Alright, let’s talk about this Mickey Mouse car project I got myself into. It all started a few weekends back when I was clearing out the old shed. You know how it is, years of stuff just piling up. Tucked away under a dusty tarp, I found it – this little red pedal car, shaped vaguely like an old cartoon car, with faded Mickey Mouse stickers peeling off the sides.

Honestly, it looked like junk at first. Really rough shape. One wheel was busted, the steering was jammed solid, and rust was everywhere. The paint was mostly gone, showing bare metal underneath in patches. Looked like it hadn’t seen daylight in decades. My first thought was just to toss it out with the rest of the rubbish.
But then, I don’t know, something stopped me. Maybe it was the goofy Mickey face still barely visible on the hood. Reminded me of being a kid, I guess. Decided right then, okay, let’s see if I can bring this thing back to life. Seemed like a decent little challenge, something to keep my hands busy.
Getting Started: The Teardown
First job was taking it completely apart. Every single nut, bolt, and screw. This wasn’t as easy as it sounds. Everything was seized up with rust. Had to use a ton of penetrating oil and some careful persuasion with a hammer here and there. Found a few surprises too:
- The steering mechanism was simpler than I thought, just bent rods mostly.
- The seat was just thin plywood, totally rotten. Needed replacing.
- That busted wheel? The axle was bent too.
Took photos of everything as I went along, otherwise, I’d never remember how it all went back together. Bagged and tagged all the small bits.
Cleaning and Fixing
With it all in pieces, the real dirty work began. Wire brushes, sandpaper, rust remover – you name it, I used it. Spent hours just getting down to clean metal on the main body and chassis parts. Had to straighten the bent axle in a vise, which took some effort. For the busted wheel, I couldn’t find an exact match anywhere. Ended up finding a similar solid rubber wheel online and modifying it slightly to fit the axle. Close enough, I figured.

The rotten plywood seat was easy – just used the old one as a template and cut a new one from some scrap wood I had lying around. Gave it a good sanding so no splinters!
Paint and Details
This was the fun part, kinda. Choosing the colours was easy: classic Mickey Mouse red for the body, black for the chassis and details, yellow for the wheels. Felt right. Did the whole process:
- Primer first, a couple of coats to make sure the paint stuck well.
- Then the red for the body. Spray paint, nothing fancy. Took several thin coats.
- Masked off areas and did the black parts.
- Painted the wheels yellow.
- Found some decent reproduction Mickey Mouse stickers online to replace the old peeled ones.
Getting the paint smooth wasn’t perfect, gotta admit. Spray painting outside is always a bit tricky with wind and dust. But it looked a million times better than before.
Putting It All Back Together
Reassembly time. This is where those photos I took earlier really saved me. Started with the chassis, getting the axles and wheels back on. Attached the newly painted body. Wrestling the steering mechanism back into place was fiddly. Connected the pedals. Bolted the new wooden seat in. Finally, carefully applied the new Mickey stickers.
Stepped back and looked at it. Not bad. Not bad at all. It actually looked like a proper little Mickey Mouse car again. The steering worked, the pedals turned the wheels. The new wheel wasn’t a perfect match if you looked super close, but who’s gonna look that close? It rolls, it steers, it looks bright and cheerful.

So yeah, that was the Mickey car project. Took longer than I expected, and cost a bit for the paint, the wheel, and stickers. But seeing it go from a piece of rusty junk to something shiny and fun? Pretty satisfying way to spend a few weekends. Plus, now I’ve got this cool little retro piece sitting in the garage. Not sure what I’ll do with it yet, but the process itself was worth it. Just tinkering, fixing stuff up. Good stuff.