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.

Friday, September 8, 2017

F is for Funny How Things Come Together Sometimes

Or: H is for Henbrandt . . . Again!

I was walking up to the station the other day and a saw a piece of orange plastic in the detritus building up in the rain-channel the local authority gave-up cleaning as soon as they had installed it!

Picking it up (I'm a right old pikey!) I recognised it to be a jumping-toy mechanism and stuffed it in my pocket . . . for the spares box, you understand!

Only to notice a rather mucky blob of green rubber a few days later in the same damp leaf-pile, taking that home too - for a good wash with a toothbrush, it was obvious they went together . . . probably thrown from a passing car by a stroppy infant, or dropped by the occupant of a pram?

Thinking maybe it was a Frogglet from the Clangers, and possibly a freebie from one of these kids magazines, I put it to one side intending to include it in one of the future Christmas novelty round-ups or a [the] Clanger post (which has been in Picasa for a while now!) after shooting off a few pictures for whenever; and thought no more about it, for a week or three.

Then, when I popped into The Entertainer in Basingrad for my occasional look to see if there are any new rack-toys around, or any developments in Star Wars or Micro Machines &etc., I found a whole box of them! 50p each! You'd be mad not to (or less mad than me? Doh!), so I bought one-each of the four I didn't have.

Because we'll probably never return to them, and I quite like them - in my immaturity! - I took too many photographs, so here are a couple more! 

The blue one reminds me of Plug from the Bash Street Kids!

Branded to Henbrandt, and part of a promotional, pocket-money, toy stack/display called Fun Time, they were alongside the usual segmented snakes, yo-yo's, bouncy-balls and so on, all @ 50p per unit.

However, when I went to pay for my four-for-two-quid Jump-up Monsters (for that is what they are called on the receipt), the cashier said "That's one-fifty sir", says I "I think you'll find it should be two, there's four here and they're fifty-pee each?", "No" replies the lad; "They are on offer, it's all three-for-a-pound on that end", "Blimey" says I, "I'll have another look" . . .

. . . returning moments later, to the same till, with three parachuting aliens, each holding an umbrella - as an emergency 'shute - and a book to read on the way down! The three also in Henbrandt 'cellophanes', a quid: bargain!

In the meantime, I had found this further along the same footpath, but definitely a pedestrian's loss as it was where the path is further from the road - maybe a secretive baby is feeding stuff he wants to see on the Blog, to the Blog, by 'accident'!

It too is branded to Henbrandt, and I had seen them, a while ago (but can't remember where, as I never imagined I'd need to know!) in larger bags of 10 or maybe 20 units for a couple- or few-quid as bulk-buy, party favours.

[chant]
♪♫♪ Allll to'getheeer'now - alltogethernow! ♪♫♪
♪♫♪ Allll to'getheeer'now - alltogethernow! ♪♫♪

[up an octave]
♪♫♪ Allll to'getheeer'now - alltogethernow! ♪♫♪

[shout]
♪♫♪ Aaalllllll toooo'geethhh-eeerrrr NOW! ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪

[repeat until you're sick of it in your head - earworm!]

Thursday, September 7, 2017

C is for Combat Cannon

As opposed to a Stay-at-home-and-get-the-tea-on-or-do-some-ironing Cannon!

This was supposed to be part of Rack Toy Month, but due to the vagaries of my budgeting, the fact that RTM overran and that Royal Fail use a bank-holiday Monday as an excuse to do bugger-all for about four days, it didn't arrive until the late posts were publishing and I wasn't near a computer.

I'd been watching it on feeBay for a few weeks (months maybe?) and it had come down in price so it ended-up being a bargain, but had I been flusher it would have been cheaper still . . . and this may be worth noting as a sales technique if you are a seller:

Having reduced the lot (there was another bag included which we'll look at another day!) by a pound after a few re-listings, the seller still didn't sell it (although he would have if I'd been in a better position, but I had insurance to get!), so kept it off evilBay for a few days and then re-listed it with a 10p increase . . . it immediately got two watchers?

When I saw it had been re-listed I grabbed it - having been the only watcher over the previous few weeks! But it makes you think; a steady price-increase might get watchers to strike before it goes up some more? Worth a thought . . . anyway; let's look at it.

On feebleBay it was hard to gauge the figures, I thought they were about 55/60mm and new poses, or new to HK copies of less common US or Euro figures from the 1960/70's. It turned out they are common'ish copies of the old 45/50-mil Monogram (later Revell) GI's, with another pose - see below.

The gun - the real reason for the purchase as I've never seen one before - is a quite crudely manufactured, spring-loaded, shell-firer with a satisfying, clicking, elevation-mechanism noise.

