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.

Saturday, October 29, 2016

327 is for Ländliche Gruppen. Gespanne

We come to arguably the most problematical set - for collectors - in the entire Preiser catalogue oeuvre, past, present and - I suspect - future. It is also by far and away the most useful set for war-gamers, small scale modellers, scratch-builders, dioramists and railway enthusiasts.

Preiser Artikal Numer 327 - Ländliche Gruppen. Gespanne (Rural Groups [and] Wagons), now listed as: Art.No.16327, contains . . . well, that's where the problem starts, and remains; it seems it contains whatever anyone at the factory feels like putting in it! But there is order to the madness . . . let's have a look . . .

The box-fronts from my two sets, I used to think the one on the right was the newer, but now I'm not so sure, although if wagon-wheel size is a guide, the older is on the left, suffice to say that for now and in relationship to the tables used later in the post 'My 1' is on the left here; 'My 2' is on the right.

The first thing to note is that the set on the left claims to contain 3x the milkmaid from the 'At the Mill' runner/vignette when in fact it only contained the one, indeed neither of my samples have extra milkmaids, but one of them is suspect as it was loose when it came in. The other point is the inclusion of the 'Washing Day' runner/vignette in the second box's line-up

Contents of one is described as 60 figures (no set yet encountered has a 60 figure count), 40 accessories and three wagon kits. The other set just states 120 pieces, with pictures that include an unrelated cement-tower/railway trackside scene.

The backs of the two boxes - again; 'My 1' is on the left. The illustrations on the box are mostly the contents of the box, with the mock-up wagon we looked at the other day, but the number of sheep can only be obtained with another set, again: that we saw the other day.

While the other box only has one image on the back pertaining to set 327 among all the railway and military scenes; advertising itself (327) with the cow family, but 327's only ever have a part of that family.

Of note is the "Subject to alterations in assortment, shape and colours" message on the older (?) box, that's the cover-all for the rest of this post!

The ends of both; 'My 2' is the lower, both repeat all the points raised above.

Now 'My 1' gets the inaccurate cow shot, repeated on the other box with another rail scene.

So a mixed message from my boxes, while the newer box on Plastic Soldier Review (PSR) seems to be an update of 'My 1' with different graphic panels, now describing 60 figures and 43 accessories (why so specific?), while showing the [old] large wheels on the buggy by using the artwork from my earlier set. Figures have lost the little numbers underneath on the artwork as well.

My 1; If you count all the animals including those from the 'wagon kits', all three suckling pigs, both packs, the feed-bucket and the held-child, you get 41, not 60. If you count all the unmade accessories on the three fencing/accessory runners and the bundle of wire you get a count of around 78, not 60?

You can make it 60 by tweaking stuff, likewise you can make 120, by counting fences made, but wagon springs, or axles separately &etc. until you go potty in the head, but basically, there is little relationship between the box descriptions and the contents, other than most of the stuff illustrated on 'My 1' is there in the box!

The catalogue image that ran through the early catalogues which covers the period of both my sets, like mine it has half the large animal set, but with a foal and calf, there is no hint of the fencing runners, but the water-pump/trough is there so at least one runner must have been present, with the gate and gate hinges? [See below].

This set/advert (?) has the extra shepherd which requires breaking a runner and two extra milkmaids - likewise. It has the same three wagons as both of mine, which we will come back to below.

The current layout in the catalogue is a fuller picture, not in comparison to box contents per se, just that it has more in it - as a line-up! An extra wagon (also seen in PSR's example) is the obvious addition along with a (new design?) tall-post water-pump, extra calf, more cattle, more tools, an extra draft horse and the +1 shepherd. The low water-pump and trough also seems to have been redesigned to a longer, more slim-lined model, but not in PSR's sample.

The three wagons that seem to be universal in the early sets, and retained in the larger current line up; all very useful for war gaming and for modellers. The Buggy hasn't been seen in these posts yet and is very Wild West in design, as is the flat box wagon, the other is more European in outline, and would make a nice addition to medieval armies/scenes.

