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.

Monday, October 17, 2011

M is for Mini-trucks, Part 6 - Types 5, 6 and 7 (all known)

The final line-up of these little trucks, for which - as if you haven't guessed - I have a real soft-spot for, they were everywhere when I was a kid...and you can still get them!

Type 5

Soft polyethylene plastic
All plastic black ethylene ‘ring tyred’ wheel/axles
Windows
Marked with very small sized ‘MADE IN HONGKONG’ across cargo-bed
Quite clean design, smaller still, green plug-ins
40mm long
Set – ARMY VEHICLES T707


Type 5/6 Hybrid’s A and B

Windows gone again, Type 4 or 5 detailing, type 6 size
Soft polyethylene plastic bodies (both sub-types)
Steel axles, black ethylene wheels (Hybrid A)
All plastic black styrene wheel/axles (Hybrid B)
Various markings in various positions
Good design, smaller still, bodies similar to Type 2E’s (ABC) and may be smaller version of same makers work (?), black plug-ins
42mm (built-up bodies), 38mm (Jeep) and 37mm (plug-in cargo-bedded vehicles)
Sets –
MOTOR CARS (Hybrid A, with Merit/Manurba/Hausser civil copies)

If you take the bridge off the ferry, it can instantly become a larger-scale vehicle raft, to take your twin PzIV ray-gun across the great grey-green greasy Limpopo!

Type 5/6 Hybrid’s A
and B - sets - continued;
LANDING CRAFT SET/L.S.T 62 (Hybrid B, harbor/river-ferry)

A fuller line-up of military and civilian body-types and plug-ins for the Type 5/6 A's with steel axles from various angles.

The odd thing is that while there is are dedicated 'one-off' box/office/communication shack and tanker bodies in the military series, they made plug-in box and tanker bodies for the civil series?

Type 6A

Soft polyethylene plastic
All plastic black ethylene wheel/axles (similar to Type 2D)
Windows
Marked with neat ‘MADE IN HONG KONG’ across cargo-bed
Smaller still, green, black or silver plug-ins
36mm long

Sets – ‘Lucky Bags’ (mid-1980’s-mid-1990’s) and the above gum-ball / capsule / vending machine containers

Type 6B (green - above)

Soft polyethylene plastic
All plastic black ethylene wheel/axles (similar to Type 2D/6A)
No windows
Marked with large neat ‘HONG KONG’ across cargo-bed
Loss of detail from 6A, silver plug-ins
35/36mm long


Type 7 (contemporary, multicoloured - above))

Soft polyethylene plastic
All plastic black ethylene ‘ring’ wheel/axles
No windows
Marked with small uneven ‘HONG KONG’ across cargo-bed
Smallest yet, various colours, civil vehicles only with plug-in body types
28mm long, some 30mm with load-overhang
Sets –
Lucky Bags’ (mid-1980’s-mid-1990’s)
Budget Christmas Crackers (to present)
Gum-ball machines (1980’s)

M is for Mini-trucks, Part 7 - Other types/sizes/makes

Finally - how other people treated the mini-truck and some larger versions of the truck showing the Dinky inheritance;

NFIC seems to have used the Dinky truck straight, just giving it a full range of different body types. The London Taxi-cab is also theirs and I've seen a red London Routemaster, so they were aiming at the tourist trade buyers, when not turning out Army-lorrys!

This Argentinian manufacturer; Industria Argentina/RM has gone with a medium range Mercedes truck-cab (3000 series?), but uses all the usual plug-in weapon systems, along with a double-rocket launcher which is a first in this size.

Cane's little carded army contains a Humber, but barely recognisable as such, but the Saracen is a nice little model for it's size/pocket money budget.

The Sam Toys is a clean-lift from Dinky with added crew and has been seen before here and elsewhere.

That's it, for now, I dare say we'll return to the subject in a year or two, in the meantime if you find a new variant let me know!

H is for Hong Kong, Part 1 - Overview and 'Past the Post'

Note; In the next three posts making this set of articles HK (italisised) refers to a specific company and not my usuall short-form for 'Hong Kong'.

Following on from posts above and the prolific riff-offery of Hong Kong, particularly in the late 1960's and 1070's, here is a quick three-part'er on the sort of products resulting from a bit of piracy of the British producers of larger-scale figures.

