Now, I'm not stretching the hyperbole to
state WTF? here, am I? What The-very-actual Flipp'in Ada is going on here!??
I think it's a
junior-school-gymnasium-type-piece-of-padded-play-equipment-type-thing? Anyway;
whatever it is, it's hanging from a building in downtown Philadelphia! Uptown?
Pennsylvania? Brian will correct me!
Now, I was taken by the fact that once you
get over a large padded, vinyl tank - which looks like it should be in The
Beatle's Yellow Submarine - hanging
from the side of a building, you realise you are in a street of timeless
quaintness. The sort of mews or side street you might find in London,
Birmingham (that's Birbig'um, Ingerland; not Burmin'um, Alerbammy) or even
Amsterdam? . . . or, maybe, even Birmingham, Alabama?
And while - if it were a mews in London -
you'd expect it to be grade-II listed, the fact that the shackles are in the
woodwork of the windows rather than the masonry, suggests a similar protection
order? Altogether a fascinating and amusing couple of pictures - Thanks to Mr
Berke for spotting it, and sending them to the Blog. Apart from the brightly
coloured tank, it looks like a film set!
Brian suggested it no longer fit the 'small
scale world', but it's small enough!
I shot this on Adrian's Mercator Trading stand at
the September Sandown Park show, you often see these about at shows, but usually
in a plain paint scheme, this one was leery enough to be worth shooting.
I'm guessing French, although I think Johillco had a couple of few in their
inter-war catalogues and lots of other people had a go; in real life it was the
first major volume-production Tank, sold whole, as kits, hulls &
running-gear only or simply licensed to armies all over the world for many
years, and there's a whole toy collection to be had just in model Renault F17's and the many
variants/derivatives!
Again I'm only guessing, but are the tracks
replacements from Meccano? Usually
when you see these (in green, more commonly grey, or a three-colour 'blob'
camouflage) they are either trackless or tentatively holding-on to blobs of
semi-melted, semi-cracked India-rubber or leather of some kind, but these look
a tad too well preserved? Still it's a good way of replacing the missing
originals and that form of Meccano
track is probably contemporary with the model.
3 comments:
This part of Philadelphia is known as Center City
I think the tracks are original, I have some tinplate tanks with very similar tracks and if you look carefully at the wheels you can see the are grooves on the rims that fit the width of these tracks perfectly.
Cheers Terranova, I copied all the notes from Mr. B into the folder but he's sent so much stuff since Christmas it's all got a bit confusing!
H
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