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.
Showing posts with label Land-Rover. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Land-Rover. Show all posts

Tuesday, July 5, 2022

M is for Memories of a Misspent Youth!

The reconnaissance platoon of the Ist Fantasian Motor-Rifle Corps, Putlos, Schleswig-Holstein, 1986!

We made the red stars from an old fertilizer sack we found in the barn we were billeted in, while providing 'Enemy Force' for the rest of the battalion!

Left to right; top; Steve B, 'Solid', 'Beano', Stu' M,
bottom; Alan 'Muscles' G and yours truly!

They gave us a LWB Land Rover, but no tilt, so we fashioned one from three groundsheets and some broom-handles (also liberated from the barn! And returned!), however six-guys full kit doesn't leave much room for passengers, so it was interesting in the back. Stu' and Beano (IC) were alright; they were up-front - with a heater . . . of sorts!

We'd be tasked with an all-night OP or a snap VCP, or sometimes just a drive-through (so someone else in an OP could report our movements), then back to the barn and some of the best cooks in Berlin Brigade who had two catering trailers for about 30 of us, we lived like kings and it was a pretty 'cabby' week! Bloody wet though; anyone in the UK who's ever bemoaned the weather, has never been to the Jutland Peninsula in October!

It was in this Lanny we all nearly died, when we came round a corner in the middle of nowhere and found two old ladies walking down the centre of the country-lane. Stu' managed to avoid them but we ended-up careering down a ditch at 45°'s while the windscreen and driver's door (LHD) got smashed-in by a line of cut-off tree stumps!

By the time we'd all clambered out of the half-waterlogged wreckage, the two old ladies has just wandered off round the corner (don't think they even broke step or stopped chatting to look over their shoulders!) and were nowhere to be seen! We tried pulling, we tried pushing, we stuffed logs under it, but in the end a passing German farmer pulled it out with his tractor and we limped-home to a late breakfast!

He hadn't seen the old ladies either and he'd come from where they'd gone (which we'd just driven - flat fields for miles) so we wondered if they hadn't been visiting from the twilight-zone as payback for some RAF bombing raid (Oldenburg escaped the worst, but nearby Kiel was heavily bombed) in the 1940's!

You can only get away with that shit when you're young . . . and . . . those 'Deputy Dog' hats though!

Thursday, December 19, 2019

E is for Educational Supplies

I think most of us have a grail of some kind; I'm talking about that thing from childhood we've been looking for ever-since we last saw it, or possessed it; or something which we let go back at the start of our collecting; maybe a bargain someone snipped-us to with a longer or faster arm on a dealers table; those things which tick something bigger than a mere 'box'.

This could be considered mine, or one of mine, there are a couple of other things I'm still looking for, but it has been one, since before I was a collector, or, since we are talking my having deciding I was a collector in '77 (the sponsored silence story I've bored a few people with already!), maybe the thing that actually got me collecting, subconsciously, in the first place?

In point of fact; I don't think we've had the story here on the Blog, so at the risk of sounding repetitive to my mates, I'll tell you now; I 'knew' or realised or decided I was a collector while playing with my tin of soldiers during the hour's sponsored silence for the Queens Silver Jubilee at Heckfield Village Hall . . . Church Hall? At Heckfield Church's 'Village' Hall!

Yeah! All the parents getting together and shutting their kids up for an hour - in both senses of the word! Except for my mate Miles from Laundry Lane who got told-off for whispering three times, then got chucked out! How do you get chucked-out of a sponsored silence?!! He only had to keep it shut for 59-and-a-bit minutes . . . someone thinks Miles' is a newsreader now, on the flickering cod's eye, which would be rather apt!

But anyway back to '77 and the parentally-enforced, angelical silence of a hall full of children; we had all been told to bring something to keep us amused or occupied (in silence Miles; silence!) for the duration (an hour is very long at that age, especially when doing something enforced - I can still remember every minute of it), all the sensible kids took a book or a puzzle or some comics . . .  I took my tin of soldiers.