Top is a comparison between the ACW figures of CMV and HK (see part three - below). The main image shows from top left to bottom right; two colour variants of the Britains Herald, one UK (black with brown base) ethylene figure the other a Hong Kong vinyl (grey with green base), a Paramount with hollow base and a marked 'HONG KONG' figure (see below).

The second row starts with a HK copy, then three unknown British copies (could be either/or all or none of; Kentoys/Speedwell/Trojan/VP) while the last row is all CMV.

Note that one of the British rip-offs has no hat, while the Paramount is a very different sculpt.

The unknown Hong Kong figure marked neatly on the edge of a quite deep base, with the number '634' on the opposite rim.

Past the Post went with copies of the Monograme GI's (another of the most copied/pirated/licenced sets of figures ever) and an assortment of Indians/Native Americans, all just over 50mm. There were double-decked boxed sets as well and I have eBay pictures of Cowboy sets in the archive.

H is for Hong Kong, Part 2 - ABC

The real reason for this set of posts coming into being, as I was researching the Mini-trucks posted above, I came across these guys and decided to try and sort out all my 'marked' copies of early British makes large scale figures.

ABC seem to be the commonest of the various makes, although as their figures are of the poorest quality, it may just be that their commonness is due to late production leading to more survivors?

The comparison with a Britains Swoppet original shows how mush of a size loss the copies suffer from, this could be down to re-sculpting (or 'copy-sculpting') rather that pantographing. Also a base mark close-up showing the diamond design with ABC within it.

They also copied the Swoppet Knights, I only have the one, and no weapon, but I've seen crude copies of Britains weapons in my mates spares box, so guess that's them then! Also note again the size loss compared to an original.

Their 8th Army figures were taken from Timpo and Crescent, and are very small at about 45mm. They have dropped the pack from the Timpo donor and added a beret, again suggesting sculpting from life rather than pantographing?

H is for Hong Kong, Part 3 - CM, CMV, HK

Again in this last group there are similarities and differences that may or may not indicate links?

Three cowboys from 'CM' which I suspect is the same company as CMV, with a close-up of the base marking; an M contained withing a larger C.

CMV copies of the Britains Herald American Civil War figures, Marx Pirates and more Britains Cowboys, again with a base-mark close-up. The pirates don't have the release-pin holes the other two examples do.

HK copies of Timpo 8th Army along with Britains American Civil War figures and Cowboys. A comparison with a Timpo original radio operator reveals how much smaller these copies of copies ended up!

The way the HK is placed within the circle could link it to CM, but the use of a circle in trademarks is so common that it isn't much of a link.

S is for 'Special Relationship'...(Bloody Journalists!)

I have been trying to upload this for weeks, but Blogger will not accept the scan of the original newspaper article, so I've had to mock it up as well as I can in Word for Windows. It is a very delicate object and needed a high resolution to be readable leading to endless "An error has occurred..." messages from Blogger.

I've tried sharpening and lightening it to reduce the pixel-count but no dice. The mock-up is almost correct but lacks the vertical justification. Wording per-line/column is correct and the title and Images are where they lie on the original and, although that is very yellowed; I have rendered this is B&W to ease reading.

[You will need to right-click 'Open Link' to render this readable]

The Author of this piece definitely didn't think he had a Special Relationship with the 'Old Country'. I'm guessing this was published sometime after Dunkirk, and before the US reporters in the UK had started to fully report back to the US on the successes in the Battle of Britain, or the worst effects of the Blitz. As a historical document it is priceless, of note is the lack of a byline, a coward never signs his work - as true today as it was then.

He also credits the two non-combat poses above as being lazy old Brits, but the guy shaving is definitely a German officer in those riding Britches they favoured (Elastolin figure; 550/28) while the wounded guy is not the known British pose (in a tin helmet), is reversed from the illustration in War Toys 1 (39/40 catalogue) and has the wrong base for Lineol, but looks to be French - with that greatcoat on - anyway?

So not only does the reporter have a low opinion of the British and their efforts to keep the world free of repressive, fascist dictators single handed, but he's willing to lie to 'prove' his point...a journalist, lying? Never!

