But . . . if you get excited to the point
of hysterical public orgasm by 1950's Spanish rubber while suffering 'knowledge-base'
brain-freezes on endless samples of more recent stuff . . . well, luckily for
the other readers; this isn't your Blog!
Late production Cherilea swoppets, the
third generation, in their British Infantry guise with a clear nod to Timpo's
figures and a vast improvement on the previous two generations, although; I prefer
the toy-like charm of the earlier attempts while getting annoyed by the
idiosyncrasies of this set!
The Brit's though are probably the best as
their helmet with its two-colour flecked or marbled scrim-net cover is the best
of these figures, and the weaopns are half-decent with the SLR, GPMG and SMG
quite well modelled, the other two are a bit 'off-the-wall' though!
The 'Germans'! Grey and black . . . it's
all a bit jingoistic now, but back in the day it was the acceptable way of
doing these things, as the Germans have never gone to war is this shade of grey
and didn't use the illustrated weapons; the anachronisms are what make them
'toy' soldiers!
At least the piss-pot with a cut-out on the
rim works reasonable well for the WWII era 'Fritz' helmet.
I think these are meant to be US 'Doughboys'
in an olive drab but as you can see the helmets don't work at all with them and
you think they're half finished in some way, and of course these were in the
shops year before the US armed-forces starting experimenting with the current
'Fritzie'!
They don't work any better for the UN
troops, but at least the Soviet-looking RPG/A-T rocket-launcher is more
explainable with a generic army of unknown origins than it was at the top of
the page in a UKMF/BAOR rifle-company!
The weapons; top-left to bottom-right we
have an FN/SLR, an RPG7 type (or even a half-decent stab at a PzF 44), a FN MAG/GPMG, Stirling SMG and a sort of Ingram/Uzi
type 9mm automatic 'sprayer'. The GPMG is a tad oversized but quite
recognisable, and for some time now (1995) a US service weapon too, where it's called an M240B, replaceing the M60.
Same torso, different legs! There are five
leg poses and five weapon-specific torsos, although the nine-milli' body can
carry most of the other weapons as with the far-left figure in the German shot
above.
4 comments:
Very crisp, my favourites being the Germans!
Heehee . . . . one minute later and you would have had the older ones to compare with!
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