Now, this tin was an old army bulk-biss'quit tin - large, silver, square thing with a big round lid like a works coffee tin - full of small scale toy soldiers, and - in a silent (or near silent - Stop it Miles!) hall, every move of my hand produced a noise which seemed to eco round the rafters like a grenade going off!

As a result, I decided that rather than play with them (I was thirteen, and girls were watching!), I'd tip them out quickly in a single crescendo,  and then sort them into piles, as it was a while since I'd last had them out.

In the sorting I ended up with various piles, and realised (or decided) that it was looking like a collection, and decided to collect, an 'occupation' I got seriously started-with later that autumn, buying some old 1st version Airfix blue-boxes and a square-boxed Strongpoint at the Swap Shop in Saffron Walden, which I followed with six sets of Atlantic WWII from the Toto Lotto in Neuhausen ob Eck, the following January!

On the day, my piles consisted of Airfix, Hong Kong, Marx Miniature Masterpieces, some based AFV kit-figures and a few odds such as Minimodels cowboys & Indians and a small red polyethylene pick-up truck with white wheels, I'd nicked from primary school!

So we go back about another seven years;

Way back to when I was six or seven and attending Heckfield Village Primary School (Mrs. Nash's class), long since sold-off and converted to posh dwellings for the Tory-faithful under Thatcher, there was an old, round biss'quit tin full of little things which would have failed the modern tests of H&S inspectors.

Due not only to the 'choking hazzard' but that several of them were of a size where jamming up the nose or in an ear was an equal possibility! However, there they were and they provided hours of time-wasting for moi, as you could hide behind the low-bookcases and play quietly with them until going-home time!

I have to confess I once stole, filched, pocketed, palmed the aforementioned little pick-up truck, (which I now seem to have misplaced but I know it's somewhere in the stash), however I was always looking for the rest, remembering them as 'something to have' for 'the collection'.

And earlier this year I spotted them on feebleBay, on a buy it now, lost them - even as I was eMailing Bill from Moonbase about them - only to find the next day that they'd been relisted at a reduced BIN, which I promptly coughed-for . . . this is them!

Bell; CEA; County Education Authority; Early Learners; Educational Novelties; Elephant Novelty; Galt Toys; Horse Racers; Horses; Lambs; Land Rovers; LEA; Local Education Authority; Mad March Hare; Merit; Micro Vehicles; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Prize Toys; Novelty Toys; Pigs; Rabbit Flat; Race Horses; Racing Cars; Scottie Dogs; Speed Boats; Thomas Salter;
As they arrived; I think the croquet mallet is a Christmas cracker or gumball-machine, capsule-prize, I don't remember them in the tin, but then I'd forgotten most of these, especially the racing cars, which I have been collecting separately for years!

I had in fact seen them several times but not put two-and-two together, while I've always remembered the tin and the delight I got from its contents, apart from the fact that there might have been some horse racers, and that there were other vehicles besides the pick-up (which remained familiar due to its being around!), I couldn't remember what the figures looked like; for years I thought they may have been the same as the Hong Kong Kibri/Leyla copies I had in that other tin (the sponsored silence was years after I'd left 'primary'), but the truth was, there were no figures to speak-of, apart from the race-horses which were the only accurate part of the memory . . . and explains why the six-year old me didn't filch a bunch of people to go with the pick-up!

Bell; CEA; County Education Authority; Early Learners; Educational Novelties; Elephant Novelty; Galt Toys; Horse Racers; Horses; Lambs; Land Rovers; LEA; Local Education Authority; Mad March Hare; Merit; Micro Vehicles; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Prize Toys; Novelty Toys; Pigs; Rabbit Flat; Race Horses; Racing Cars; Scottie Dogs; Speed Boats; Thomas Salter;
So, animals first and we might as well go clockwise; elephants; little lambs (which look like horses, except the accompanying horses look more like horses! Cats, which are standard capsule-prize fare with a charm-loop; Scottie-dogs - ditto, but lacking the loop; the horses themselves; these would later get small charm 'bars' down their backs and finally; the pigs, one of which - in orange - we have seen here as a Question Mark, you may remember me highlighting the truncated trotters.