The other two are both Lineol, the 'Tirpitz launch' Hitler (5/1) and 5/79/2 - German soldier throwing a stick-grenade.

It should be pointed out that three out of four Americans at the time supported their Presidents support (albeit tacit and with ulterior motives!!) for the British position and more specifically his friend Winston Churchill, unfortunately, the 25% were good-old-boy, red-necked, right-wing fascists!

And what happened to the Importhause in the next year or so . . . ?

Some of the 'offending' articles at a recent show; Elastolin SA and Hitler Jugend at the front, SS/Leibstandart guarding the gate and Lineol British Guards behind a ranting madman on the dais (what am I doing there!!). The fort is also a German piece of the same period.

F is for Further Follow-up B

Continuing on the subject of 'The Meet', I got permission to use the images on Adrien's Mecator Trading website (link to right), but then decided I'd be better-off buying the items in order to compare more fully, and I'm glad I did.

When I saw them on his (Adrien's) stand, I thought there must be both a 'Meet' and a 'Hunt', and still do, but hadn't noticed that there was a 'new' pose of rider on the standing horse in his group. Looking to the left, above, also his Master of Hounds had a different dog soldered to his leg, the one looking sideways.

Another pose not known to me was the Hunt Master with his horn, the assumption must be that all poses will turn up on both horses in the end?

The two mounted figures I already had, but this time on galloping steeds.

I have also bought (from Adrien/Mecator) the book on Heyde by Markus Grein, and he has one of the standing ones on the cover, and as he's an expert on the subject; the evidence suggests that they were made first in Germany and then - probably as war loomed (as pointed out by Terry H-S in comments last time) - the mould came to the UK, maybe the set didn't sell well in Europe?

I suspect the finishers were given a tub or box of plain castings and just randomly paired a horse or dog with a person, and every now and again soldered three dogs together, so most combinations should turn-up eventually...

The whole group, or at least one of each of the variants now in my possession. The Master of Hounds in the new set had the dog mentioned above, while the group of three dogs has two of that pose as apposed to none in my original group.

Likewise, I feel the lady will eventually turn up with a standing dog, or soldered to a standing horse, while the Master of Hounds may turn-up with a sitting dog.

If Hill got the mould, it would make a Charbens set rarer, as they would probably have dropped it from their range earlier? It would also open up the tantalising possibility that the mould still exists as some Cherilea were re-cast a few years ago. Paul Morehead and his army of toy soldier spotters keeps finding odd Hill/Johilco metal figures or animals cast in plastic, in such small numbers that they look to be test-shots or limited production runs (how much pressure would a mould designed for lead take?). So they may be a very limited try-out by Hill or the later Monarch/Phoenix/Cherilea owners of Hill moulds?

As I suggested last time, the brown of the plastic mouldings of this set is very 'Hill', and as the Master of Hounds won't stand up without some support (a wodge of icing being ideal!), they may have been sold as cake decorations?

M is for 'Minter'

About time for a little morsel to be thrown to the hardcore Airfix junkies, and this is as good as any, although I may put all the ready-made vehicles over on the Airfix page eventually, I didn't plan on it when I preloaded the posts.

This is what a mint 25lbr and tractor should look like, with a connecting 'sprulette' between the gun and the Morris Quad, the reason it is bent like a banana is that in its mint state it's a tad too long for the box!

That's it...simple post!

Saturday, October 15, 2011

News, Views etc...Images and Blogger

I've noticed when checking back at home on my oh-so-slow Vodaphone dongle that the images of the last three posts done at the library are appearing in some new all-together on a page format. This means they don't load as large as they could/should/might, and seems to be yet another piece of unwanted 'functionality' added by Blogger this summer without notice or reason.

For those who are not that familiar with the Wibbly-Wobbly-Way; If you hover over them and right-click your mouse then click on Open Link or; Open Picture, you will get the image full size. Clicking on them in the new format page just moves to the next one without enlarging the one you want to!

Again; anyone know how to stop all these Div's and P's from forming themselves automatically in the coding between paragraphs and images every time you change the view from Edit to Compose to Save to Preview and back again (my record is fifteen /div's in a row - after the last full stop!).

I've seen it said on a forum somewhere that it's because I've changed to a three column design, but I've noticed it happening to people who stuck with their original two column format so that's bollocks! And it happens in (single column) Edit, long before you load it into the full layout?