Note how the original version of the buggy had huge wheels which severely limit its turning circle, these have been replace on more recent versions of 327 by a smaller set allowing tighter turns without the wheels fouling.

The fact that one complete set of wheels are dark brown is a further indicator of the add-hoc nature of filling these sets - whatever is to hand that matched the artwork and then make up the difference! Also note that the artwork shows a wishbone draw-bar, with one horse, yet the contents include a central pole, but only one horse came in the box, when two are required?

The reason I can't trust 'My 2' is that although it seems complete (and similar to 'My 1'), it was started and most of the runners had been 'de-sprued' so I can't vouch for it to the same extent as the earlier (?) one.

This (the painted one) has the wishbone poles and the smaller wheels and while it had the correct one horse, also came with two of the heavy brewers dray horses, the only time I've seen this.

I've prepared a table to show how the sets differ, if anyone would like the original to add their set to the table eMail me on the usual (maverickatlarge[at]hotmail[dot]com) and I'll send you a copy. Or send me your contents list and I'll do a follow-up.

You can see that no two of the five examples I'm using has the same contents listing, or count. The latest set (or the catalogue image - which can only be a guide*) has three pairs of draft-animals which makes it the most useful, with the extra wagon as well!

* I believe that's how it happens - the workers use the current catalogue image or a printed-list based on it; as a guide, filling the sets from stock and adding odds and sods to make-up the numbers and/or ensure the count is greater than the box states, negating complaints from customers?

The smaller animal runners seem to be universal and come with no extras, each is an old 'six-figure' set's-worth and I'm not sure how the suckling piglets vignette should look as it had come loose/off the runner.

Figures are dealt with below, but the 'Washing Day' runner's contents are here to minimise imagery in what was always going to be a long post.

The larger animals are interesting as they were separate sets in the 'six figure' range, with cows and horses offered as 155 and 156 respectively (six animals each), however in the budget range (4150 - Horses and 4155 - cows) they lost the foal/calf, I suspect some of the animals in 327's came from those removed in that exercise. The rest provided by splitting the original runner/s for horses and/or cows into two and chucking half in one 327 box, the other in another.

The foal is missing from both my line-ups so is also missing from the previous image, while numbering has changed slightly with regard to the 'last three' as a second set of [more animated] horse poses was added in the 1980's and there are now various sets of cow offered by dint of different paint finishes.

There are two poses missing from this as my listing for the table is based on the five sets studied only.  Either of the prone/lying-down horse or cow from the original 'six-figure' sets may have been included in 327's, otherwise it would have been back in the granule-hopper?

The farm or 'rural' family, he's casting seed, she's literally holding the baby, while the older boy is suggested as the goat-heard in pictures. They'd look just as good out on the prairie waiting for the Clancy Gang to raid their barn! The set was also part of the coloured plastic batch we looked at the other day.

'At the Mill' is a nice vignette with a recalcitrant donkey/ass/mule type refusing to be told what to do or where to go, again useful - add it to the various Atlantic mules and the Esci Alpini one (not to mention the more recent additions to the canon) and you've got quite a team for your Chindits or Merrill's Marauders!

This is an odd one as well, as there are clearly some sets of 327 (not mine) which have extra milkmaids from this runner, as the budget issue is the full six-figure (or five and a mule) set, there'd be no extra's kicking-around the factory so did they break whole runners for one extra figure , or even two? It may have been reduced to five in earlier times, but earlier sets seem to lack the extra milkmaids - although they are on the box? Maybe the rest of the family ended-up in some of the larger, bulk, figure-only sets; sans milkmaid?

I say this as those set's which have the extra shepherds, get them as they are left over from the sheep-only sets. If you cast back to the shepherd post, you'll notice that one of the bulk sets only has standing sheep, the 'spare' prone sheep then appear at a higher ratio in another bulk set, leaving lots of spare shepherds and dogs to be added to these 327's.

One would expect something similar with the milkmaid but it doesn't seem to be the case, as a result a lot of recalcitrant donkeys may have gone back in the hopper - that'll learn 'em!

