This winter, when tidying my attic, I found back my old toys including a RC12LW I bought in 1993 when I was a teenager. This car almost never ran, maybe 100m of test drive in my parent's house driveway.
The box later suffered from a flood in my parent's cellar but, fortunately, the car was stocked higher than the water level, so it looks undamaged. It just looks like a near 30 years old RC car. I really like the look of those chassis.

I feel ashamed to show you the body, because the teenager I was really butchered it: cut with a chain saw, drilled with a jackhammer and painted with a trowel

At first, I thought about two options:
-1: building a period correct RC12, with vintage electronics.
-2: using today's technology (brushless motor, lipos, etc...)
All my vintage electronics disappeared twenty years ago in the flood, and I'm little afraid about the reliability of 30 years old electronics bought on internet, so I abandonned option 1.
Putting lipo batteries and a brushless combo looked at first attractive for regular use, but finally, I find it kinda weird... Too big age gap between chassis and electronics, perhaps.

So I thought about a middleway: use a modern brushed motor and NiMh batteries. Given the age of the car and the fact that spare part could be unobtainium, I think it's safer to use a "cool" motor. My goal is not to race against modern car, I just want to have some fun driving a vintage RC car, so I'm thinking about a 27T or 23T. What do you think about that?
I have a Savox 1251 servo I'm not using that could do the steering job and I'd like to use my 2.4GHz radio, because it's so convenient and the little size of the Rx is an advantage on a small chassis. I know it's a little bit herectic.

I'll cartainly have lots of question later (body, tires, things I haven't been thinking about yet...), but do you think it's a realistic project?