Here's another one; the new Blogger advanced editor doesn't carry the same colours as the old one! Do I carry-on with the old editor until they retire it one day without notice or find all the khaki-green bits and change them...Aaaarrrrhhhhhh!

T is For Trucks - Overview

A bit of a gratuitous post today, these are mostly old photographs I took about ten years ago with my old 35mm Zenit, and in the course of packing for a forthcoming move, I though I'd scan them into the PC, they seemed to scan OK so I collaged them, and am throwing them up here for the hell of it!

Top left to bottom right, clockwise; Airfix (both Types) double convoy of NFIC, the three Tudor*Rose trucks and some slightly smaller trucks from the Beeju stable, with a 'Home Farm' Blue Box type Bedford.

Hong Kong cheepies, modern style to the left of the older - but still available - rack-toy trucks. Below them a 'Mini-car' from VEB Plasticart on the left and some kits on the right, Matchbox, Airfix and Hasegawa in front; Esci behind.

Two scratch builds from Airfix, and an assortment of die-casts top, Matchbox and Dinky bottom left with various other bits bottom right - Corgi x2, HK, Montaplex and a Dime-store toy from the states by...can't remember! A birds name I think...Montana? I'll have to look when I get home! [Mohawk!]

The inset image is the other reason for this post, linking in with both the stuff I posted a few weeks ago, and the forthcoming article on these mini-copies of the old Lone*Star/Kleeware truck, a Kleeware is on the far end of the row, the very tiny one is from a resent Christmas Cracker.

Marx reissues and an original ambulance (copied from the Dinky Daimler of the 1950's), Roco-minitanks early pattern Unimog (correction; I think this is the Roskopf one?), one each from Jean (right) and Manurba (left) and three Blue Box.

Friday, October 14, 2011

News, Views, Etc...

Competition...

I don't know what happened to the totaliser, it was 290-odd to go one minute and only 62 views the next...I will have to find out whether the problem is with the counter provider or with Google/Blogger/Adsense. I suspect the latter, the two posts on Eko below have taken ages to get right and all down to the 'improvements' blogger has been making.

In the meantime, anyone who was so incensed by the sudden zeroing they took a screen capture to send with a stiff message, before calming down and not doing (because no one complained - you lovely people!), send it to me anyway and the capture nearest to 000,001 will get the prize.

If not it will have to be held-over until I get it reset, which will make it 100,500'ish, and I'll give it to the 101,000th screen capture?

Sorry, but out of my hands!

E is for Eko; Part 1 - Vehicles and Figures

Eko, Valladolid, Spain

Probably the Spanish for ‘Echo’ rather than the Ee-Kay-Oh they tend to be called in the English-speaking world (including by me!). HO/1:86 were the two given scales of this half-pirate, half-inheritor of other people’s Spanish prototype vehicle range, however on the undersides of the vehicles 1:88 was as common as 1:86. Figure-wise; Airfix suffered from the most plagiarism with Atlantic and Wiking also getting the boot put in. Still available from some sources outside Spain as late as 2000, while within Spain display cards could still be had in corner shops in late 2008. Vehicle-wise Roco Minitanks and Roscopf both seem to have provided ‘inspiration’ for the military stuff, the civil range being partly inherited from Anguplas.

A selection of products and packaging types, some early'ish, some quite recent, indeed these were mostly still available from the larger stockists in the 2000's. The shop cards (which I've put a selection of non-contiguous figure sets in) were bought about three years ago from a corner-shop in Spain! (thanks John!).

A selection of the sets with figures, the small truck comes with unpainted figures and it's likely you could have got any vehicle that fitted in the blister? The little bag of seated figures actually came with the 6x6 truck when boxed separately, but is here hiding a gap where a jeep should be!

A few lose vehicles, they are very similar to and clearly based on the Roco Minitanks and Roscopf ranges, but they are different, and there are unique items in the range, so it's more homage than plagiarism! The DUKW (not Duck, Duke or Duwk as I saw it spelt the other day!) is a particularly nice model, and while smaller than either the Airfix kit or their (Airfix's) ready-made, it's cheap and cheerful and a handful would make a fine sight on the war-gamers table.

