Seen before, this is the same company that made the tank transporter,
the little forward-control truck with tin-plate tilt and the airborne ZSU self-propelled gun, now believed to
be the Tula Cartridge Plant, and all
from a series known as 'Military
Equipment', which included a handful of solid-cast figures. Vehicle is one
of the early FROG (Free Rocket, Over
Ground) launchers, tactical battlefield nuclear-missiles akin to the US Honest John or French Pluton.
But Era, in Sevastopol made
this; I'm not sure but I think the NATO reporting name for this might have been
Guild?
It's two SAM-I's (think Hawk!) mounted
on the same chassis as the previous beast (old T54/55 hulls), and is a most odd
arrangement, with the vehicle manufactured to contemporary Corgi, Dinky or Matchbox 'Super King' standards with continuous rubber-band tracks,
revolving wheels on through-axles etc . . .
. . . while the weapon platform is a really rather crude stamping, with
no attempt at modelling the travelling/launching cradles/mechanism and with two
even cruder aluminium castings for the rockets.
But I love it; it is an incredibly tangible toy, you really want to
handle it. While there is no elevation, there is something really satisfying
about the way the two rockets follow each-other round! The rockets also make a
good handle to push the thing across the floor, it's hard to explain, but if
you've got one, you'll probably know what I mean?
Comparing the two, you can see how the Cartridge Plant's is made the same way they made their bullets and
shells, Heavy-castings riveted together with a set of carpet wheels, while
Era's is a more complicated piece, but they still go together well, as they may
have in real life - it being 31-years
since my last Soviet-studies courses - I can't remember, but a FROG batterys (or regiments) would have
needed some high-altitude air-defence, tagging-along?
The FROGs were replaced by SCUD, and Guild was replaced by Guideline?
All-in-all; a long time ago now!
The Era mark on the base, in
Tula they didn't mark the Military
Equipment vehicles; only the packaging! Both are around the 1:48/50th
scales of the similar Western toys, think Corgi's
Gepard Spaag or Dinky's Leopard I MBT.
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