How To Build a Pinewood Derby Car/Glossary
Appearance
- Alignment
- The process of aligning the wheel vertically (camber angle) and parallel to the direction of travel (toe and steer angles).
- Axle Slot
- One of two slots cut in the stock BSA kit block.
- Beveling
- tapering the axle to reduce the contact area between the axle head and the outer wheel hub.
- Balancing
- Wheel modification to achieve an equivalent mass distributed about the hub.
- Block
- The 7 x 1-3/4 x 1-1/4 pine block.
- Bore polishing
- Polishing the inner surface of the hub to reduce friction between the wheel and axle.
- BSA
- Boy Scouts of America.
- Coning
- Modification of the inside wheel hub to reduce hub-to-body friction.
- Center Rail
- On wood tracks, a lane guide that is approximately 1/4" inch tall and 1-5/8" wide that the car straddles to keep it on the track.
- Deburring
- Axles are essentially one-inch nails that have two burrs under the head from the stamping process. A typical axle treatment consists of removing these burrs followed by sanding and polishing.
- Dominant Wheel
- The front wheel that touches when the car is on a flat surface. In a raised front wheel configuration, this is the wheel that is not raised.
- Extended Wheelbase
- The largest distance possible between the axles such that the wheels do net extend past the end of the block: 5-3/4" with the axle holes 5/8" from the end of the block.
- Grooving
- Notching of axles to reduce the contact area and thus the friction between the axle and the wheel.
- H Tread
- A wheel modification in which the tread is cut with a "H" cross-section to allow contact with the track surface on the inner and outer parts of the tread only.
- Kit
- The Official BSA "Grand Prix Pinewood Derby Kit" with block, 4 axles, 4 wheels and instructions.
- Krytox
- A liquid synthetic lubricant (MSDS).[1], Krytox oils and greases are perfluoropolyether (PFPE) synththetic lubricants made by DuPont
- Light Wheels
- Wheels that have been reduced in mass, typically by removal of material from the inner side of the wheel.
- Matched Wheels
- Wheels taken from the same mold number.
- Mold
- The plastic injection mold for pinewood derby wheels.
- Mold Number
- The number on the inside of a wheel, indicating the injection mold.
- Moly
- Molybdenum disulfide lubricant.
- Molybdenum disulfide
- Molybdenum disulfide is a dry lubricant similar to graphite.
- Nickel plating
- Nickel plated axles can be polished to a smoother finish than stock zinc BSA axles.
- Notching or Grooving
- Axles can be notched or grooved to reduce the contact area and thus the friction between the axle and the wheel.
- Nyoil
- A liquid synthetic lubricant (MSDS).
- Outlaw Wheels
- Thin wheels machined from a high-performance polymer such as delrin that are typically allowed only in open class races.
- Oversize Axles
- Oversize axle (e.g. 0.091 diameter) axles can reduce wheel wobble. Official BSA axles are 0.087 inch in diameter.
- Rail Riding
- Adjustment of the dominant front wheel alignment to induce a slight steer toward the track center rail to cause the car to hug the rail as it goes down the track.
- Raised Wheel
- One wheel (typically front) raised approximately 1/16 inch on the car body. This wheel is not in constant contact with the track and thus contributes less to the rotational inertia.
- Silicone
- A polysiloxanes organic/inorganic polymer lubricant.
- Speed Axles
- Nickel-plated aftermarket axles.
- Teflon
- The trade name for polytetrafluoroethylene (PTFE) polymer. Powdered Teflon is a common Derby car lubricant.
- V Tread
- A wheel modification in which the tread is cut with a "V" cross-section to allow a single radial point of contact with the track surface.
- Wheelbase
- The spacing between the front and rear wheels from wheel center to wheel center. The standard pinewood derby wheelbase is about 4.5 inches and the extended wheelbase is 5.75 inches with the wheels 5/8 inch from the end of the 7 inch block.