Clearly these are also capsule toys, they are also Christmas cracker novelty-inserts, they were probably thrown from windows at kids in the streets of Malta on hi-days, holidays and Holy days , they may have ended-up in Piñata or Sobres, but bulk, as here, they were supplied to the old Local Education Authorities (LEA's), or county-council stores (?) to issue to primary schools as teaching aids - sorting and counting probably . . . not that I remember doing anything more than fiddle with them in a more aimless fashion . . . maybe I was indulging in a subtle self-exercise of hand/eye coordination!

None of these have any mark beyond the odd mould-release, pin-disc remnant. Both the cats and dogs are quite common as designs with many similar ones out there.

Bell; CEA; County Education Authority; Early Learners; Educational Novelties; Elephant Novelty; Galt Toys; Horse Racers; Horses; Lambs; Land Rovers; LEA; Local Education Authority; Mad March Hare; Merit; Micro Vehicles; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Prize Toys; Novelty Toys; Pigs; Rabbit Flat; Race Horses; Racing Cars; Scottie Dogs; Speed Boats; Thomas Salter;
These have definitely also been supplied to board-games, in which capacity we saw them on the old Other Collectables Blog, now merged with and hidden somewhere on this site! But new colours have extended the number of team possibilities in the project mused-on last time we looked at them.

Bell; CEA; County Education Authority; Early Learners; Educational Novelties; Elephant Novelty; Galt Toys; Horse Racers; Horses; Lambs; Land Rovers; LEA; Local Education Authority; Mad March Hare; Merit; Micro Vehicles; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Prize Toys; Novelty Toys; Pigs; Rabbit Flat; Race Horses; Racing Cars; Scottie Dogs; Speed Boats; Thomas Salter;
I had half-remembered the mounted jockeys and again I suspect they may have been supplied to games companies in the past, but as - these - learning-tools, they - like the racing cars - come in a wider palate of colours.

The rabbit is actually a hare, and he's an old design, I have a polystyrene one from a probably earlier tranche of these, and a phenolic or cellulose/celluloid one clearly carrying a stop-watch, who must be the Mad March Hare, late for his very-important-date and possibly from an early (when did the book or movie come out? 1940's/50's?) board game, so this mould might have been inherited by whoever was behind all these.

Bell; CEA; County Education Authority; Early Learners; Educational Novelties; Elephant Novelty; Galt Toys; Horse Racers; Horses; Lambs; Land Rovers; LEA; Local Education Authority; Mad March Hare; Merit; Micro Vehicles; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Prize Toys; Novelty Toys; Pigs; Rabbit Flat; Race Horses; Racing Cars; Scottie Dogs; Speed Boats; Thomas Salter;
I had already picked up a few of these over the decades, but due to the fact that this was one of several bags of capsule/board-game riders, they hadn't triggered a memory by themselves, most of the ones I've picked up in the past will be board-game rather than school lot, looking at the colours?

Bell; CEA; County Education Authority; Early Learners; Educational Novelties; Elephant Novelty; Galt Toys; Horse Racers; Horses; Lambs; Land Rovers; LEA; Local Education Authority; Mad March Hare; Merit; Micro Vehicles; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Prize Toys; Novelty Toys; Pigs; Rabbit Flat; Race Horses; Racing Cars; Scottie Dogs; Speed Boats; Thomas Salter;
Transport; The little 'Lake Geneva' pleasure-boat was Bill's 'pick-up truck' memory, he could remember err . . . 'liberating' a yellow one from his primary school, and he's North of the Watford Gap, so it was clearly a common item in the late-1960 to early/mid-1970's inventories of LEA's all over?

The London taxi-cab is another which has seen service as a capsule-toy, and I have a clear-plastic one somewhere with a charm-loop. The Pick-up truck went with the five in the bottom left shot, but I've also managed to get some green ones from Adrian Little a year or two ago and another lot this autumn, so they are below now - this shot was the better ones in the June/July bulk 'school lot' this year

Bell; CEA; County Education Authority; Early Learners; Educational Novelties; Elephant Novelty; Galt Toys; Horse Racers; Horses; Lambs; Land Rovers; LEA; Local Education Authority; Mad March Hare; Merit; Micro Vehicles; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Prize Toys; Novelty Toys; Pigs; Rabbit Flat; Race Horses; Racing Cars; Scottie Dogs; Speed Boats; Thomas Salter;
Back in 2015 I took these from an evilBay auction, I had bookmarked it intending to bid, but things intervened as they do and it slipped-by! I recognised the pick-up truck (it's like mine), so knew that at least the vehicles were 'right', but as the seller had two Wacky Races cereal premiums and several Crescent-for-Kellogg's Guards Band premiums in the lot as well, I still didn't make the connection with the other items!