The firing rod can be fitted either way, and due to it's length matching the breach-length rear of the catch-slots, I suspect should be the other way round but this was how it came, and both it and the spring are laid in the breach-cavity, then the two are pinned together and the whole held firm by an ethylene O-ring and the barrel.

One of the shells is a miss-mould . . . or a dum-dum!

One of the 'Unknown' MPC spaceman copies has been ID'd! Or at least attributed to a generic rack-toy and married to some Monogram copies! Maybe the 'dum-dum' is a chemical munition!

Range, at a vague 35% of elevation, is a pretty consistent 'over 3-meters' and at near point-blank will knock-over a Britains Deetail cowboy!

Base-mark on both is a small, neatly-lettered but poorly-stamped, full 'Made in Hong Kong'

How they go in the archive; gun, shells and figures one side of the index card, header-card, bag and staples the other. Both the staples and the shells get their own smaller self-seal bags (I don't use the term 'baggies' - it's baby-talk), of which I only use four sizes across the whole collection, all others (as they come-in) are used to go back out, or given to trader-mates.

The main reason I de-bagged this one was that the staples were so rusted, the card needed a clean/to be protected from them and was going to come loose with handling at some point anyway. The card will get annotation at some point, I just photographed it first!

The staples are kept so that when/if I need/desire to restore the packaging, I can match them with new, clean ones of the same size; feeding them through the same holes and closing them by hand.

Wednesday, September 6, 2017

T is for Two - Parcels (Follow-up to RTM '17)

So . . . Saturday just gone left two parcels on my doorstep, one from a Mr. Peter Evans of a nearby but apparently somewhat smoky parish, and the other from a Mr. Brian Berke who lives in a big apple!

Both parcels contained donations to the Blog for which I am - as ever - grateful, and while some of the bits will filter-in over time or even be held-over until next year's RTM, two of them are pertinent to the recent Rack Toy Month, so I thought I'd better post them 'as soon as'!

Sent by Peter before I posted them on the Blog, and with no knowledge of the fact I was about to, so an example of fortuitous synergy; having stated I wasn't happy with the New Ray moniker on various figures (11 and 12 in this post and 26 in a subsequent post) being so ascribed elsewhere, I believe these are closer to the actual New Ray and a quick comparison with the figures published here the other day will show these to be a superior material with a smother, glossier finish.

However I'm still to be convinced these are 'they' either! The prone figure especially is not to the same level of detail as New Ray originals, nor do the upright figures have the same chamfered edges to their bases as the originals, but their bases are more substantial than; and the overall quality is better than the ones we looked at the other day, also; they are good copies of the New Ray poses, so another one to add to the unknown's! Thanks again Peter!

Meanwhile also on the doorstep was a load of nice things from Brian among which was this loose policeman, New York, riotous denizens in, for the use of! As I have rather depleted the bloggability of the loose, larger scale HK/China 'unknowns' from the emergency services box I though it's better to post him now; while the others are fresh in our minds.

I think he's a missing pose from the bottom row in the line-up, and also from the Jaru 'Emergency Rescue Police' big bag (seen in red plastic) Brian previously shelfied for us, which leaves Jaru having carried three sets of vaguely/basically 50/54mm police figures in the last ten years or so. Thanks again Brian!

Tuesday, September 5, 2017

I is for Impact

Picked-up another charity-shop board-game in August, box was shot to pieces but there was enough of the bottom tray to ID the name of the game which meant ID'ing some more 'unknown' figures in the collection, and a pound-fifty got me a reasonable sample for a post!

It's funny, trying to ID game figures ought to be easy, you go to Board Game Geek and search; don't you? Well, yes, and if you're lucky you'll find them, but I spent ages trying to ID the name of the game with the Minimodels conquistadors, and it wasn't until I was searching for something else that I found them under Tri-Ang, while the pirate from Paul Lamond needed Ron Chiasson to help as I'd tried all the obvious things and got nowhere, meanwhile these guys were waiting and the guy on the blue Dredd'esque motorbike is still anonymous!

45mm; 47mm; 50mm; Board Game ACW Soldiers; Board Game, Board Games; Boardgame Pieces; Drummond Park; Game Playing Pieces; Impact; Old Plastic Figures; Old Toy Soldiers; Playing Pieces; Seven Towns; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Board Games; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Impact Episode 1; Ambush at Wolf Ridge; Idea Shop, 2003; 2002; PVC; Factory Painted; Dinosaurs Versus Humans, Wolf Ridge; Raptor scouts; Corezec drillers; Alien Dinowarriors; Aliens; Dinosaur Aliens
A board-game needs a board! The main game; 'Impact Episode 1' comes with the card boards (x6) and piles of hills which line-up with holes in the board, the later add-on/follow-on game; 'Ambush at Wolf Ridge' has a formed mountainous moonscape, of which you got only four; with smaller armies.