The other standard 'six-figure' set is the farm worker set, in the painted 'exclusive' range this is one of many, another being scaled-down ex-Elastolin poses, while a third has more rotund sculpts and a fourth 'At the Cattle Market' is a cow-based version of 'At the Mill', only with a slightly more compliant cow. The above set comes with a runner of six little tools, usually in a contrasting colour plastic - here grey (part-painted, part set - My 2) and brown (My 1), but it also raises question marks - see below.

Every set seems to 'agree' with regard to the four old, knackered, fence sections, which have definitely seen better days and need some work . . .

. . . for which there is a mending-kit included in most sets. The codes: 0566 put them in a small range of accessory-sets (we looked at '556 - Luggage' the other day) which came out just before the big late 1980's re-numbering exercise, whether there was a separate 566 I don't know, I haven't found it yet.

No instructions come with this group of runners, and you can see in the official Preiser shots above, several ways of building the water-pump/trough (803.0566). I think the other runners are meant to make four two-bar fence sections (802.0566) with three uprights each, tall enough for horses or cows to be corralled, and the short posts (801.0566) are for the wire?

The 803.0566 runner also carries two buckets with separate handles (more question marks), a stool and some thin hoops which may be to fashion a hinged gate from the N/Z shaped piece and the posts at the other end of the runner, but all three runners just provide useful stuff for buildings, shelters, earthworks/defence-works or 'bits' of built environment, while the 'barbed-wire' is lovely stuff.

If anyone wants to buy it in bulk - WWI or ACW war-gamers - it's the 'security' wire used with lead-plugs to seal utility meters, corporate router-cabinets, service panels and the like and can be bought, dirt cheap (per inch), by the reel, from electrical wholesalers.

So the question marks seem to be over the newer sets, the catalogue image shows six buckets and PSR reports 12, these are clearly being added now as the PSR box has the latest version graphics, but PSR doesn't seem to have the 566 runners, the parts from which are piled-up all over the catalogue image.

Neither source seems to show the two from the 566 runners, but everything in the catalogue image is grey so they may be there? If the [new] buckets are on a runner of 6 with PSR having two runners, you need to add the two from 566 (and the one from the guy feeding the horse?), which would change totals to 8 or 14 where a 566 is included.

Tools are also a query, in the old catalogue image (and both my sets) you get a runner of 6 field/barn/yard tools with long handles, there are a lot in the new catalogue image; maybe three sets (I've assumed two), held, stacked or loaded in the wagons, so it would seem multiples are being included, but PSR's don't break-down by runner (4 forks, 2 spades?), and PSR also has a bunch of hand tools not seen in other sets, seemingly 2x1 runner?

Don't get me wrong, I do not doubt the contents of PSR's set, I know how diligent Dave is when it comes to these things, but it's clear the latest sets are getting a bunch of smaller items added to the extra wagon, horses, milkmaids (&etc) whether or not they should have been, or where in [some of] the older sets.

That's the thing with this set, the boxes have never fully explained the contents, the contents vary every time you look at them and the catalogue images shift components like sand on the breeze, but it seems to be following a basic contents 'menu', it seems to be the place of last refuge for items left out of other rural, bulk or budget sets and it seems to be slowly growing in size/contents - it's a really useful set; get one, get two - compare the contents and report back!

Friday, October 28, 2016

S is for Schäferei, Schafe, Shepherd, Sheepdog and Sheep!

No, not Brexiteers, real sheep, with a natural right to behave like sheep! Baaaarrrrr! Trumpton for El Pres'! If he does win, we will at least know we're in the end game, and the death of hope can really gather pace as the fascist sharks circle the tank that has you, me and a crack in it! Still . . . I digress, back to toys . . .

The Preiser 'season' has become alternating wagons/people/wagons posts because of these chaps. I was just going to do the long overdue wagon posts and thank Gary Worsfold for them, but though, "Ooh, I could use the on-line catalogue images to show some of the wagons missing from the photograph-able line-up?", only to find that Preiser had added a dinky little shepherd's hut on wheels to the range recently. So; a shepherds post became inevitable, and lead - through the contents of both boxes and the catalogue - to the full season!

