About Me

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No Fixed Abode, Home Counties, United Kingdom
I’m a 60-year-old Aspergic gardening CAD-Monkey. Sardonic, cynical and with the political leanings of a social reformer, I’m also a toy and model figure collector, particularly interested in the history of plastics and plastic toys. Other interests are history, current affairs, modern art, and architecture, gardening and natural history. I love plain chocolate, fireworks and trees, but I don’t hug them, I do hug kittens. I hate ignorance, when it can be avoided, so I hate the 'educational' establishment and pity the millions they’ve failed with teaching-to-test and rote 'learning' and I hate the short-sighted stupidity of the entire ruling/industrial elite, with their planet destroying fascism and added “buy-one-get-one-free”. Likewise, I also have no time for fools and little time for the false crap we're all supposed to pretend we haven't noticed, or the games we're supposed to play. I will 'bite the hand that feeds', to remind it why it feeds.

Thursday, January 16, 2020

C is for Christmas Exhibition - 5 of 5 - Low Display Table

The exhibition extended to a side table, where some of the earlier systems get a second outing with ephemera for a more nostalgia-related display than the ready-to-play stuff in the upright cabinet . . .

Ballast/Mineral Wagon; Bayko; Big Train; Binns Road; Christmas Exhibition; Exhibition Of Construction Toys; Fleet Library; G-gauge; Green/Red Meccano; Low Display Table; Massey Ferguson; Masterbuilder; Meccano; Minibrix; Ministry of Education; Morris Minor; Passenger Coach; Primus Engineering; RAF roundel; Science Museum; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Trix catalogue; Vulcanised Rubber;
. . . which looks like this! The two items which aren't further looked at in the next four images are firstly; the late green/red Meccano set (bottom centre), I know it's late as it has a yellow plastic tray insert to hold the components, but the earlier colour scheme with grey wheels. My brother and I had yellow vac-forms but blue/yellow plates and silver-anodised beams, so ours must have come just after this set.

Note also the aircraft engine, propeller and wing-struts (along with non-standard wheels?), all job-specific parts, but the piece I like most is the bolt-on RAF roundel!

The other item of note here is a catalogue of exhibits for an exhibition of construction toys at the Science Museum, issued by the Ministry of Education no less! I can't make out the date but it looks to be either 1945 or '55, and would be a wonder to view now . . . are the items still in their archive?

Ballast/Mineral Wagon; Bayko; Big Train; Binns Road; Christmas Exhibition; Exhibition Of Construction Toys; Fleet Library; G-gauge; Green/Red Meccano; Low Display Table; Massey Ferguson; Masterbuilder; Meccano; Minibrix; Ministry of Education; Morris Minor; Passenger Coach; Primus Engineering; RAF roundel; Science Museum; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Trix catalogue; Vulcanised Rubber;
Trix catalogue and parts, as I mused a couple of posts ago; I think this is a licensed product re-branded to Trix (or from Trix?) and that a US company is also known for these triple-pierced beams? The cog and disc are very similar to Meccano parts, but the spanner has the added value of being included* into a model . . . so long as you have a second to tighten the nuts!

*I tried 'assembleable' but it seems to be a new-word too far!

Ballast/Mineral Wagon; Bayko; Big Train; Binns Road; Christmas Exhibition; Exhibition Of Construction Toys; Fleet Library; G-gauge; Green/Red Meccano; Low Display Table; Massey Ferguson; Masterbuilder; Meccano; Minibrix; Ministry of Education; Morris Minor; Passenger Coach; Primus Engineering; RAF roundel; Science Museum; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Trix catalogue; Vulcanised Rubber;
Minibrix; we didn't have this system as kids but many of our friends did, I found it a bit boring, as (like Bayko, missing from this year's exhibition at Fleet Library, but seen in past displays) it can only make endless variations of a few basic building types - no cranes, no spaceships, a crude crocodile maybe, if you tried hard enough and had both a good imagination and good visio-spatial planning skills, but not realistically set up to model anything other than another 'box' with or without pitched roof!

In its defence it was made out of a very stable vulcanised rubber, like vehicle tyre-rubber (unlike that Italian stuff which has melted vast tracts of Toy Soldier history to sticky, furry lumps of nothing!), and while you sometimes find it with a perished surface (a sort of flaking hardened 'varnish' as a top layer), most is as useable now as it as when it was made 50 or 60 years ago.

Note the door; along with the windows, small points top and bottom of the element locate into dimples along the surface-edges of bars or bricks. And - like truck-tyres - it was bloody heavy!

Ballast/Mineral Wagon; Bayko; Big Train; Binns Road; Christmas Exhibition; Exhibition Of Construction Toys; Fleet Library; G-gauge; Green/Red Meccano; Low Display Table; Massey Ferguson; Masterbuilder; Meccano; Minibrix; Ministry of Education; Morris Minor; Passenger Coach; Primus Engineering; RAF roundel; Science Museum; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Trix catalogue; Vulcanised Rubber;
We saw the ballast/mineral wagon in an earlier post, here's most of a passenger coach! The image seems to be of an auction lot and shows a whole set which also builds a windmill, a rail crane and section of track looking to be about G-gauge or 'Big' in plastic parlance!

Ballast/Mineral Wagon; Bayko; Big Train; Binns Road; Christmas Exhibition; Exhibition Of Construction Toys; Fleet Library; G-gauge; Green/Red Meccano; Low Display Table; Massey Ferguson; Masterbuilder; Meccano; Minibrix; Ministry of Education; Morris Minor; Passenger Coach; Primus Engineering; RAF roundel; Science Museum; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Trix catalogue; Vulcanised Rubber;
Masterbuilder handbook and parts; again very similar to Meccano, but actually the 'rims' are better modelled than those of Binns Road's system, in separate scales they wouldn't look out of place on a Morris Minor or a Massey Ferguson!

The whole collection is still on exhibition now and to be seen in Fleet Library (North Hampshire - Berkshire - Surry triangle), and should - if previous years are to be a guide - continue 'till the end of January 2020.

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