About Me

My photo
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.
Showing posts with label Code Zero. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Code Zero. Show all posts

Monday, December 8, 2025

N is for November's Sandown Park - Vehicles

As always, I picked-up a fair few vehicles a month ago (where does it go, this time which is already so limited to us!), and a pretty eclectic bunch at that, but Sandown Park was originally a train and die-cast show! Anyway, let's look at 'em!

A bit pricey, at a tenner; I like mine around the five-quid mark, but it does have one of the MPC-copy astronauts, which are harder to find. I may already have one, but unlike my MPC sample (Golden Astronauts), I can never remember which Spacex ones I have and which ones I need, so there's a tendency to just buy them! Not that the MPC situation is any better, I know I have all bar one, but can never remember which one, so don't buy!
 
Couldn't resist this Hot Wheels model, it's the basic 110 'Defender' as we took delivery of, back in '86/87, ahead of the rest of the British Army, because the Berlin Brigade had a separate procurement / purchasing system! Although most of ours were soft-tops, and the CO got a windowed 'Safari' hard-top 'limo' with foot-steps and roof-rack!
 
Nice - probably copies of a Western novelty - all plastic, Hong Kong made, road rollers, two in one colour, the other - bagged - in another and many thanks to Adrian Little, who found these and put them to one side for me. They'll make a nice line-up with the Blue Box, Blue Bow and others, alongside the Montaplex ones!
 
Eldon, no, Elmont, a mistake I always make! An early British maker of road transport models in plastic, rival to Wells-Brimtoy, with similar fly-wheel, push-and-go motors, they are manufactured in an early, soapy plastic, similar to the French cart in Chris's last parcel, but less stable and prone to warping.
 
It's in a hell of a state, but . . . I have a red one with . . . green (?) cable drums, which is so badly deformed, I will cannibalise it to get this one ship-shape. This has a slight shrinkage dip in the cab-roof, which will need hot water, a wooden wedge and some super-glue to straighten again (for a decade or two?), but my existing one has warping through the cab, body and cable drums, so there was method in the madness, and it was barely any money!
 
A lovely French motorcycle, possibly Cofalux, and probably a team-support vehicle from a Tour de France boxed set, alongside the Matchbox scrambler one, but not the common yellow plastic, number '8', this red, number '10', was from a gift-set.
 
Baby in a boat . . . it's a boat, with a baby!
 
Seen before, but another sample, cheap!
Kamley/Kwong Shing
 
Magneto, a German firm which actually produced a few of the dancers and ethnic dressed figures seen here before, and there's a post in the pipeline, but for now - missing its propulsion wand, this is a magnetic push-novelty, where negative magnetism is used to propel the car.
 
Zero-Hour / Code Zero plane, someone had glued the broken tail stabiliser back-on, but back-to-front, which I've fixed, but it made it dirt-cheap! These have passed their silly-money point now, and there was a lot of Zero Hour stuff around the halls, most of it very reasonable, compared to evilBay prices of only a few years ago!
 
I was getting stuff from the horses-mouth on this Bluebird line, a while ago, but then he started sending it to other Blogs, so it lost it's exclusivity, and I realised it was more about promoting his site, than supporting mine, or contributing to fandom, so I dropped out, and have stuff I'll probably never publish, and which subsequently appeared elsewhere, anyway. I'll promote your site if I chose to, or because it's the right thing to do, not because you ask me to, or it becomes conditional! 
 
I tried to pay Steve Vicker's for this unmarked 'British' generic novelty, on Saturday just-gone, as he'd given it to me at Sandown Park, and I felt he'd given it to me because I'd told him the vessel was a German premium and didn't belong in the box, but he wouldn't take money for it, so I filled my boots with French, Canadian and American plastic, to even things up a bit!
 
Technically, it IS a German premium, it still has Sanella on the hull, but it must be clearance or some kind of unused-stock sell-through, and once I'd found the little cellulose sheet (bottom left image), and read the instructions at home, it became obvious, from the faint traces of dark-brown glue (Evostick as was - evo' for evil!) on the sheet, that it was the correct ship.
 