This is how I remember the vehicles in our lot at Heckfield; all red with white wheels, and I don't remember our having had Land Rovers, if we had I would have stolen all of them! No! I would have had one instead of the pick-up!

But if I was nicking, and Bill was nicking, chances are everyone was helping themselves to their 'favourite' and with all the farmer's sons who attended Heckfield back then, the Land Rover's had probably been liberated several terms, or even years before I got my tiny little infant's hands on the tin!

Note the darker-blue for boats and taxis.

Bell; CEA; County Education Authority; Early Learners; Educational Novelties; Elephant Novelty; Galt Toys; Horse Racers; Horses; Lambs; Land Rovers; LEA; Local Education Authority; Mad March Hare; Merit; Micro Vehicles; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Prize Toys; Novelty Toys; Pigs; Rabbit Flat; Race Horses; Racing Cars; Scottie Dogs; Speed Boats; Thomas Salter;
These were also part of the lot, again we have new colours; a herd of swine in the same orange as the one which we saw before (From Chris Smith I think?), a flesh-coloured racehorse, a dark maroon elephant matching one of my racehorses and - most obvious - the cats have now been given bases, or had they formally been based? I suspect the former.

The white elephant is a buckshee cracker/gum-ball thing, as may also be both the poodle and the two little green horses, but those latter two may be from these; now I know what I'm looking for I'll keep an eye out for them, building an archive of images to get a more definitive picture of what was sent out to schools at the time.

Funnily enough, I have that green horse - as a design - in two larger sizes equating to 30/35mm and HO-OO, both in hard phenolic resins, the larger size drilled for a wagon (or chariot)'s drawbar, so it's obviously an old, possibly just post-war, design from someone?

If it was Bell, then Merit (J&L Randall) might have been the supplier of these later ones? Although if one HAD to choose a name for the supplier's the obvious candidates would be Galt or Scotland's Thomas Salter I think?

Bell; CEA; County Education Authority; Early Learners; Educational Novelties; Elephant Novelty; Galt Toys; Horse Racers; Horses; Lambs; Land Rovers; LEA; Local Education Authority; Mad March Hare; Merit; Micro Vehicles; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Prize Toys; Novelty Toys; Pigs; Rabbit Flat; Race Horses; Racing Cars; Scottie Dogs; Speed Boats; Thomas Salter;
A quick return to the vehicles, there are points of connection between these and both W. Germany (Jean-Manurba-Layla-Heinerle group) and KOHO-marked vehicles of similar size, along with Hong Kong copies, so there's another whole post there . . . maybe next year?

There only seem to be four vehicles in the line, a Series-1 Land Rover with slab-sides, the pick-up (Morris or something more American?) and two 'posh' cars, a Bentley type and a Citroën or a Cord Roadster - it's a bit Batman'y?

While red bodywork with white wheels seemed to be 'it' for years, other colours were clearly made, will probably prove just as common and can come with a variety of wheel-colours including a very pale blue - centre of lower shot, although - as you can see - black and white wheels seem commoner.

Bell; CEA; County Education Authority; Early Learners; Educational Novelties; Elephant Novelty; Galt Toys; Horse Racers; Horses; Lambs; Land Rovers; LEA; Local Education Authority; Mad March Hare; Merit; Micro Vehicles; Novelty Figurines; Novelty Prize Toys; Novelty Toys; Pigs; Rabbit Flat; Race Horses; Racing Cars; Scottie Dogs; Speed Boats; Thomas Salter;
Final line-up for now, with the pinky-red and powder blue ones we've already seen, the darker blue in the feeBay lot maybe and other colours probably out there, there will be 15+ in the end, probably all the colours of the race hoses/elephants, and maybe black and white?