A few civilian bits and bobs, the Traffic Police set is one of my all-time favorites, and for war-games purposes can be used for several Nations around the WWII period. Thanks go to Bill at Moonbase for the little N-gauge truck (front right; middle shot) - which is in soft white-metal - about which I knew nothing, and still can't find anything!!

A question-mark still hangs over the guy with the sack, but he matches the artwork in the catalogues so I'm pretty sure he's Eko. The Civilian sets seems to have taken their lead from the little strips of early Wiking I think I've already covered?

The four British sets, one based on Britains Lilliput, the others all Airfix. The Tommy-gunner from the commandos is one of only 2 duplicates in the range (ignoring the seated set) the other being the stretcher-team in the German set. The HK copies at the bottom (which I've seen described as Airfix copies) are in fact - technically - Hong Kong copies of Eko copies of Airfix! As evidenced by the bases.

The 'Interesting Toy' set they originated in. Hummm...yes...the interesting thing is; How come the kneeling poses have a shed-load of base and can't stand up! Good old Hong Kong!

The native Spanish sets, the Desert Legion (sandy-coloured set) and Spanish Foreign Legion (bottom left) are again among my favorite sets, despite the anachronisms of a hawk the size of a golden eagle appeartly having a combat role and the waving of large flags, like some doomed charge of Confederate volunteers across an open field somewhere in North Carolina! The support weapons are curtasey of Atlantic and the seated set don't seem to have an origin vis-a-vis piracy (bearing only a slight or passing resemblance to the Roscopf set), so would seem to be originals, albeit; rather crude sculpts.

Various Nations including two German sets (from Airfix again), the really rather good Russians, the Swiss who seem to fight in baggy pajamas, or at least they did in the 1970's (Hey - Spain was a bit isolated at the time!), and making-up for the quality of the Russians; you get the Japanese, without any doubt at all - THE WORST set of toy soldiers ever made, I say; EVER MADE! AND...they are mostly casualties!!! And...I've promised myself I wont mention the racist paint-job...And...

The Americans; the sculptor of the Russian set (who is also responsible for the Spanish legion), clearly had a hand in the two sets of paratroopers and they are lovely as a result, the GI's are OK and original sculpts that match-in very well with the Airfix first version set, the shot bottom right compares the Spanish and US gunners and their MG's.

In all the above shots there are self-explanatory colour variants and other comparative shots, in a whole post below this one is a load of ephemera and the listings as I know them, there are one or two gaps which it would be appreciated were someone to fill them. This was supposed to be the last word on the subject but one of the images below just wont load, so I'll have to go home and sort it to post at a later date!

E is for Eko; Part 2 - Ephemera and Listings

This is some of the resource material I've culled the listings from, there was another image but blogger just will not upload it (I've tried a dozen or more times 'internal error' is all it tells me), showing the store display card with some packs attached I'll have to put it up here another time...

HO Civilian Cars and Trucks (12 [*], 6 or 3 [+] per stock box)