On one level the whole thing is very much a marketing exercise aimed squarely at getting a slice or slices of the Games Workshop, D&D and Aliens/Predators franchises, being a co-operative venture between Drumond Park (game play and box design - now part of the Vivid group), Idea Shop (characters and imagery) and Seven Towns (gun firing mechanisms) who have been licensing stuff since the 1970's - this game is dated 2002/3

45mm; 47mm; 50mm; Board Game ACW Soldiers; Board Game, Board Games; Boardgame Pieces; Drummond Park; Game Playing Pieces; Impact; Old Plastic Figures; Old Toy Soldiers; Playing Pieces; Seven Towns; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Board Games; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Impact Episode 1; Ambush at Wolf Ridge; Idea Shop, 2003; 2002; PVC; Factory Painted; Dinosaurs Versus Humans, Wolf Ridge; Raptor scouts; Corezec drillers; Alien Dinowarriors; Aliens; Dinosaur Aliens
The above opinion is backed up by the juvenile play (always board) of the first two levels and pretty simplistic third level, limited scope and fact it seems to have disappeared quite quickly with only the one extension game issued, strangely the Wolf Ridge seems the commoner of the two?

You follow the paths and shoot the enemy with the missile firing 'guns', playing at level three allows for a simple capture system. An Episode 2 country/urban battlefield was announced on the back of the box but I haven't found one on-line yet?

45mm; 47mm; 50mm; Board Game ACW Soldiers; Board Game, Board Games; Boardgame Pieces; Drummond Park; Game Playing Pieces; Impact; Old Plastic Figures; Old Toy Soldiers; Playing Pieces; Seven Towns; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Board Games; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Impact Episode 1; Ambush at Wolf Ridge; Idea Shop, 2003; 2002; PVC; Factory Painted; Dinosaurs Versus Humans, Wolf Ridge; Raptor scouts; Corezec drillers; Alien Dinowarriors; Aliens; Dinosaur Aliens
However, on another level and leaving the criticisms aside, the figures make the set and they are less than shabby! A mid-density PVC, factory painted, Dinosaurs versus Humans, what's not to like! In Episode 1 you get two armies, ten dino's with one static gun (a very neat Gieger'esque, squat piece of pure evil) and eight humans with a 'Walker', tracked-bot and static gun-turret.

The Wolf Ridge sets seem to have smaller numbers of the same human sculpts, but at least one new dinosaur. I'm going on what I can find on Google/feebleBay.

The shtick is that these Dinosaur Raptor scouts have invaded Earth in a mountainous region where the only humans nearby are a bunch of miner's - the Corezec drillers - who then have time (at the start of a hostile invasion!) to fashion weapons from their mining equipment (and undergo military training and the procurement of matching uniforms and PLCE and adopt military rank structures!) in order to fight-back and defend Earth from the vile gatorsaurs!

Those invaders must have taken their time between opening hostilities and firing their first shot! And - let's face it - the sculpting is more deep-space mining-vessel than Earth-side anything . . . Nostromo's acid-etched floors and cocooned-crew!

45mm; 47mm; 50mm; Board Game ACW Soldiers; Board Game, Board Games; Boardgame Pieces; Drummond Park; Game Playing Pieces; Impact; Old Plastic Figures; Old Toy Soldiers; Playing Pieces; Seven Towns; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Board Games; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Impact Episode 1; Ambush at Wolf Ridge; Idea Shop, 2003; 2002; PVC; Factory Painted; Dinosaurs Versus Humans, Wolf Ridge; Raptor scouts; Corezec drillers; Alien Dinowarriors; Aliens; Dinosaur Aliens
The 'Guns' - they are classified on the box as field, medium and large, but there are no separate rules for each class I'm aware of, and they all take the same ammunition, a silicon-rubber-capped bolt 'missile'.

Apart from the firing mechanism which rather ruins the lines of the weapons, they are all reasonable, the dino's having GW-style, chunky, man- (or dinosaur-) portable amorphous, bone-like units and the lovely alien 'Pilot' skull type static unit, while the miners have converted drilling and boring machines and an equally evil-looking, squat, automated turret/bunker thing.