Starting with a comparison shot we've got the standard Merten 'six figure' box on the left and all sorts on the right. The Hong Kong stuff (copied from Marx) is best suited to 28mm role play/gaming than HO/OO railway layouts

Preiser painted their three sheep poses while Merten just gave you 18 poses and changed the plastic colour occasionally! Airfix delivered three slightly larger (OO - 1:76th'ish) sculpts; quite a flock, and they would all go together in a sheep market or show setting as different breeds, the Airfix passing for Merinos.

You can add Merit (OO and N gauge compatible) and Britains Lilliput (the same two poses, the former plastic copies of the latter), Bachmann and/or Revell (?) and possibly a Crescent pose (?), they did a goat! Additionally; Preiser are starting to introduce new sculpts based on the old Elastolin moulds they inherited - although they're supposed to have the Merten moulds somewhere, too?

Box/catalogue art and the current budget-paint catalogue image for Preiser, they are phasing-in a third (of three) shepherd, slightly different from the ex-Elastolin sculpt.

I used to think the above shot shows the new sculpts, there's not much in it, the surface detail is a little better and some configurations are issued with a ram, missing for the last 40/50-odd years, but I think it's a reversed image of the old ones!

Below is a big question mark we'll be looking at fully in a separate post in a day or two, but some sets of what used to be 327 have a single set of sheep, but the dogs and shepherds from two 'six-figure' sets as shown here, however I have two sets without the extra's and . . . well, we'll look at it later!

I'm missing a prone painted eepie-deep, but these are loose scraping from more than one set anyway! Merten above: they're not such good sheep, sculpt-wise, but there's so many poses and I think they're better-animated!

To the right is the new shepherd's van, which comes - here - as a kit, but is also available as a made-up model in more than one set. I think it's looking ripe for conversion to a WWII Soviet cooks trailer/field kitchen? Or a junior staff-officer's towed office? Now that the Eastern Europeans are issuing all those fantasy sets in 1:76/72, it could be all sorts of things - Halfling's caravan, Dwarves' mobile-forge, Wizard's spell-lab . . . all sorts

Three of the sets with the new sculpts, there seem to be about 5 poses of sheep, a (new?) dog and the third shepherd moulding. In the budget-paint range's bulk set you aren't given any prone animals!

Merten had two sculpts and the one from the woodsmen set is the better both having more detail under the splodges of paint Merten can suffer from and also the slightly more generic clothing allowing him to herd his sheep pretty-much anywhere in Europe, with any genre of locomotive running in the foreground.

The TT-gauge figure here is the other (second issued?) sculpt from Preiser, with N and Z gauges getting the older one from the HO range. Not the TT set has a ram and the new sculpts, N gets the old sculpts, Z has simplified micro-blobs.

The larger-scales show clearly both newer sculpts, the one (left, broader hat-brim) ex-Elastolin, the other (right, narrower brim) all new?

Two unpainted sets, one from the bulk sets issued by Preiser (on the right) in the same 'pure' white polystyrene of Airfix's 'multipose' which glues so easily and cleanly with liquid-poly, the more translucent or 'wishy-washy' set on the left was part of the multi-coloured batch of unknown destination/use we looked at in the long post the other day.

Known Listing (incomplete):

Merten
? - O Gauge (different sculpts?)
891 - Woodsmen, Forester and Shepherd - HO Gauge
2403 - Shepherd and 18 Sheep - HO Gauge
2403a-d - 4 Sheep - HO Gauge
2403e-i - 5 Sheep - HO Gauge
2403j-m - 4 Sheep - HO Gauge
2403n-r - 5 Sheep - HO Gauge
T891 - Woodsmen, Forester and Shepherd, TT Gauge
N2403 - Shepherd and Sheep, N Gauge
Z891 - Foresters and Shepherd, Z Gauge

