just add the car's body, the spoiler, the front fender piece and
two little rear vision mirrors and a windscreen wiper. I seem to have lost those
three parts over the years.
There are also rear mudflaps for each wheel but I left those off because the car
looks cooler to me without them.
COLORS & MARKINGS |
A
can of gloss red spray paint from the hardware shop took care of the painting of
this Citroen. I did the rims in Tamiya XF-16 aluminium and the tyres and
underside in matt black.
The decals were great and go on quickly and easily.
I should have painted the rear fin black, but I didn't notice until I had
already applied the decals.
CONCLUSIONS |
I always meant to get more of these cool kits, but never did. If the other Heller 1/43 car kits are this great, then I can happily recommend them to anyone.
REFERENCES |
http://www.citroenet.org.uk/sport/sport-90.html
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Citroen_ZX_Rally_Raid.jpg
See "Climb Dance" here:
http://video.google.com/videoplay?docid=-3368948773832597270#
If you can understand French, or just want to watch:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0f_ZnggWfME
August 2011
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