The set of premiums (Manurba, Siku, someone like that) can be found unbranded, usually in brighter colours as later rack-toys (Tallon like), or with branding, like the Sanella here (a German margarine for baking, still going), in a number of configurations, but all on the same hull, there’s a liner, tramp steamer, small tanker and this . . . exploration vessel/mail packet?
 
It says "Gives hours of fun", but I suspect it was minutes of misery, trying to get it to work, against a very sensitive chemical reaction that's too easy to muck up, and where would you get small camphor tablets these days? The threat of banning moth-balls was enough for the industry to withdraw them, and while the EU never passed the rule, they've never returned, and most of the ones you might find on evilBay or Amazon are fakes . . . another missed 'Brwreakshit benefit"!

Thursday, February 15, 2018

Zulu is for Zero Hour!

Ryan Davis - who sent yesterday's Chopper Ace - also sent two pages of Zero Hour stuff, from which I have cropped-out the following images - all the Bluebird catalogues I've encountered (four or five now) have been larger than A4 which makes them problematical to handle!

Also repeating yesterdays message - If you sent me stuff back around 2008-2012'ish and wondered why I never posted it on the Blog - remind me and I'll rectify the omission! In the meantime here's some more Bluebird Zero Hour from the probably-1992 catalogue courtesy of Mr Davis

The truck with the split (or splitting?) wheels seems to one of those things you often find in catalogue imagery . . . something which never got released; it's not in any of the photographs, it's not - to my knowledge - in any evilBay lots and having now seen parts of four catalogues, I've never seen it 'in the flesh', so we only have the two art-works (there's another lower down) to hint at what might have been!

I suspect[ed] this was another of Mr. Dixon's show-display/press-shot dioramas? The vehicles are 'out of the box', but the figures and scenic stuff have been painted and the monorail weathered and pushed through a tunnel, and over both a stream and gully!

I asked Richard Dixon about it after I'd actually put this post to bed, and he recounted the whole sorry tale of woe and complication;

"The monorail set display is one [of Richards] of mine....It was the first big set I created for the product...it was four feet long and about three feet wide....wooden base / landscaped. We used it for a creative picture which appeared in the Bluebird Toys Trade Catalogue first. At that point the monorail train worked....subsequently, somebody down at Bluebird played with it and broke the track!!!

It was then decided that the item would need to travel as a mobile display for shops....so I had to strengthen the whole thing and get a Perspex cover made to [go over] it .

When the item arrived at Bluebird in Swindon....plan changed!!....the marketing department decided that it would stay there for display as they liked it so much....when they got a visit from Hamleys to look at the range it was then decided to go in the store on Regents Street London for Christmas.

The saga is not over - because of the weight of the thing - due to the strengthening procedure - Hamleys could not move it around in store for various displays - it had to stay in one position as they only had one gondola stand that could take the weight!!....After Christmas it went back to Bluebird where I was called to do some repairs - eventually going over to the country estate home of the [redacted] in southern Ireland for its final display.

If I had known it would be sent around....the construction method would have been done differently....but as usual things in this business are often decided upon on the spur of the moment....
"

Richard also sent the following;

They made a bigger one!

There's at least eight-feet in frame, and more going-off either side! Both monorails and most sets are in evidence, it's no wonder the various arms of Bluebird were vying for the rights to hold these at their sites, but one wonders what it did to productivity figures at each site before they were moved on . . . I'd be all-day, playing on any of them!

And look how dated that Panasonic CRT-monitor looks now - I think it's got its own VHS slot, very flash for the late '80's!

Thanks again to Mr. Dixon, his website'shere.

A smaller version of the monorail was issued for those on a tight budget, and it's operated by the Bad Guys! Only a small train and a handful of figures; this stuff gets some silly money on feebleBay for what it is!

Seen in the contribution from Mr. Dixon the other day, but here from another catalogue* and with a shot of a boxed set; Action Task Force. There's that split-wheel truck again, have you seen one in 'real life', real-toy-life that is!