Preiser
45116 - Shepherd and farmer lighting pipe (new sculpt) - 1:22.5th Scale
47056 - Ram bleating (new sculpt) - 1:24th Scale
47057 - 3 Sheep (1x3 poses, new sculpts) - 1:24th Scale
47062 - Shepherd's dog (new sculpt) - 1:24th Scale
47100 - Shepherd (new sculpt) - 1:24th Scale
65325 - Sheppard with Sheep (new sculpts with ram), 7 standing, 1 lying plus dog - 1:43rd Scale
160 - Sheppard with flock of 6 - 2 each (old sculpt) and dog - HO Gauge
161 - 15 Sheep, 5 each (old sculpt) of 3 poses - HO Gauge
327 - Larger set of unpainted figures and accessories also containing the contents of a 160 - HO Gauge
4160 - Sheppard with flock of 6 - 2 each (old sculpt, basic paint) and dog - HO Gauge
4161 - 15 Sheep, 5 each (old sculpt, basic paint) of 3 poses - HO Gauge
13003 - Shepherd with Flock, shepherd‘s van, rack wagon and 24 fence elements, each 44 mm long, approximately 80 (new sculpt) pieces - HO Gauge
14160 - As 160 - HO Gauge
14161 - As 161, but 9 each of two (new sculpt) standing poses - HO Gauge
14411 - 60 sheep, 30 each of two (old sculpt) standing poses - HO Gauge
16327 - As 327 - HO Gauge
17601 - Sheppard's van - HO Gauge
75020 - Sheppard with Sheep (new sculpt), 7 standing, 1 lying plus dog - TT gauge
79000 - Railway personnel, passengers, passers-by, workers, animals - bulk unpainted set includes shepherd, dog and double-count of standing sheep (old sculpt) - N Gauge
79160 - Shepherd with flock - including dog and double count of standing sheep (old sculpt) - N Gauge
79252 - Flock of 60 sheep, 10 lying (old sculpt) - N Gauge
88577 - Sheppard with flock of 6 - 2 each of three poses (old sculpt) and dog - Z Gauge (also included in bulk unpainted figures set 88500)

This is how common TT-gauge is in the land of Microsoft...

Where's the offensive TET-gauge or the Pharaohs TUT-gauge?

Thursday, October 27, 2016

B is for Brigade Band in a Box



I was sent these ages ago by Jonathan Newman with the intention of the contributor for me to Blog them, but they slipped through the net at the time and I found them the other day, checked back in Hotmail and will pop them here, as an example of the interim production of Preiser's inherited Elastolin stuff from the late 1980's/early 1990's, when they matched the corporate identity of Preiser with font, layout and packaging, but retained the Elastolin brand-name.

Many of you probably remember the adverts in Military Modelling and other hobby mag's around 1994-7? Now all ex-Elastolin is listed as Preiser but still has the Elastolin moniker attached and increasingly finds itself reproduced by Preiser's prodigious CAD/CAM workshop in other sizes.


As they are low-res, I'll just throw them-up as an example, there's not much to 'blurb' on, interesting that they have gaps in the line-up hidden in the centre of the band, presumably (as with all the 'complete' bands Preiser issues) there is a specific make-up to a Fire Brigade band, accurately represented in a generic carton.

Obviously using the old German Infantry musicians, with new helmets/added helmet-ridge.





The current incarnation of these sculpts is as separate figures in the standard Wehrmacht format/paint. From time to time Preiser still issue the bands with other paint finishes, while private sellers paint them-up as black-clad Nazi's and put them on feeBay for Brexiteers to spend too much on.

And many thanks again to Mr. Newman

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

W is for Working Wagons of War and the Wild West


Yeah! The wild Westphalia, the war on the growing seasons . . . at last - we get to the best wagons for war gamers and modellers to hack-about on their work-desks.

These are the three Gary Worsfold sent to the Blog; all from the standard 'exclusive' range rather than the 'Standard/Budget' range, and all from the period (which may be extant) of getting the painting done in Mauritius, they are painted to a high standard and that's most noticeable on the draft-cattle with their pink noses and little nostrils!

