Let's remind ourselves of the figures
first, alongside the tan ones we looked at yesterday were sold these, in
tropical OG's! The plastic is probably a dense polyethylene, but it's so dense
it has the properties of a polypropylene.
Although in the late 1970's 'polyprop'
wasn't being used in the toy industry like it is now, it was starting to
creep-in through action figure components and Japanese space-toys, or larger
infant-toys which needed a rigidity/robustness but without the sharpness or
frangibility of polystyrene, so, with New Zealand positioned on the Pacific Rim
and trading across it, either polymer could be the one used here.
Anyway I'm using both tags to cover my proverbial!
As you may have gathered in yesterdays
post; from one of the prizes, these figures were made by Lincoln Industries Games (commonly; 'Lincoln International'), and having missed-out on (or passed-up
the opportunity really) a boxed clip-together/readymade Thunderbird 2 by Lincoln
a few years ago, I can say it's the same slippery-smooth plastic as that.
The set was covered in the NZMSS's magazine
not long after the main launch of the promotion if yesterday's dates are any
judge, and it's a fair appraisal from someone I'm guessing was more toward the
BMSS's hollow-cast, flat or solid-lead collecting flock, than our polymer-loving
branch of the hobby? 'Kit Review' text reads;
Dave Morris
"OPERATION HERITAGE"
By now most
of us would have seen the soldiers put out
to raise money for the Army Museum. The museum is to
be
built at Waiouru; and in fact the foundation stone has
al-
ready been laid.
The retail
outlet is the Woolworths chain of stores, &
Lincon Industries manufactured the models.
They are
sold conjointly with a competition, the entry
form being inside the plastic bag pack. The price of
$2
a pack (6 soldiers) is not very good value for money.
How-
ever nobody is filling his pockets as the proceeds are
go-
ing to the museum.
THE MODELS
There are
six Soldiers in each pack, on one sprue ['runner' - ed.], each
depicting an era of military history.
1. The Militia.
2. Boer War.
3. W.W.1
4. W.W.2 (Desert)
5. Post W.W. 2 Malaysia
6. Today— Ceremonial. (SD's with Lemon
Squeezer)
The soldiers come in two colours; Drab green and khaki
As model solders
the effort is very disappointing.
There are several errors which should not have
happened.
1. The height
of soldiers are only 50mm.
2. The
soldier in Service Dress has breast pock-
ets
somewhere down around his lower ribcage.
3. The
bayonet on the WW2 soldier is depicted as
a No 1. Although not completely incorrect
He
should be better displayed with a No 4 bay-
onet.
Right alongside on the WW1 soldier is
a No 1
bayonet.
4. The numbering on the accompanying leaflet
of
soldier
identification has two numbers back to
front;
No 5 and 6. [On
the artwork - ed.]
However to
look on the bright side, the soldiers have
A "now" vogue look of the original toy
soldiers: Thin,
lean, faceless and flat without dimension. The packs on
their backs are merely a raised line.
And flash; Surprisingly
there was none. There was also
no flaws in the manufacturing.
I take slight issue with the Malaysia reference as
the SLR didn't enter service until after the Malayan Emergency was coming to an end (1960), and I think it's really Vietnam that's being referenced -
if it's a campaign? Although the weapon could be an M16, or the reference could be for Borneo ('66). And - as we saw
yesterday - the accompanying-flyer gave that particular figure a much wider
spread than Malaysia, geographically, and 30-years to cover in one sculpt!
The fluidity with the weapons' ID (it's
more SLR than M16) is mirrored in the bayonets, which are both modelled as mere
sticks, but I know what he's getting at, one should be longer - if they WERE
hollow-casts . . . it would matter - you can't do it with paint if it's
not there! Neither has any connection with the musket at the bottom of the page
which is just editorial decoration I think.
As with the Tan ones, Glenn kindly sent us
both a loose set and a set still on the runner, you can see it's the same order
and layout as the previously seen one, which you might think is obvious, but
tomorrow we'll find it isn't!
Let's do the grizzled-old colonial settler
with a very Victorian beard to death shall we (actually - it looks like a bee-beard!); on the left a close-up of the
militiaman from the Maori wars, front and back and in all three colours; on the
right a comparison with the garrison troop from Sanitarium's premium-regiment!
And a reminder Glenn can supply limited
numbers of sets still on the runner and most figures in most colours loose -
email me (maverickatlarge[at]hotmail[dot]com), for the passing of your details.
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