Again I also asked Richard about it;

"The 'monster ' Jeep....I think it existed as a prototype....saw something at Origin Products** in London when I visited the designers on one occasion....not sure it was Zero Hour though....may have been planned for Manta Force....I certainly did not photograph it for Zero Hour....not sure if it was going to be released or just something which was planned but never went anywhere."

*Catalogue Listing is complicated, I think Ryan's was 1992, mine is 1990 (I think - in storage now!), the shots Richard showed us the other day may have ended-up in the 1991 catalogue and the one I photocopied at Kingston Uni' in 1994 was possibly the 1993 edition, but it or another in the same folder (no Zero Hour) may have been 1989? Also there seem to have been both trade and retail/customer versions; which is which in the above is open to question but mine and Ryan's (with packaging details) are both 'trade'.

** Origin Products survive - after a fashion; the core was actually bought by Mattel in 2007, while staff in the UK gravitated to Character Options/Toy Options of the Character Group, where one of the 'main-men' at Bluebird is still on the board; Mr. Kiran Shah, or - at least - he was last time I looked into the subject (2008)!

Close-up of the boxed-set, it seems to consist of most of the vehicles from the larger monorail set.

Thanks again to Richard and Ryan for all the above images.

.....●●==========================●●.....

I'd better contribute something to the post . . .
Listings
Zero Hour (stated to be approximately 20mm high to a 1:65 scale)

Figure Sets 1990
900281 - Eagle Air Squadron Troops [Good Guys]
900291 - Swordfish Navy Task Force Troops [Good Guys]
900301 - Army Wolf Pack Troops [Good Guys]
900311 - BAD Brigade Troops

Accessory and Play Sets 1990
900321 - Crop Duster Set
900331 - Gemini Two-man Tank Set
900341 - Swordfish Navy Marlin 3-Man Sub Set
900351 - Quick Silver Fighter Set
900361 - Cougar Armed Vehicle Set
900371 - Navy Hammerhead Power Boat Set
900381 - Kestrel Chopper and Snipe Fighter Set
900391 - Blueshark Torpedo and Rubber Boat Set
900401 - Thunderflash Armed Halftrack and ATV Set
900411 - UAV Armed Tour Bus and Trike Set
900421 - UAV Petrol Tanker and Assault Boat Set
900431 - Night Hawk Bomber and Quicksilver Fighter Set
900441 - Supreme Headquarters Monorail Superset

Figure Sets 1991
910281 - Army Wolf Close Combat Troops [Good Guys]
910301 - BAD Polecat Gang Troops
910311 - BAD Scorpion Force Troops
910731 - Eagle Air Para-wing Troops [Good Guys]

Accessory and Play Sets 1991
910011 - Action Taskforce
910321 - Close Combat Howitzer Set
910331 - Polecat Gang Piranha Airboat Set
910341 - Scorpion Force WASP Gunship Set
910351 - BAD Black Mamba Monorail Set
910361 - Scorch Global Attack Bomber Set
910421 - UAV Petrol Tanker and Assault Boat Set
910431 - UAP Winged Demon Bomber Set
910441 - VTO Para Wing Troop Transporter Set
910451 - BAD Scorpion Force UAV Ambulance and Armoured Landing Craft Set
910541 - Close Combat Rhino Armoured Missile Carrier Set
910551 - ?
910561 - ?
910571 - MV Surprise Q Ship and Landing Craft Set
910581 - Para-wing Hornet Micro-light

Other Lines
920011 - Chopper Ace, contained figures drawn from (seated) or compatible with (standing) Zero Hour and we looked at it/them yesterday.

A part range was in the 1992 catalogue while a fuller-range returned in what I think was the 1993 catalogue but I only copied the figures!

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

C is for Chopper . . . Ace!


Putting the images Richard sent away on the dongle I found a load of stuff from 2011, which came out of the last time I looked at Bluebird here (bottom left shot, but I think I'll re-do all those blue-bird articles, I cropped/collaged them very oddly? I was still learning how both Blogger and Picasa work I guess)! Sent by Ryan Davis as part of an image swap, I don't know why I didn't Blog them at the time, but I used to be bad at recognising 'contributions'; presuming private emails to be err . . . private! It's probably an Asperger's thing?