45mm; 47mm; 50mm; Board Game ACW Soldiers; Board Game, Board Games; Boardgame Pieces; Drummond Park; Game Playing Pieces; Impact; Old Plastic Figures; Old Toy Soldiers; Playing Pieces; Seven Towns; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Vintage Board Games; Vintage Plastic Figures; Vintage Toy Soldiers; Impact Episode 1; Ambush at Wolf Ridge; Idea Shop, 2003; 2002; PVC; Factory Painted; Dinosaurs Versus Humans, Wolf Ridge; Raptor scouts; Corezec drillers; Alien Dinowarriors; Aliens; Dinosaur Aliens
The complete Raptor Scout army below, while the upper shot compares them with a Hasbro; Halo figure and figures from both the big shooting games of the 1980/90's Tomy/Pressman (et al)'s Crossbows & Catapults and MB Game's similar Weapons & Warriors (also carried by Pressman at one point?); the smaller blue pirate figure.

The announced Episode 2 was to have included Carbozec tech. warriors for the humans and T.Rex assault troops for the 'saurs, but the only different one I've got is the one in the above comparison which I believe comes from the Wolf Ridge set? I have the larger 'unknown' sample in storage but memory serves that they are all the same as the recent purchase.

Not unknown any more!

Monday, September 4, 2017

A is for 'Ancient Siege Machines'

Every time I buy a mixed lot of plastic toy soldiers there seems to be at least one of these in the lot! They must have been one of the best sellers of Britains output and for the longest time.

The publicity graphics changed every couple of years with the images changing from coloured line drawings to photographs as printing techniques improved or got cheaper. The crew are given quite generic helmets in order to allow their use with both ancients and medievals.

Positioned with the Swoppet knights in early catalogues, they gravitated toward the Herald knights and Trojans in the mid 1970's and then went off to the artillery pages.

Looking at them in alphabetical order - the Ballista crew come first! Common/early or longer running colours to the left, later figures to the right. The nose protector rather places them in the 1066-crusades era.

Catapult crew with an unpainted ex-outworker's example in the middle of the lower line-up. Someone (I think in Plastic Warrior years ago) compared all the rock-holders/throwers in the Toy Soldier world once, and there are dozens of them!

Ammunition!

L is for Long-Ladder on Lego's Leery Little Lorry

From their small range of HO gauge compatible vehicles which as far as I know weren’t stolen from Hestair Kiddycraft (unlike their accompanying construction bricks) and which come fitted with die-cast metal wheels!

360° Telescoping, Turntable Ladder Truck.

Thanks to Adrian Little for letting me photograph it.

Sunday, September 3, 2017

E is for Espanya!

I thought we'd have a bit of metal for a change, and having recently been given this as a present, it was the obvious candidate.

An Almirall figure of a Civil Guardsman bearing a standard (or colour?), actually brought back from Cuba, but totalitarian regimes make strange yet obvious bedfellows, even if one purports to be from the socialist 'Left' and the other is avidly from the 'Right' with Catholic Rome's berobe'ed servants behind it! When they are both pariah's to someone, trade is easier to justify, and politics is all about justification!

The base is the same as a recent set of magazine part-work collectables from Almirall, but I couldn't tie the figure into that set and the same base was in use by the firm when Garratt was waxing-lyrical about them in the early 1980's, so I hope he's a rarer figure from the 'connoisseur' market. Although I wouldn't describe the figure as having a connoisseur finish, the painting is a bit hit-and-miss - more 'matt toy-soldier' style.

Still - he'll look good leading my Pech Y Hermanos (Pech & Brothers) detachment!

21st-Jan-2019 - Better line-ups here now

P is for Pilots Pondering Parentage

I suppose I could spend a few hours Googling things like "Fujimi 1:48th Zero kit on sprue" or "Box Scale WWI Biplane on sprue" and after a while have most of these ID'd, but I'm hoping some of you will know these instantly and be able to tell the rest of us, if not Google awaits!

I'm pretty sure there are four makes (or lines/ranges) here (A, B, C, and D) and that they are all around 1:48/1:50th, however, box scale may be the truth as some are from early kits I think?

Number 6 looks like he might be a Kamikaze ready for the off? 7 could be a paratrooper, or just someone adjusting his chute before climbing into the cockpit. 2 seems to be the crew from an old 'stringbag', so probably a WWI fighter, and the red plastic hints at a Fokker Triplane, but the only figures I know from that one are (thinks Revell or Aurora?) pushing the aircraft on the ground, labelled-up and in storage! The 3's seem also to be a pair and from the same era?

Numbers 1 & 4 though; seem to be better equipped with more modern flying gear, so I'm guessing WWII, again yellow plastic hints at a Tiger Moth? Any help formally ID'ing any of them will be appreciated.

Saturday, September 2, 2017

B is for 'Brucey Bonus'

We won't be seeing any more of them will we? Another tangible link with childhood slides away harshly.