2001 - Volkswagen Beetle*
2002 - BMW 501*
2003 - Mercedes Benz 300*
2004 - Opel 1954 Kapitan*
2005 - Renault 4/4*
2006 - Seat 1400*
2007 - DKW Pick-up Truck*
2008 - Jeep Truck (forward control pick-up)*
2009 - Volkswagen Beetle Convertible/Cabriolet*
2010 - Mercedes Benz 190SL Open-top*
2011 - Mercedes Benz 190SL Coupe*
2012 - ?
2013 - Ford Flatbed Truck (open)*
2014 - Ford Flatbed Truck (closed)
2015 - Magirus Flatbed Truck (closed)
2016 - Magirus Flatbed Truck (closed)
2017 - ‘Eko’ Cola Truck with Coke Cases
2018 - ‘Piper’ Cola Truck with Coke Cases
2019 - Magirus Fire Truck with Ladder
2020 - Gas-oil Tank Truck (ESSO)
2021 - Citroën 2CV*
2022 - 2-wheel Camping Trailer [caravan]*
2023 - Car Transporter with 5 Cars+
2024 - Magirus Tanker Truck
2025 - Renault Dauphine*
2026 - Willys CJ Type Jeep*
2027 - Citroën DS19*
2028 - Ford Panel Truck/Van*
2029 - Ford Mini-van Ambulance*
2030 - Ford Micro-bus [Minibus]*
2031 - Fiat 600 Multipla*
2032 - Seat Sedan 1400C*
2033 - Land Rover (SWB, open-topped, driver? Seems to be UK pattern, not Spanish licensed ‘Minerva’*
2034 - Citroën 2CV Pick-up/Delivery Van*
2035 - Fiat 1800 Station Wagon*
2036 - Seat 600 Coupe*
2037 - Seat 1400 Panel Truck*
2038 - Lincoln Continental*
2039 - Opel Record*
2040 - Opel Record Station Wagon*
2041 - Fiat 1800 Ambulance*
2042 - De Soto Diplomat*
2043 - Plymouth Station Wagon*
2044 - Ford Thunderbird*
2045 - Chevrolet El Camino*
2046 - Articulated 5-flask Oil Transport Truck [semi-truck]+
2047 - Renault 4L Station Wagon*
2048 - Citroën AMI*
2049 - Mercedes Benz Racer*
2050 - Simca Sedan 1000*
2051 - Renault Florida*
2052 - Boat and Motor with Trailer*
2053 - Cabin-boat and Motor with Trailer*
2054 - De Soto Diplomat with Boat and Motor with Trailer
2055 - Plymouth Station Wagon with Cabin-boat and Motor with Trailer
2056 - GMC 2.5-ton Truck (open)
2057 - GMC 2.5-ton Truck (covered)
2058 - GMC 2.5-ton Tanker Truck
2059 - Citroën DS19 with 2-wheel Camping Trailer [caravan]
2060 - Fiat 1800 Station Wagon with 2-wheel Camping Trailer [caravan]
2061 - Volkswagen Beetle Convertible/Cabriolet with 2-wheel Camping Trailer [caravan]
2062 - ?
2063 - Dodge Dart*
2064 - Renault R8*
2065 - Fiat/Seat 124*
2066 - Pegaso Cement Delivery Truck
2067 - Barreiros Van
2068 - Non-articulated Lorry with Trailer [UK; Wagon-and-drag]+
2069 - Camion Dump Truck*
2070 - Studebaker Hawk*
2071 - Ford Zephyr*
2072 - Opel Kadett*
2073 - Ford/Mercury Comet*
2074 - Mercedes Benz 220*
2075 - Studebaker Avanti*
2076 - Citroën Estate [break]*
2077 - Rover 3-litre*
2078 - Jeep Wagon (shooting break)*
2079 - Ford Falcon*
2080 - Volkswagen 1500 Coupe*
2081 - DAF Coupe*
2082 - BMW Coupe*
2083 - SAAB 96*
2084 - Volvo Sport*
2085 - Ford Consul*
2086 - Crane Truck+
2087 - Dump Truck
2088 - Mercedes Micro-bus*
2089 - Morris Mini*
2090 - Panel Truck Fugon*
2091 - Ford Thames Flatbed lorry
2092 - Pegaso Delivery Truck
2093 - Pegaso Fire Truck
2094 - Pegaso Tanker Lorry (ESSO)
2094 - Pegaso Tanker Lorry (Campsa)
2095 - Pegaso Articulated Tanker Lorry [semi-truck]+
2096 - Pegaso Articulated 2-flask Cement Lorry [semi-truck]+
2097 - Pegaso Hook-Ladder Fire Truck
2098 - Jaguar E-type Coupe*
2099 - Volkswagen Carmen Ghia*
2100 - Jaguar Racer*
2101 - MG 1600 Coupe*
2102 - Pegaso Motor Bus+
2103 - Unic Cement-mixer Truck
2104 - Pegaso Cement-mixer Truck
2105 - Alpha Romeo Guiletta Sprint*
2106 - Jaguar Mk.9*
2107 - Ford Anglia*
2108 - Fiat 1500*
2109 - Borgward Isabella*
2110 - Alco Double-decker [London] Bus+
2111 - Thornycroft Mighty Antar Low-loader with Cargo+
2112 - Caterpillar Earth-mover
2113 - Pala Excavator
2114 - Hanomag Farm Tractor
2115 - ?
2116 - Land Rover Safari (LWB, hard-top, seems to be UK pattern, not Spanish licensed ‘Minerva’)*
2117 - Chausson Motor Bus+
2118 - Titan Articulated Low-loader with Load [Semi-truck]+
2119 - Thames Flatbed
2120 - Thames Soda-delivery Truck
2121 - Thames Beer-delivery Truck
2122 - Sava Butane Delivery Truck
2123 - Sava Garbage Truck
2124 - Skoda Coupe*
2125 - Heavy-duty Berliet Dump Truck
2126 - Pegaso Articulated Lorry with Box Trailer [Semi-truck]+