If you sent me stuff back then (2008-2012'ish) and wondered why I never posted it on the Blog - remind me and I'll rectify the omission! In the meantime here's something which looks like Zero Hour but isn't! From the 1992 (?) Bluebird catalogue courtesy of Mr. Davis.


The set got a whole page to itself in the Catalogue and I've further cropped the images out below. Most of it is imminently forgettable as a cheap 'placky' novelty, but it's the figures which caused the stir, I posted them on the original posts as 'can't find them in the catalogues Zero Hour', and Ryan kindly ID'd them as coming from this set.

Although a cheap plastic toy, removal of the rotors and a bit of a paint-job might give you some airborne capability for you 'Space Marines'; the rear landing-gear is quite Gerry Anderson'esque I think?

Sooooo . . . let's get this straight: One wrong move on the part of the pilot and you're going to be wearing a couple of tons of lifting hook as a face-ornament? Good luck with that then!

There was a rash of these toys at the end of the 1970's, Airfix and Tyco (?) to the fore - I seem to recall, some bombing, some dropping (one dropping parachutes), others picking things up, this drops and picks up!

I don't know if it can go backwards or if - upon missing - you have to go round and try again, but if it does (did!) go backwards you could pick up both chaps at the same time! When I get everything out of storage I'll have to check the odd & sods boxes, to see if I have some of the stores. Finally reads the blub - Yes it goes backwards!

Although the figures are Zero Hour compatible, the 'Red Angel' / Chooper Ace set is very civilian, in outlook/setting, which was a growing trend by the late 1980's as we know from the dearth of figures around at the time; at least there were these!

Sunday, February 11, 2018

I is for If You Like Sci-fi Toys!

I received an email and some very interesting shots of Zero Hour (Code Zero in the 'States) toys, as the Photo's aren't collageable and the text is self-explanatory, I give you first Richard Dixon's own words, then the shots...

Hi Hugh

I've just been reading your site stuff on Zero Hour Toys....

....I was the principal photographic designer for Bluebird Toys in 1989 - 1990....I also designed the Toy Fair Displays for the Range at Earls Court Toy Fair and the smaller display at Harrogate Toy Fair to launch the range.

During my time on the promotion for the product I also built a large display for Hamleys in London for the Christmas Display to promote the Range...and worked on the TV advertisements and all Children's Comics for the Range....

....Best Regards




Richard's website is a wealth of toy info and nostalgic imagery . . .


. . .  thank you Richard for these fascinating pictures!

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

B is for Bluebird Toys - An Overview

So - Bluebird Toys (UK) Ltd Huh? They came, they made, they went! And contributed more to the small scale world in their short time than much bigger, longer lived companies...or did they really?

The 1997 Argos catalogue page annoncing the launch/availability of Havok.

Bluebird were formed in 1980 by Torquil Norman who was an old Model Toys man ( Berwick-Timpo owned), and one has to assume he had ideas about how to do things differently in a new decade with new mores. He started well with a 'Big Yellow Teapot' pre-school toy and other 'activity' toys for tots, and the company got off to a flying start.

Zero Hour catalogue pages from 1990 & 1992

However, all was not rosy in the garden and the company seems to have grown too fast, cash flow tightened and within ten years it was struggling. The answer was Polly Pocket, which quickly became very successful and refilled the companies coffers, she was then joined by Mighty Max, who sadly only lasted about 4 years. However Polly wasn't necessarily a Bluebird invention, she was licenced from a company called Origin Products Limited, possibly a wholly owned subsidiary?. Google gives about three 'Origins', one making trouser-presses in the Far East, a group of engineers in London and a dead homepage, so no clarity there!

Manta Force and Viper Squad pages from the 1990 catalogue.

A look at the acknowledgements 'small print' on the back of a late catalogue shows that - in fact - all the products being issued by Bluebird have dues to another source. The Manta Force, for instance was in the Tomy stable.

