These are mostly from Peter's Big Bag of
Rack Toy loveliness, exceptions being the dark green one (which also came from
Peter I think but a year or two ago) and the hard-styrene, vintage push-and-go
which was - I think - a Sandown Park purchase at some point.
The six similar ones are the same as the
truck sent to the blog by Martin a while ago, and as I think I mused at the time seem to be
from the interregnum between 'Hong Kong' marks and the modern 'China' marks,
but it may just be that someone forgot to stamp the tool!
The three with loads are ultra-modern
mouldings; cheap, but well engineered/finished.
The vehicle park, from the other side and
the three new vehicles, there is at least one other body-type (which clip to
the load-bed with four ear-flap clips) as I saw a bunch in a mixed lot on
evilBay about a week ago, but the shots weren't clear enough to discern,
however it looked like a stack of gas-canisters, like an old barrage-balloon
lorry.
Close-ups of the truck we looked at last
time, passing itself off as a Ford
but not looking like one I know (is it a recognisable US Ford-type?), it has features in common with some of the smaller
Chinatrucks you find.
Close-ups of the interim boxed-front
design, the dark green one has appeared on the Blog with very different accompanying
stuff to the stuff the yellow one came with. The two holes in the load-bed
suggest plug-ins for these as well as the clip-on bodies.
As the yellow one came in the 'Big Bag' I
can't draw conclusions from what may (or may not) have gone with it, but the
fact that the green one come with very different stuff (mini-tank; Patton, and jet fighter) suggests that
the middle-man was not only ordering different configurations of contents for
different sets, but either had possession of all the moulds, or was working
with the same factory for all sets, who had a wide range of mould tools to work
with.
This lorry also represents something
different for Hong Kong/China; the exception that proves the rule! Usually, the
quality of these rack-toys drops off as they go through the generations of
copies of copies of copies . . .
. . . but in this case the original
(smaller, yellow; 1970/80's) is the worst generation and the modern,
third-generation (mid-green, printed bonnet; current) is the best with an
interim design (sand and jade; 1990's-2000's).
The original looks like an old 70's chromed-up
Studebaker or Chevrolet pick-up truck but with a stretched body, the first
clean-up makes it look more 'Army Lorry'-like and the recent re-design
(blocking the windows, something which happened with later copies of the 1-ton Humber mini-trucks - makes for a simpler
tool) has turned it into something more 'future medium-lift replacement
logistics vehicle programme' looking!
The Ford
and the two same-sized Box-fronts. The new one has decent wheels and a return
to the metal axles of the '50/60's toys, rather than the [tend to break, or
miss-mould] all-plastic things which came-in in the 1970/80's as a cost reducer;
as we saw with the jeep variations yesterday.
A couple of slightly different ones - the
larger push-and-go is a copy of a Triang-Mettoy-Minic-Playcraft
type (I think?) and hard styrene except for the wheels.
The smaller one is the old 1-ton Humber but in HO-OO gauge compatible
size rather than the mini-trucks we looked at back in 2011. Now . . . I've
never seen this size of the vehicle in Pyro-Kleeware
guise (their bigger scale lorry's cab was more like the push-and-go), so this
must be a copy from Dinky (or one of
the other copies) or a scale-up from the mini-trucks (it has the same
components as the mini-Kleeware's)
and is clearly the donor for the lesser NFIC
versions. Marx also pirated it but as
a cleaned-up and slightly distorted, flatter, almost 'squashed' moulding.
This is clearly off the back of a recent toy, probably
from a larger tub/bucket play set, until I've ID'd its carrying-vehicle it
remains a UN storage hanger! Can anyone help ID the set or vehicle?
Rocket launchers, for completion really -
we've seen two of them on the Blog already and the third is above!
I thought this (left-hand image) was from
my old imageshack.com account, but I think it's a scanned photograph, so may
have been seen here before, but again, it's 'ere because it's 'ere because it's
'ere! I particularly like the Vostok type rocketry, as both are militarised
(with paint) versions of civil 'big rigs' it probably also exists as a very
incongruous NASA type in an alternative play set! Small scale.
On the right is a bit of fun; have you seen
the Movie Brazil? My dream-house!
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