Top right; I could have put this in the
pneumatic post, but it's neither agricultural, nor horse-drawn so it goes here
as an oddment. The other two were both sent by Gary, one being a petrol engined
beast: shouldn't be here at all, but it's such a tiny little thing, and clearly
trying to be a wagon; a horseless wagon!
The next few are all from the catalogue as I haven't any of the fire appliances, but
they need to be covered to get everything ticked-off. I hate to think what that
scene would cost to produce at high-street prices, but when you get the chance
(a lottery-win is required!) well worth the effort.
Steam-pump, hand-pump, coal and water, just
add fire! These really are lovely little things let-down only by matching
horses and drivers, but a little home-conversion would sort that out.
There's a fifth fire appliance, a
'crew-bus'! The wagon top right is perfect for British outline railway layouts,
being the same to all intents and purposes as a rag-&-bone cart, or
costa-mongers or street-traders wagon, and the sort of thing you'd find down
the docks taking things from quay-side to warehouse.
The removal van or pantechnicon is a more European design, similar to the road-workers or construction-site
vans or circus wagons, both of which we haven't covered in this season, the
site wagons seem to be being phased-out, you don't see them like you used to;
in real life or model railway catalogues, but I'm guessing that they are still
used for [local?] removals?
Both Roco
Minitanks and Preiser used to
carry a few of them (we looked at a Preiser
for Aristocraft one in an early wagon
post here), but other than a couple of office-bodied military ones in Roco's last listing and the Preiser circus ones, they seem to have
all but disappeared.
So to the death of horse-drawn transport as
a mass feature of everyday life, the Daimler motor-wagen! It's a tiny little
thing, fascinating, and explains in part why both horse-flesh-power and
electric vehicles were still more numerous before the First World War.
Open-wagon look, central steering wheel,
little engine in a box at the back, only two pedals (?) and barely room for
three bodies . . . err . . . I mean bags of potatoes! Yet you can see the
attraction - imagine Toad of Toad Hall; "Poop poop! Coming-through, no horses, make way for the future, plebs!"
I probably should have used WWI figures for the size'ers. Lovely - thank you
Gary.
Only for completeness, and very useful for
war-gaming, the 17103 is an
unpainted kit and provides for a whole street-barricade, not much use against
T34/85's but it will slow-down Cuirassiers!
Modern versions of the previous trolleys
with electric tugs and hand-barrows.
My final addition to these posts, and the
last of Gary's contributions, and arguably the nicest, it's certainly a fine
sight. Underneath the logs is the 'standard' Preiser frame and the red cloth is
a nice touch, also interesting to find the practice was universal
A few close-ups; when I say it's arguably
the nicest, I'm thinking the VIP coach is the better finished, the beer wagon
is just 'the best', the post wagon is a dinky little thing, while this has a
grandeur by dint of its presence, the obvious weight, the visual length - it
needs a team of four I think?
The same log-wagon is currently still
available in the catalogue, along with Santa and his sleigh, also two more of
the more work-a-day wagons, these both having the older, spoke-wheels, all
three would look good busying themselves next to the Matchbox/Revell Flower Class corvette 'down the docks'!
Finally - it's November and Santa has
swopped his two horses for four reindeer; he needs four more animals, but only
to cover the names Disney invented to accompany Rudolf!
===============================================================
A few years ago, someone stated that he wouldn't produce a
complete list of Preiser as it would
run to 100's of pages; actually it currently runs to less than 60 - with all or
most of the blanks in place; and I am in the process of completing it for the
A-Z entry.
However I have two gaps, one is the very
early days (with any additions to the small 3xx series we looked at the other
day), the other being the four-number codes from the 1970's/1980's.
Also while I have various lists of Aristo-craft, Bachmann, Faller, E-R, VIP, Vollmer and Walther's/Terminal Hobby Shop products as supplied by Presier, I'm sure they are not all complete. If anyone can help supply scans of old catalogues (mine is PK 12 I think, but in storage now) or listings of early stuff or the mid-four number era, that would help, and all help will be acknowledged when I publish, also you will get my current draft by return.
Also while I have various lists of Aristo-craft, Bachmann, Faller, E-R, VIP, Vollmer and Walther's/Terminal Hobby Shop products as supplied by Presier, I'm sure they are not all complete. If anyone can help supply scans of old catalogues (mine is PK 12 I think, but in storage now) or listings of early stuff or the mid-four number era, that would help, and all help will be acknowledged when I publish, also you will get my current draft by return.
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