There are ten agricultural-type wagons in the catalogue at the moment, of which one is new from the village paint-shop in a fetching blue finish - probably  a racing wagon's team-colours! Note also how they are starting to add traces from the animals to the two yolk-things I've failed to find-out the name off - since I last didn't know the name of them. Trees! Singletrees and doubletrees! Thanks Google.

The other two in this collage are the 'suggestions for arrangement' used on boxes and in the catalogues and show how you could treat the wagons in set 327. The low-sided box-wagon would look fine in a Wild West setting, while the more central-European looking deep-sided one is the sort of thing you can impress into Nappy or Wellingtonian armies, or grab for you Wehrmacht infantry units.

This is a lovely model, but it's let down by the load which - let's face it - looks like a slightly collapsed block of polystyrene covered in a crushed/powdered bright-yellow scouring-pad, which it is!

One day I will repaint it a sun-faded cereal colour and give it a covering in long flock/static-grass of a similar shade, but not using the static wand, rather mix-it with a slice of paper-glue stick and apply in directional clumps with a thin artist's palate-knife, stuffing other clumps more haphazardly between the bars of the . . . err . . . ains? Wains? The sticky-up, wingy-things! I think they are just called ladders, or harvest ladders? I thought they were strakes, but that's something else apparently . . . swift surf later!

In the current catalogue, the same load as the previous wagon has been made from scoring-pad material without the pulverising and applying to a polystyrene block, and looks better for it!

While top right we see a different coloured static-grass applied to the same former as the grass wagon, to make muck!

Gary's boxed version of the grass wagon (472) with my loose one in the centre for comparison, the static-grass is a different colour again on the older one, I like to think mine is taking fresh grass to a silage clamp, the other bringing summer-hay back for the stack-yard animals? You can see at a glance how much better painted the later one is; well - the wagons are much of a muchness, but the animals are significantly better.

Reverse scenario, mine has a recognisable long-tyned, four-pronged, loading fork, the one Gary obtained seems to have been sent out with an oar!

I told you I'd photographed the hell out of them! I think all the splodges of glue about the place on my loose one, and the metal brake-handle are owner repairs/additions, I've never seen another metal one and it looks as if it was cut from a sewing-machine needle which would have needed softening with a flame before it could be bent or cut without shattering?

Unlike most of their rivals (or the Hong Kong marked copies), Preiser have no system for attaching the animals to the draw-bar/centre-pole, just glue them in close and - presumably stand them somewhere flat until they've dried/set?

There seems to be a programme of updating/redesigning the now 40-odd+ year old range, and the new rack-wagon/ladder-sided wagon is a much improved vehicle, and rather timeless, it would look right loaded with Landsknechts, wounded Wellingtonians, puffed-out Panzergrenadiers or a ragged-knot of refugees.

The new box wagon seems to be an interim design between the old open-ended one with the white flour sacks (next image), and the deeper-sided blue one (catalogue image above), which will allow it to cover for both . . . and reduce choice; boohoo!

They seem to have sculpted a new set of wagoneers (wagoners?) to accompany them, too. And - again two of them now have straps/traces from the horse-furniture to the . . . wooden thing. Much-improved wheels are noticeable as well, while the chocks on the parked wagon will prove useful - but can be easily scratch-built!

Only a miller's bags are this white! The attendant is posed for reins, so I should add them sometime! The body/frame of this wagon is the same unit used on the tanker and the larger ladder-sided wagon and the load has required the heavy horses from the brewers' drays.

It must be said; all the wagons are slight beneath their given bodywork, so lend themselves to both simple conversions/additions or more drastic scratch-building of whole new body-types.

Newer catalogue images show the two new designs parked-up (inset left) and going about their business (with more realistically-painted sacks - inset right), while the older image, carried-over from the 1970's, is that peculiarity of catalogues everywhere (Airfix were famous for it); a mock-up!