The fact that Hasbro have bought Mattel (a long time partner and eventual purchaser of Bluebird) while Takara and Tomy have married doesn't help with the research, this was all happening at the start of the 'modern' period of toy production where Tomy will re-use Starriors as RATS and use the cockpits on some Zoids while issuing separate licences to Hasbro and Kenner! It's all about quick profit, quick turnaround, making moulds pay and shovelling the residue to clearance houses for repackaging in Spain, Mexico or the souks of Istanbul.

If you go to the London Toy Fair regularly you'll know that companies come and go so fast, seem to grow and then disappear, or turn out to be no more than a brand or trade mark with a separate stand, it's hard to know who's what, and they're not that interested in the customer either. "The Customers Always Right" has become the customer will buy what we present to them or what we present to the kids until they pester the customer to see things our way!

So we find that Kenner/Parker, Fredrick Warne, BBC Enterprises, Tomy, DC Comics, Disney, Lewis Galoob and others were all getting a slice of the Bluebird pie.

Clockwise from top right; Polly pocket Catalogue page; 40mm Prince Charmings (?); and a Batman card.

In the end - which came at the end of 1997 - Mattel won a bidding war and bought their old trading partner and moved production to the US, swallowing Galoob as well...just before Hasbro swallowed the lot!

Mr Norman? Well, 'Sir' Norman went off to spend a lot of money on a theatre, which might help the more cynical among us (Me Sir! Me!) understand who was behind Origin Products? Note; Mattel are still crediting an Origin on the PP website...

Z is for Zero Hour by Bluebird Toy (Code Zero in the US)

So let's look at the most useful series for small scale enthusiasts, the Zero Hour range of futuristic/post apocalyptic rubber men! Good guys, bad guys and big tanks, what more could you want. And some of the figures/accessories are really quite useful for fantasy/sci-fi war gaming.

A shot of various figures from various sets, unlike the Havok range below (tied-in to Argos), these had a wider release and were available in Toy-R-Us, where I passed on the chance of a complete set as they were hideously expensive!

The Green row are a colour variation only available in the Supreme Headquarters Super Monorail Set (Groundhog Marine commandos), the figures more usually in shades of brown as Army Wolf Pack.

Group shot of the Bad Brigade set with a tatty old UAV Tour Bus also available in the big monorail play set. Most sets not only cost a lot, but contained an inordinate number of seated figures!

The big tank!

Some other stuff, you get the picture, lots of play value, not much imagination needed, everything has a back story, real 'modern' toys. The two grey figures are as yet unidentified, being from neither the figure sets nor the big play-set.

These were issued/carried in the US by Mattel where they were known as Code Zero, so assume re-packaging? These seem to have been Bluebird originals, and I don't know if the ranges differed, however V. Rudick's One Inch Army book is short four figure sets and a number of accessories so I guess Mattel didn't market the full range across the pond?

Wednesday, February 18, 2009

Z is for Zulus

And other African warriors. Not actually much covered outside metal war gaming figures. Most of the early British plastics producers had a set of 'African Warriors' and Esci produced a reasonable set I'll probably cover another day, but I thought I'd look at what we have vintage wise.

These are 15, 20 and 25mm figures by (from left to right) Stadden, Hinton Hunt (I think, there's a HH mark on the base and it's his style) and God knows, in fact who cares, stumpy little scaled down 28mm Ork!!

Two 40mm Hong Kong or possibly minor European maker and a HK copy of the Lone Star African warrior in 35mm.

Marx African exploration set, this is a late set in the 'Battleground' style box, with soft polythene parts. The contents of these sets vary as there were more poses than the bean counters would allow in a single set. Most of the accessories are standard, but the pile of boxes in the centre is unusual and may be unique to this set (Unlikely though, Marx would throw anything in anyset!!).

Kinder have also marketed some nice African/Zulu warriors in a swoppet style, produced by Res Plastic (RP) in 54mm. I have them somewhere and will post them one day, when I find them!!