Which leaves the question . . . if you are over - say - 48'ish but under - probably around - 60'ish do you remember all these from primary/junior school . . . or did you have something similar but different? AND . . . did you 'liberate' your favourite!

Monday, September 24, 2018

HO is for Lone Star Germans


Just a box ticker to get something up here for this afternoon! The Lone Star Germans reduced somewhat!

25mm Lone Star; Afrika Korps; DAK; German Infantry; German Soldiers; HO - OO Figures; Land Rovers; Landy; Lone Star; Lone Star German Infantry; Lone Star HO; Lone Star Land Rover; Lone Star Nazis; N-Gauge Land Rovers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Treble-O-Trains; War Games Figures;
This is the contents of a full set, almost certainly from the D-Day play-set with large vac-form, you get (got; 60+-years ago!) eight each of the six figure poses downscaled to an HO-gauge compatible 23-odd millimetre size along with two of the sub-scale (N-gauge) Land Rovers from the Treble-O-Trains range range, but in a dark olive, satin finish, rather than the bright, gloss red, black or British racing-green of the railway versions, giving a 50-piece count - 100 with the Paratrooper opo's; we'll look at another day.

The painting here has been restricted to a stab-and-hope dash of matt, flesh-pink in the vague areas of the face and hands - check-out the flame-thrower operators!

25mm Lone Star; Afrika Korps; DAK; German Infantry; German Soldiers; HO - OO Figures; Land Rovers; Landy; Lone Star; Lone Star German Infantry; Lone Star HO; Lone Star Land Rover; Lone Star Nazis; N-Gauge Land Rovers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Treble-O-Trains; War Games Figures;
Later they seem to have done service as Chinese troops (probably referring to the Korean conflict) with an all-over gloss-red hat and while one might be tempted to imagine that this headgear embellishment was home painting; note that A) the flesh (better registered) is also now gloss and . . .

25mm Lone Star; Afrika Korps; DAK; German Infantry; German Soldiers; HO - OO Figures; Land Rovers; Landy; Lone Star; Lone Star German Infantry; Lone Star HO; Lone Star Land Rover; Lone Star Nazis; N-Gauge Land Rovers; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Treble-O-Trains; War Games Figures;
. . . B) another out-painter has gone with a more detailed attempt at the red-star, Chinese troops (and later the Vietcong) carried on their soft hats; both colours are also in a gloss-finish.

Thursday, June 14, 2018

BB is for Nonsense!

The big disappointment with Oxford's die-cast range is the fact that they seem to have decided to pander to the worst of the combat-wombat fantasists usually found at Beltring or Wheels and Tracks at What's-it Hop Farm by providing a totally fictional series of Berlin Brigade urban camouflage schemes for various models in their Land Rover family.

They. Did. Not. Get. Urban. Camouflage. Ever! Bit of a rant today!

Worse, I think all three of the ones I'm looking at here weren't even service-vehicles in the brigade, so they are doubly fictional.

It's a long time ago. But I don't remember 1-Ton's in Berlin, at all. The Wombat platoon had old stripped-down series threes with a false floor to stow the Wombat's ramps, while the mortar platoon had series threes (replaced by defenders in 1986, maybe '87) with trailers for the base-plates. There was a Milan platoon, but I seem to recall they man-packed everywhere, broken down to one tube per infantry company? They ('Milan') had had Forward Control's in Tidworth though . . . I think!

The other uses for One-ton FC's was as 105mm Gun-tractors - we didn't have 105's in Berlin - and as ambulances, but in Berlin we had the old 'camper-van' overhanging-bodied' 3-series (as modelled by Corgi!), or - uniquely in the British Army - Unimogs.

So this vehicle wasn't in Berlin, and if it had been, it wouldn't have got the urban camouflage, which was confined to the larger AFV's - The Chieftains had it (for summer 1986?), the FV432 and 432B (Raden turret)'s had it first (they were wearing it for the Royal Hampshire's 'trooping of the colours' as senior battalion on parade for the Queen's Birthday Parade (QBP), so '84'ish?) and the Armoured squadron's Chieftain ARV's, Ferrets and FV438RE's had it, but our Fox's (bigger than a Ferret and armoured) were green and black.