The sides and bed seem to have been casually cut from balsa or thick card and attached to the 'standard' body/frame and in being between the hight of the two box-wagons that went into production back then, mirrors the new one! This is a newer version of the photograph as well, and the pigs seem to have been processed through Photoshop . . .

. . . as we can see from this old box scan, there used to be one sole pink one and he lasted the longest time, now he has had a saddle added, shadow removed/lost and two saddle-backs have joined him, people were moved and scenery air-brushed out on the left of the frame as well in the previous picture.

Sunday, October 23, 2016

P is for Politzi

I'm sure we've had that as a title before, but I can't think when; so I'll live a little and gamble that we haven't!

These came in with a mixed lot from a show years ago, been in the collection as long as I can remmeber, 1989 (?) and seem to be most of the 1970/80's style West German police sets, from the early-number 'six-figure' painted sets, and while they don't have a box now, they might have when they came-in and do seem to be near complete. There would appear to be one each of every pose, including 'perps and crims' (well . . . A perp and A crim!), with six motorcycles and one-each of the four rider poses.

The sets they came from include:

Standard Range (became 10xxx)
0064 - Verkerhspolizisten - Traffic Police (in West German dress, 4 standing and 2 seated, number seen reused on American list as ‘Pit Crew in Blue’)
0065 - “Banküberfall” - “Bank Robbery” (4 German ‘Grenzpolizei’ and 2 robbers)
0066 - Polizisten, Polizei-Kradfahrer - Plainclothes Police + Motorcyclist (x5 German dress figures + BMW R80 motorcycle - number seen reused on American list as ‘Pit Crew in Green’)
0067 - Polizei-Kradfahrer - Police Motorcyclist (x3 in West German dress + 3 BMW R80 motorcycles, different poses)
0068 - Polizei-Eskorte - Police Escort (x3 West German outriders + 3 BMW R80 motorcycles, one pose)
Unpainted sets
0331 - Polizei - Police (x20 + dog, and 6x BMW R80 motorcycles, replaced as 10331 by wedding guests, seen as 0321 in Canadian book, typo?) [The set we're looking at]
Military-Police Painted
2512 - Polizisten, Polizei-Kradfahrer - Plainclothes Police + Motorcyclist (x5 German dress figures + BMW R80 motorcycle, as 0066)
2513 - Polizei-Kradfahrer - Police Motorcyclist (x3 in German dress + 3 BMW R80 motorcycles, as 0068 - one pose)

Not my finest hour, image wise, but you get the idea, nice modelling of the BMW R80 with lots of fiddly detailing - before and after.

I've only made-up two, and never got round to attempting painting. The 802.2513 code on the accessory runner (a frame runner) is for the Military Police set, so that must have been planned first even if the civi's were numbered/issued first, a mute point at the time when the German Police all had a secondary military-role along with the Boarder Guards (Bundesgrenzschutze) in the event of a war with the Warsaw Pact forces.

801.2513 was the runner for the bikes themselves and the dispatch panniers in green plastic, and if you look carefully - I've lost an indicator-light . . . never going to find that fucker, it's probably embedded deep in a carpet seven or more homes ago, and long gone to landfill!

The Preiser Informtion7 'flyer' was included in most larger sets in the 1970's/80's, and usually had either a generic - near blank - B side, or a Bundeswehr themed one (even civilian sets - for the painting guide), this set gets its own set-specific B side, with illustrates the contents with detailed painting guide for the various police uniforms/departments and a construction expanded-view.

Saturday, October 22, 2016

S is for Sheer Loveliness!

While I love the brewer's drays for their 'chutzpah' and enjoy the farm wagons for their applications in Wild West or military settings, you just can't beat these coaches and carriages for the delight of them!

There are two basic designs on the same chassis; an open coach and a closed carriage, which Presier got massive mileage out of through the simple use of colour. White was wedding, black was for Taxis (Hansom-cabs . . . No - wrong layout!) and various colours for other issues, the 'group' culminated in this, the VIP coach, now listed with the Circus, it was such a late addition to the range it's not in the original list of 4xx numbered wagons.

