It has an internal anvil, and exhaust
venturi, which as they face forward would/could be seen as retro-rockets on an
interspatial vessel! It needed a good clean and I used cotton-buds to remove
the rusty gunk from the interior and an old flossing-brush to clean the
venturi!
There's nothing to hold a cap or a section
of cap 'tape' in place, so I suspect it was designed and/or issued with the
plastic-drum caps in strips to place over the end of the hammer-bar. The
anvil-plate seems to be set into the plastic, but it's very rusty so I'm not
about to shove it around or pick at it to prove or disprove the suspicion!
And, if you're one of the older loyal
readers of this blog it may look familiar to you; because it's a copy of the Merit (J&L Randall) one we saw here.
Before it was cleaned up (crap shot -
sorry!), it's somewhere between the two common'ish sizes we looked at last
time, and has a screw-cap where they had pop-on ones. In the comparison below
we see the odd part in dark-olive, they all go in the tub together, and as bits
which fit come-in they get put with each-other.
The two on the left are not cap-firers, but
rubber-tipped projectiles. The smaller red one being from the rail-mounted 'Battle Space' launcher from Rovex Tri-Ang/Hornby-Triang, it replaced
a short-lived die-cast alloy version (also with a rubber nose, but in oxide red).
The yellow one is annoying me as I'm sure I
know (or should know) its origin or have ID'd its brand/maker in the past -
possibly on this Blog - but I can't find it on the Blog, can't find it in the
archives and can't find it on-line, so if you can tell me - kudos to you! Is it
ammunition from a 'One Man Army' type
thing?
An old internet image (possibly Vectis?) it's a bit fuzzy but you get
the idea and we looked at mine years ago (over a decade ago! And I now know the
yellow one in that post!),
the real aim here is to use the connection of this and the 'unknown' yellow one
to get us to this . . .
. . . sent to the Blog by Mr Berke, it's
mintier than a minty-mint 'minter' from the Royal Mint! Crescent's rocket launcher; which carries a cap-bomb of epic
dimensions, with a fully die-cast nose/firing mechanism on a polyethylene body.
This baby would take six or eight caps and detonate with quite a flash, having
a much heavier rod that the other's we've looked at.
Unfortunately, because we abused them with large charges, the tiny elastic-band which kept the 'breech block' in place quickly failed and the little piece of mazac is often missing. We looked at the rarer desert variant here a
while back, but a temperate/tropical unit was also available . . .
. . . and Brian sent one of those too!
Although obviously a cap-bomb, it was originally sold as the Mobile Space Rocket in the red/green
combo', with this version normally having a white plastic body for its Corporal Rocket & Lorry (the real
corporal was longer and thinner) and the 'civil' coloured truck carrying the
yellow bodied rocket.
I thought we'd seen my paint stripped one
on the blog, but I can't find it either, not can I find the HK copy's post, but
I did re-show it (if I'd shown it at all? Maybe a show-report?) in this post, it's all
plastic with a no-cap missile copied from another (Corgi) toy.
Going back a post (from the earlier link) Mr.
B also sent this to compliment the spring-loaded rocket launchers of that post,
it's the MPC rocket launcher, which
is supposed to be rubber-band operated.
Although when I say rubber-band operated,
Brian couldn't get it to work so I turned to Ed Berg (who has just Blogged the whole MPC space range)
and asked him for help (or the instruction sheet), but he explained he had just
as much trouble trying to get them to work, but told us how it should be done
and Brian had another stab at it.
But - basically - it seems the rocket gets
a little too comfortable in its mounting slot/groove and sticks fast, clearly
the rocket designer and/or the launch-pad designer and the tool's 'pattern
maker' weren't talking to each other with the clarity necessary? Or the rubber-band 'interactivity' was a late
addition to the toy's features? But it looks the part!
The gang at Moonbase have been running a
Money Box Season through lockdown (among all their other stuff!) and I sent my German BAC Spaarraket's over there, so follow the jump for more on them or this link for loads of money boxes (banks), including at least four other rocket types, a spaceman, several globes &etc.
It seems BAC Spaarbank is actually a Belgian entity, part of the [now] Dexia combine, previously; Gemeentekrediet van België / Crédit Communal de Belgique
Three months later - and it's nice to see Collectors Gazette were paying attention!
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On another matter altogether, the Police Commissioner for Durham has just accused Grant Chapps (Transport Secretary) of "Making it up as he goes along" with regard to Dominic Cumming's shenanigans over the Covid-19 Lock-down . . . well, fancy that, fancy populist fuckwitts on the right making it up as they go along! History will reflect more kindly on my whitterings that mine 'eemies'! Have you injected your dose of loo-cleaner today?!
I think the Merit cap bombs had a spring between the flat plate you identify as an anvil and the internal top of the nose cone, so you lifted the anvil slightly by pulling up the rod and slipped a paper cap under it.
ReplyDeleteYes they did Andy, and I suspect it should be present on the rusty one!
ReplyDeleteCheers
H