This example also has far too much grey and not enough chocolate and white for the BB urban camouflage scheme's ratios which were closer to 40/30/30, but that’s going to be the obvious trouble with an invented paint-job!

This is comical, not only were 'lightweights' not service vehicles in Berlin Brigade, the camouflage on this has been copied from a combat-wombat's own civilianised Q-plate vehicle (Q568 GFV) which can be found on the internet; his mate had the most ridiculous aerials on a series-3 LWB and they spent their time worrying sheep between petrol-head events like those mentioned at the start!

Lightweights were considered 'special' vehicles, and while I seem to recall one FFR per company-HQ in Tidworth, it just wasn't a vehicle that the Berlin Brigade ever qualified for, there being no air-portability requirement for units written-off the strength of NATO, due to their low survivability 'forecast' in the event of the shit really hitting the fan!

Again, Land Rovers didn't get urban scheme, again; too much grey, not enough of the other two colours, but also, the series-3 safari's we had tended to window bodies with heavy, full-length (over-hanging) roof-racks (the CO had one I think), and while we did take delivery of the new 110 Defenders while I was there (ahead of both UKLF and BAOR), they were all green and black, and the hard-tops were fibre-glass pull-on's, windowed and all-green. But time's a bitch; and of the three, this is the one I'm not so sure of - as a service vehicle - and it could have arrived in the brigade after I left, but it didn't have the camouflage.

Again there's a combat-wombat one (soft-top Series-3) wearing military plates at shows (85 KB 80), but he's got both colours wrong, the chocolate being instead a camel-shit orange and the dark-grey; a pale ducks-egg colour!

He uses the scheme on the original experimental vehicle (01 GF 98?)'s scheme (from 1982?) which was placed on an old series-3 long before my time in the city, and which was only cleared for use with colour modifications, on the larger AFV's.

The thing is, the AFV's had a war-function of providing fire-support as rolling or emplaced 'bunkers' for ad-hoc battle-groups carrying out whatever task/s they had been given, within (holding actions) or through (breakout-infiltration-harassment) what was to be assumed would be a shattered or damaged city - if they had survived whatever indicated the beginning of hostilities! As such, they were painted to effectively disappear into the rubble.

Minutes 2.18 and 3.10 - 432's only, 1984 or '85

The soft-skins (and Fox) were primarily tasked with normal, day-to-day, 'peace-time' transport, patrolling the wire (foxes) and regular exercising 'down the zone' and therefore carried the standard NATO/UKLF scheme of broad black regions over an mid-olive drab-green (called 'Deep Bronze Green). The Fox'es were eventually painted 'urban' as well, but not until '88 or later.

They were not expected to survive the opening of hostilities, or be much use in the confines of rubble-strewn city streets, and would have been unlikely to have had time to be covered in a non-existing series of schemes. There was supposed to be a secondary function of the schemes - which were 'identikit' for each vehicle type - that of confusing the Russians into the exact numbers of armoured vehicles we had.

1987 - Chieftains now done - minute 13.30 - Striped-down brand-new
Defenders still NATO standard. 
Foxes (briefly visible extreme right at one point)
still NATO too - I'm in there somewhere!

However - given that A) each vehicle had a unique number-plate clearly visible, B) 'Soxmis' (the Soviet Military Mission) were allowed to roam freely over our sector; looking and counting, and C) the Russians knew exactly how many of what AFV-types had gone up and down the 'corridor' rail-lines over the previous 30-odd years - it was an excuse for playing with paint; which only the ruperts at MOD could come-up with!

And why don't the model manufacturers produce Bedford's or other larger soft-skins in the BB scheme? It's lazy, easy, pandering to vicarious combat-wombats! And if you've bought one - give it to your 'Nottingham' space-marines, for that is where it belongs . . . La-la Land!

La-la Land Rover's!

T is for Toy Fair '18 Reports - Oxford Diecast - Military Vehicles

I really must try and get the last of the Toy Fair reports off the computer and on to the Blog!