What sets this apart from the others is a 'special' (not 'budget', 'standard' or 'exclusive') paint-job and the inclusion of reins. To be honest the paint is pretty standard, but the reins make all the difference - visually.

I imagine Wellingtonian officers being 'delivered to their regiment' in a repainted one of these, even if it's a postal-specific, late 19thC vehicle, it 'looks the part' . . . Harry Flashman: "I say, Driver? We've got awfully close to the fighting?"

Designed for an early steam layout - various European model railway companies issued models of Der Adler or similar early perambulating boilers - with gold VR's (or RM's?) over a gloss-red re-spray it would look equally good next to Stevenson's Rocket.

Although lots have been listed over the years:

Exclusive Series (now 30xxx when issued)
450 - Weiβe Hochzeitskutsche, geschlossen - White Wedding Coach, Closed
451 - Weiβe Hochzeitskutsche, offen - White Wedding Coach, Open
452 - Droschke geschlossen - Closed Coach/Taxi (black)
453 - Droschke, offen - Open Coach/Taxi (black)
454 - Kutsche offen, grün. Mit Figurengruppe um 1900 - 1900 Open Coach, Green (other issues are blue or black)
Standard/Value-for-money Series (now 30xxx when issued)
484 - Kutsche weiβ - White Wedding Coach, Closed
485 - Kutsche offen, weiβ - White Wedding Coach, Open
486 - Kutsche schwarz - Closed Coach/Taxi (black)
487 - Kutsche offen schwarz - Open Coach/Taxi (black)
Other
24606 - Prominenz in der Kutsche -  Prominent personages in the carriage ( a version may have been listed as 486?)

There are currently only four available, with two budget, one standard and the VIP coach, still for the era, that’s a busy high-street's worth!

Donated by Gary Worsfold (like the other two in this post) my 454 looks like a Taxi (453), but lacks the red wheels and plumes on the hoses. Prior to the more recent issue of 24606, there was a blue issue of 454 as well.

A single runner provides most of the figures for these many versions, however it's been a while since the separate horse-whip armed driver has been employed, possibly a case of "Political correctness gone mad!"

A wide-brimmed hat, two veils and a bunch of flowers allowing the females to be 'converted' into brides, VIP's or happy tourists, with the men as grooms, VIP's, partners or (sometimes) driver's-mates. The figures for 24606 are a set of new sculpts, with one having the chains of 'office', and you'll notice a third set of sculpts (one of the seated 1900 sets) provide the well-fed historical-looking couple with parasol/umbrella in the 454

Yes - that was a Roscopf logo back in the forth image, which takes us back to the water/milk-tanker a few days ago, and the Hong Kong horses; yesterday, which I otherwise skirted-round as there was already enough going-on in that post! There was a lot of cross-pollination between those early plastic railway accessory firms, with buildings, figures and vehicles being begged, leant, borrowed and stolen about the place, so it's not too surprising!

It seems that Preiser either inherited their fledgling wagon range from Roscopf (and added to it), or contract-manufactured some wagons for Roskopf, leaving the logo on home-issued versions, I suspect the former explanation (because of the horse difference), but have no idea, and having only noticed it in the last couple of weeks- will have to wait until everything comes out of storage to compare catalogues, can anyone else help?

The common horse for these coaches/carriages is a standing pony with a plume which is sometimes retained, sometimes clipped-off, further adding to the variation between all the versions, as does using the heavier horses occasionally.

Here compared with the Circus horse set; as they also have plumes - it's how my brain works!

The TT range gets four versions scaled-down, the horses being new sculpts with better manes and tails. In N-gauge there are versions of the open coach in white (wedding) and black (taxi) but they don't seem to have got the closed version yet?

Apparently TT is still quite popular in Eastern Europe, so that may have something to do with their getting four to N's two? N-gauge having lots of accessory suppliers about the place, while the East is a 'new' customer-base, eager for after-market stuff to enhance their old Soviet-era layouts? Pure guesswork - don't quote me!