HO Gauge Civilian / Emergency Service Figure Sets (x12 packs [assorted] per card, x12 packs [the same] per stock box)

2201 - Pedestrians - Assorted (7 figures - copies of Wiking figures)
2202 - Bicyclists (3 pieces)
2203 - Motorcyclists (3 pieces)
2204 - Boxes, Barrels and Sacks (assortment, as supplied with 4016)
2205 - Sanitary Equipment (‘Medics’ 5 figures - Airfix German stretcher team and 2 civilians)
2206 - ?
2207 - Traffic Police (8 pieces, 4 figures)

HO Gauge Military Vehicles (x6 per shop-stock box unless marked; *, then x12)

4001 - Russian T34
4002 - M8 ‘Cochise’ Armoured Scout Car
4003 - M48 Patton II Tank
4004 - Centurion Tank (available in three colours over the years)
4005 - Mercedes Unimog
4005/1 - Mercedes Unimog with [4006] Anti-tank Gun (became; 40051)
4006 - Anti-tank Gun / Light Gun
4007 - Early Jeep (forward control pick-up)
4008 - M47 General Patton Tank
4009 - German Panther Tank
4010 - Tiger Tank
4011 - French AMX13
4012 - M4 Sherman Tank
4013 - Russian T54
4014 - M41 Walker Bulldog Light Tank
4015 - Military Truck (Ford/Magirus? medium lorry)
4016 - Military Truck with Cargo (Ford/Magirus? medium lorry)
4017 - French Scout Tank / EBR 75 Armoured Car / Wheeled Tank
4018 - US M42 AA-tank
4019 - M40 ‘Long Tom’ Self-propelled Gun
4020 - Russian PT-76
4021 - Russian BTR50
4022 - Late (M38) Jeep
4023 - Land Rover (SWB, open-topped, driver? Seems to be UK pattern, not Spanish licensed ‘Minerva’)
4024 - GMC M35 2.5-ton Truck with Troops
4025 - GMC M35 2.5-ton Fuel Truck
4026 - GMC M35 Communications Truck
4027 - GMC M35 Truck with Rocket Launcher
4028 - GMC M35 Covered Truck
4029 - Stalin Tank
4030 - T235 Long Gun / Self-propelled Gun (M107)
4031 - T245 Howitzer / Self Propelled Howitzer
4032 - T120 Armoured Crane
4033 - T98 8-inch Gun
4034 - T113 Armoured Personnel Carrier (M113)
4035 - TT90.22 Spanish Utility Truck (Camion/Bameinos?)
4036 - DUKW 6x6 Amphibious ‘Duck’ USA
4037 - Thornycroft Mighty Antar Tank Transporter
4038 - French AMX30 ‘Napoleon’ Tank
4039 - Panzer III
4040 - Panzer III Gun (Stüg III)
4041 - M36 Tank Destroyer
4042 - KM [Krauss Maffei] 8-ton Anti-aircraft Half-track, German
4043 - Matilda Mk.II Tank
4044 - Slava Ambulance, England (Commer or Thames Van? Furgon in Spain?)
4045 - Land Rover (LWB, hard-topped ‘Safari’, seems to be UK pattern, not Spanish licensed ‘Minerva’)

˜
40051 - Mercedes Unimog with [4006] Anti-tank Gun (was; 4005/1)

HO Gauge Military Figure Range (x12 packs [assorted] per card, x12 packs [the same] per stock box)