Shouldn't be too much blurb today as the photo's will speak for themselves, second visit to Oxford Diecast's stand at the [not so] recent British Toy Fair at Kensington Olympia, and the various vehicles I shot there.

An assortment of 1:76th scaled vehicles including a nice group of steam traction engines and road-rollers, and some very nice Glenfrome (?) 6x6 Range Rovers in various liveries. I also like the AEC Armoured Command Vehicle in err . . . both liveries!

Further down the line-up sees nice soft-skins from World War Two and the Cold War and an intricate looking Bofors, along with a totally fictional 1-ton Land-Rover! In the background are some lovely showman's wagons and circus vehicles, which could help bring the lovely Preiser sets up to OO-compatibility for UK layouts.

AFV;'s in the guise of Churchill IV's (?) and both short-76mm and 'Firefly' Shermans, the fictional lanny again with another in what looks like 1:48th scale, both the 'rovers are fictional in two ways, but there'll be a post on them later!

Catalogue page with a plethora of AFV's, ancient and modern, the tele-porter 'Long Reach' is an interesting and different model; it would look good serving either a modern jet or an artillery piece/SPG in a little vignette? And we've seen the Post Office version of the BSA here on the Blog in the past.

I thought the RAF centenary set was a bit lame; three modern/late type 'rovers, a JCB and and WWII truck with the ubiquitous Spitfire? They could have done better from what they already list, with a bit of paint!

More Land Rovers, I'd love this set, but it's got another fictional one to be repainted! The three one-tons's are the best thing about this set, along with the little desert theatre paint-finished, series-one. In the background can be seen boxed-sets of thematic commercials, military and civil vehicles.

As well as the odd 1:48th scale vehicle or two, Oxford have a growing range of N-gauge vehicles and I'm rather taken by the trio of little tractors!

Knowing next to nothing of N-gauge (I had the non-powered Treble-O trains from Triang Lone Star as a kid) I can't be sure, but the Churchill looks too wide to make a useful flat-bed load, which would seem to be the main-point of making one at this size? Especially as I think they had to have the side-sponson engine/air-intake louvres removed for rail-trooping anyway? And - is the turret on backwards?

Saturday, December 30, 2017

12 is for Days of Christmas - Day Five


More Jeeps! A whole field of four-by-fours, kubels, dune-buggies and utes! You can see the gaps Mr. Ferretti is trying to fill, if you think you can help eMail me and I'll get you both in touch.

Saturday, November 25, 2017

A is for Abenteuer in Afrika . . . Mit dem Landrover auf Safari

Spidec Spielzeug provide us with today's post, and it's a real curates egg (he says; not for the first time, there are a lot of curates eggs in the toy basket, and a lot of them came from Hong Kong!), being at the same time both a copy of the Blue Box Land Rover AND at least one, possibly two Corgi Land Rovers! Spidec - presumably - being a German importer/jobber (?), I have a nice copy of the Britains-Herald totem pole marked to Spidec somewhere.

Nice boxed set with a reasonable afternoons-worth of play value which is all you would have been looking for in 1970-something having paid very little for this off the cheapie rack! Not sure about the artwork . . . He's got two live ones in the back but then gets a sudden urge to blow another away!

Unlike the Blue Box vehicle it's aping, this one doesn't have a trailer, but because it has copied the 'giraffe hole' in the cage (the Corgi Lions of Longleat one had it); both the big cats can escape - I hope they jump out and eat the driver before he gets a shot-off, although - the way he's holding that rifle he's going to hurt himself more than the fleeing lion anyway!

The door stickers are also falling back on the Corgi Gift Set 8 Lions of Longleat (but the Corgi cab had a hole for the guard) with further references to Corgi gift sets 31 (Safari Land Rover with Animal Trailer) and 36 (Tarzan' Rover was hard-top LWB in both sets), while I think the roof-horns are from a late Dinky breakdown truck? There are also shades of the Daktari set (GS14) in the mix.

The model differs from the Blue Box one in the 'ally rims' which although just as leery with their chromium-plated finish are to a different pattern and the radio-aerial which is found further forward on Blue Box models.

