![]() On the down side, the various updates in the ad seem to suggest it’ll need a lot of work (wood working in particular) in order to make the Ogilvie Blue King circuit great again. ![]() It’s the sort of thing that gets set up in warehouses (as seen above in former glory), kids and enthusiasts flocking to it and willing to pay a fee to use. On the plus side, this is a 155 foot long commercial grade multi-lane track with a ton of extras. Though now out of the business, Ogilvie did transfer his craft to Don Bryans who reportedly still builds such constructs out of a shop in Port Orange, FL.īack to the track on Craigslist, it may be a bit of a mixed bag depending on your view. Over the years, he and his partners built an estimated 400-600 commercial grade slot car tracks. We’re still learning a bit of history on the Ogilvie track history, but we found a brief backgrounder by founder Steve Ogilvie over on. You see, Hurricane Nate apparently did a number on the track, damaging some of it… not beyond repair, but qualifying it as a ran-when-parked fixer upper at a possibly affordable price. The term “tide” may be quick on the tongues of most Alabamans this week, but maybe less than appreciated by the owners of a 155-foot Ogilvie Blue King 8-lane slot car track in Mobile.
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