4500 - English Infantry Set #1 (8 figures, copies of Britains Lilliput)
4501 - Spanish Infantry / Spanish Foreign Legion (8 figures)
4502 - German Infantry Set 1 (8 figures, copies of 1st version Airfix)
4503 - Japanese Infantry (8 figures)
4504 - German Infantry Set #2 (8 figures, copies of 1st version Airfix)
4505 - US Infantry (9 pieces, 8 figures)
4506 - English Infantry Set #2 / 8th Army (8 figures, copies of 1st version Airfix 8th Army)
4507 - English Infantry Set #3 / Desert Infantry (8 pieces, 7 figures, copies of 1st version Airfix 8th Army)
4508 - Swiss Infantry (8 figures)
4509 - Seated Troops (‘8 pieces’ - usually 9, but contents vary between 6-9 pieces, Roco-Minitanks copies)
4510 - Spanish Infantry (NATO era, 9 pieces, 8 figures)
4511 - Russian Infantry (8 figures)
4512 - US Paratroops Set 1 (6 figures)
4513 - US Paratroops Set 2 (4 figures)
4514 - Commandos (11 pieces, 8 figures, 2 of the same pose - different bases, copies of 1st version Airfix)
4515 - Arab Legion (8 figures)
4516 - Campaign Artillery / Mortars and Machineguns (12 pieces, 7 figures, Atlantic Piracies)

HO Gauge Military Gift Sets (small sets – two designs)

4701 - ?
4702 - ?
4703 - ?
4704 - Walker Bulldog, Unimog and Self-propelled Gun
4705 - AMX 30 Personnel Carrier and Anti-aircraft Tank
4706PP - M8 Armoured Scout Car, DUKW and AMX 30 Personnel Carrier
4707 - Tank Transporter with Tanks
4708T - M98 Self-propelled Howitzer, Panther Tank and Truck with Infantry
4709 - Sherman, T34 and EBR 75 Armoured Car
4710T - M254 Self-propelled Cannon, Panther Tank and Fuel Truck
4711 - Patton Tank, Stalin Tank and Russian Personnel Carrier
4712 - Land Rover, T34 tank and Rocket Launcher
4713 - Armoured Crane, Covered Truck and PT-76 Amphibious Tank
4714 - Tiger Tank, Panzer III and German Infantry
4715 - Sherman Tank, Patton Tank and US Infantry
4716 - Russian Infantry, Stalin Tank and T54 Tank

HO Gauge Battle-scene Dioramas (large sets with vac-formed base)

4750 - The Western Front - German Infantry, US Paratroops, Sherman Tank, Walker Bulldog, Light Cannon and Panther Tank
4751 - The Eastern Front Russian Infantry, German Infantry, Tanks
4752 - Pacific Invasion Japanese Infantry, American Infantry, DUKW, M8 Armoured Scout Car, Light Cannon and AMX 30 Tank

HO Gauge Vehicle with Set of Soldiers (figures unpainted)

4800 - TT90.22 Spanish Utility Truck (Camion/Bameinos?) and Spanish Infantry

HO/OO Gauge ‘Alt [Old] Berlin’ Vintage Car Kits (pre-coloured parts, 2 vehicles per kit)

111000 - ?
111001 - ?
111002 - ?
111003 - 1907 Le Sabre
111004 - ?
111005 - Citroen 5CV
111006 - ?
111007 - 1905 Hispano Suiza
111008 - 1916 Studebaker Big Six
111009 - 1934 Fiat Bililla
111010 - 1937 Citroen 11 Ligero
111011 - 1937 Bugatti Type S7
111012 - 1938 Lancia Aprilla

˜
111033 - ? [Probably a typo]
111055 - ? [Probably a typo]

O Gauge Civilian Motorcars

6001 - 1908 Ford T Top Up
6001D - 1908 Ford Model T Top Down
6002 - 1910 Ford Roadster
6003 - Rolls Royce Silver Ghost
6004 - 1908 Panhard & Levassor
6005 - Hispano Suiza Alfonso XII
6006 - 1910 Renault 30hp
6007 - 1919 Hispano Suiza Torp
6008 - 1919 Hispano Suiza Limn
6009 - 1906 Hispano Suiza
6010 - 1911 Daimler
6011 - 1906 Hispano Suiza
6012 - 1919 Hispano Suiza Con Cap
6013 - 1912 Omnibus Hispano Suiza
6014 - Elizalde
6015 - Elizalde Coupe

There was also a range of soft white-metal 'N' gauge vehicles, I have no details on them at present.