Nice boxed set with a reasonable
afternoons-worth of play value which is all you would have been looking for in
1970-something having paid very little for this off the cheapie rack! Not sure
about the artwork . . . He's got two live ones in the back but then gets a
sudden urge to blow another away!
Unlike the Blue Box vehicle it's aping, this one doesn't have a trailer, but
because it has copied the 'giraffe hole' in the cage (the Corgi Lions of Longleat one had it); both the big cats can escape -
I hope they jump out and eat the driver before he gets a shot-off, although -
the way he's holding that rifle he's going to hurt himself more than the
fleeing lion anyway!
The door stickers are also falling back on
the Corgi Gift Set 8 Lions of Longleat (but the Corgi cab had a hole for the guard) with
further references to Corgi gift sets 31 (Safari
Land Rover with Animal Trailer) and 36 (Tarzan'
Rover was hard-top LWB in both sets), while I think the roof-horns are from a
late Dinky breakdown truck? There are
also shades of the Daktari set (GS14)
in the mix.
The model differs from the Blue Box one in the 'ally rims' which
although just as leery with their chromium-plated finish are to a different
pattern and the radio-aerial which is found further forward on Blue Box models.
A more major difference between the two is
that while the Blue Box version
(quite common)* is a simple model with clip-in axles allowing for hand-powered
motivation, the Spidec Lanny has a
push-and-go 'friction motor' for more independent carpet safaris!
* Turns up at shows as ex-shop stock and on
evilBay; found with two, one or no trailer/s in recent years; it's as if
there's a warehouse full somewhere, they turn-up with French and German
language consumer information panels and I think I've seen Spanish ones, so a
'Euro-importer' seems to have lost a batch at some point, or maybe it was just
a popular and therefore numerous line at the time?
The lion and tiger . . . "A Tiger! In Africa?"! . . . are
pretty common as generics from larger bagged/carded sets or early toobs (they
were called tubs back then I think!); polyethylene sub-scale copies of Blue Box copies of Britains sculpts.
Thanks to Mercator Trading for the
opportunity to shoot this.
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