I was a teenager when Ford got into World Sportscar racing in the mid 60's and I've remained a fan of that era. A few years ago I built a 1/32 scale road course for Trans Am racing, then expanded to Daytona, Sebring, and Le Mans type cars. Now I have a field of 20 cars, Ford GT40's, Ferrari 512's & 330P, Lola T70's, Porsche 917's, & Chaparral 2F's. Originally the Fly ones were easiest to find, but I also have some Scalextrics, one Carrera 917, and 3 MRRC Chaparrals. All the cars are as stock as possible so the solo races I run based on lap times are as fair as possible.
Admittedly, the Fly cars are sharp but after buying 3 in a row at $60 - $80 each that wouldn't even turn a lap out of the box without fixing or replacing gears I said I'd newer buy another one. I have all of the 20 cars running well now with minor tuning and they are all basically equal on my track where handling means as much or more than speed. A spin or deslot results in a time penalty that can mean going to the rear of the field and being out of contention.
The Carrera 917 has won a race from a mid-pack starting position, so it's no slouch once you get the PG tires set (I had to trim the insides of the rear tires to keep them from rubbing on the chassis). The best car now may be a MRRC Chaparral 2F with PG tires. The 2 other MRRC 2F's still have stock tires so as not to be a dominate team. I'm also happy with 2 Scalextrics - a Ferrari 330P and a Chaparral 2F. I like having a variety of brands and car types in the series.
If I were buying just one car from this era I'd hold my nose and buy a Fly Lola T70 just because of looks and get the tools out.
But If $32 for a dependable car suits you more than a $100 car that will likely need fixing immediately, you won't go wrong with this either.
Slothead