A more major difference between the two is that while the Blue Box version (quite common)* is a simple model with clip-in axles allowing for hand-powered motivation, the Spidec Lanny has a push-and-go 'friction motor' for more independent carpet safaris!

* Turns up at shows as ex-shop stock and on evilBay; found with two, one or no trailer/s in recent years; it's as if there's a warehouse full somewhere, they turn-up with French and German language consumer information panels and I think I've seen Spanish ones, so a 'Euro-importer' seems to have lost a batch at some point, or maybe it was just a popular and therefore numerous line at the time?

The lion and tiger . . . "A Tiger! In Africa?"! . . . are pretty common as generics from larger bagged/carded sets or early toobs (they were called tubs back then I think!); polyethylene sub-scale copies of Blue Box copies of Britains sculpts.

Thanks to Mercator Trading for the opportunity to shoot this.

Sunday, September 24, 2017

T is for Two - Charity Shop Plunder

The other plus drôle  from yesterday's post is that A) I already had this post in the queue when I bought the Leprechauns last week, and then B) this week I had several scores, in various charity shops, in two towns! Among the new finds were a lovely board-game for a quid and several bags of oddities including two examples of figures already waiting in the pipeline from Poland.

Indeed - there's now so much in the pipeline I don't know when half of it will get Blogged! And the Blog will trip the 2-million hits mark, in the first or second week of October . . . it's all rather go-go-go at Small Scale World, but if you keep coming; I'll keep posting! Although; you will have to accept the odd dud, and for some of you - both these will be duds . . . I love'em!

Picked this up about three weeks ago, Blue Cross (animal charity - we have dominion over them and we treat them like shit), it's marked Chap Mai, is basically a Land Rover Defender and probably came with the figures we looked at a while ago hidden in a C130 Hercules or aircraft-carrier play-set.

The front (radiator area) however seems to contain some H2 / Hummer DNA! While there are two locating-slot type-things sticking down underneath that make it impossible to push over soft furnishing like carpets . . . Doh!

Saw these in Paperchase about two years ago, baulked at 4-quid'odd, happy with 75p! It's robots, five ov'em, with gears for eyes and radio aerials designed by a blind man who only had a broom-handle and some tennis-balls to hand! They look like mobile, clockwork, Norwegian stoves!

'Revenge of the Demented Toasters!' - Coming-soon to a theatre near you; be amazed by the lack of electrical flex; be horrified by the slightly orangey-red elements; be slightly miffed by the trail of crumbs; you'll never bath with the door unlocked again!

Saturday, August 26, 2017

L is for Lazy Post

It's been a while since we had a genuine one of these but I was busy doing something-else yesterday and never got round to texting-up today's article, or what was going to be today's article, however I remembered I had these kicking around from a 2012 photo-session, so I'm just going to chuck them up here without ceremony as a follow-up/additional part of/to yesterday's post.

An earlier (?) [better finished; less holes drilled in it for plug-ins] version of the three-way hybrid A/C with sub-scale Land-Rover and jeep trailer in generic packaging along with a larger Jeep in ST (or more likely MST) branding.

Close-up; it's a much cleaner sculpt and the Land-Rover will be a copy of the Matchbox 1-75 series smallie.

The Willy's Jeep from the similar card, we'll be looking at them in a day or three!

Is it ST (something toys!) or MST - Mountain [something] Toys? Macau? . . . Probably a made-up brand so it doesn't matter, unless you are an obsessive, middle-aged, collector of toys . . . and lists!

- Probably - earlier packaging of the smaller models from the above range, and the A/C is now in 'enemy' brown!

Close-ups of the Land-Rover and trailer, while the Land-Rover is ex-Matchbox I'm not so sure about the trailer, it was issued in the small scale by Tai Sang/Blue Box (in hard plastic - theses, like yesterday's are all soft polyethylene), but someone must have produced a donor (they always did!), could it have been from an early kit? Monogram, Pyro; one of them?

Close-up of the brown-job, euschk! - No Plug-ins, no vehicle-commander.

A Reminder of yesterday's novelty/fair-ground prize or whatever with all attachments.

That's your lot - lazy post!