I - at first - thought it was similar to
one we looked at a few weeks ago, but realised the fins are different, and
while a realist/pirist will probably find it a bit crude or simplistic, it's a
fine toy if you're seven, and play is what it's all about.
Of
more interest to me is the truck with its MLRS-looking bundle, as I have the
trucks as unknowns (we've had a few here in a past RTM-posts) and I had the
artillery-bundle, but loose and looking for its host, which I never would have
believed was this truck, due to the crudity of the truck against the [seeming]
better quality-finish of the launcher and turntable.
The MLRS is similar to the earlier Bundeswehr Lars/Lars-2 systems
employed by West Germany back in the Cold War, and would be a fire and forget
'area denial' weapon following the WWII pattern of 'Stalin's organs' rather
than the larger calibre , modern MLRS systems which are more technical,
accurate, aim'able beasts. The towed-rocket is a real piece of rack-toy loveliness,
channeling pulp-anthology covers, kids comic-book rocket-toys, Giles cartoons
and Tin Tin's moon-shot!
Here's the truck (with added light-bar on
the cab roof) on Hing Fat's Faceplant
page in red and blue, which is not to say these are out there in retail land,
these will we press-release shots and could include mock-ups waiting for orders
before they go into production.
It's that stretcher-team again! In fact
there are a couple of elements taken from Kamley
(who I at first thought might be the attribution), not least the twin-radar
(green Hummer) they originally had on their little trucks. I want to track down
one of the Chinooks; according to their various publicity sources, they do it
in about six colours?
Older, 1990's set to the left, 2006
catalogue image in the middle and the current website image (dated Jan-2016) to
the right are a better confirmation of the origins of Brian's lot, the Airfix 'Strongpoint' sand-bag
sanger-copy is further consolidation.
Note how there are radio-shack/office
box-bodies and a canvas tilt variation as well as the rocket cassette-launcher.
Thanks to Brian; a positive ID.
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