So a quick late 'end-of-RTM' post; well, we couldn't not have another paratrooper!

It's actually not a very good one and left me a bit cold, clearly a civil parachutist, poorly made/finished and with one of these naff netting-and-cloth affairs instead of all the fun of tangled shroud-lines!

Kandytoys, out there, now.

A is for Army Men - RTM '17 - Part IV - Mostly Smaller Scale Crappytoys!

Or at least, this was going to be the small scale post but a number of larger ones crept in so it's not, also the numbering rather peters-out around the time we find out what happened to the 16 some of you may have noticed yourselves not noticing so far! In other words - it's the loose ends of what has been no more that 'What's in the Fritz-helmet/Modern Chinatroops' unknown's box'!

Seen before on the Blog, more than once I think and being carried by various brands at the moment as the default small scale, they are actually around 30mm and a second shade of silver-grey - distinct from the silver - surfaced in the 'Big Bag' from Peter Evans.

I re-shot the shelfie (right-hand picture) I got so fuzzy last time and we can see rust-brown still to enter the collection here at Small Scale World Towers while Brain Berke shot the left-hand bag when he was last in the UK, it showing an apparently darker green set of figures.

Here the same figures are being offered on Alibaba by an 'E-Toys', made-up brand if ever I read one, but clever and you wonder why no one else thought of it first, but maybe they have!

Number 16 has been in the collection for a while and may date back to the Hong Kong era, but he has the chalky look of more recent China production.

The broken figure seems to be Hong Kong, but without a base it's not clear, he also seems to be quite original? Next to him is a green, soft PVC, copy (?) of the believed to be Galoob for Realtoy (et al.) in denser plastic. I've put the question mark in brackets as he may be from the same factory/mould, just for a different contract, and some of Micro-Machines own figures - especially the early, unmarked, small scale 'combat' ones were in softer PVC anyway?

The other three are small-ish scale (all in this shot are around 40mm) copies (or homage) to the ring-hand MPC figures, I have no weapons or helmets for them so don't know if they had them but suspect they must have, if only by going by the little belts - which are removable! I'm guessing gum-ball machine capsule toys, but they may have had a header-carded bag, or blistered outing too?

Speaking of Realtoy and moving up a scale, if anyone tells you the figure lower left is Realtoy, tell him he's making it up as he goes along - again! The Realtoy one is bottom right and we looked at them here a while ago.

The upper image shows the unknown 50mm figure, a couple of the denser/harder PVC Realtoy (et al.)'s; they have also been marketed as Daron and Sky Marks, while I've been told they were Galoob, and certainly follow Galoob poses; along with the softer 'copy'.

In the lower image we see the various colours now found, the sailors being consistently painted the same, the others coming in desert-sand, olive-green, a 'Russian' SF/SWAT/Urban camo', a general camouflage and the woodland green 'copy', however there is a commoner reverse camouflage with sand as the dominant background and blobs of green and brown but I don't have one in this pose!

Similar figures (looking odd as they have no belt-order/webbing) are being offered by Smile Station on Alibaba and evilBay (upper shot) or at least they were a year or two ago, I can't find them now, but that's made-up brands for you, easy come; easy go!


While the various unknown carrier-deck ground-crew in the lower picture manage to look like both the unknowns; the five in black PVC are very similar to the green chap but a tad taller, while the lower three are in a soft silicone-rubber and look like the not-Realtoy figure!

However, I now know the lower chaps aren't carrier-crew, they were sold in a Realtoy-like, but unbranded/generic window-box 23710 Die Cast Metal Airport Play Set, two per card, so that may where the larger unknown figure originated, not the civil airport; but another generic window-box!

Found these on Alibaba, they look to be all new poses, of some merit and in a smaller scale; mabe45mm judging by the accompanying vehicles? And - note two new variations of the CAD-CAM-hulled AFV we looked at the other day.

Those Tamiya 1:48th copies (which Arlin Tawser ID'd here a while ago) came-in again, in a larger sample with the 'Big Bag', still unknown, but by adding one 'missing' figure gave a photo-opportunity of 6 poses x 4 figures x 2 armies for a 48 total which I suspect will prove to be the/a full-set/set-count? Miss-moulding has reduced a couple of the B.A.R-gunners to mere riflemen!

Finally, we looked at Skylark yesterday with a nice set of figure sculpts in a larger scale but in the smaller scale they are offering these really poor copies of some pretty poor 1990's copies of copies of Airfix, which (the 1990's ones) were also issued with Majorette AFV's.

Friday, September 1, 2017

A is for Army Men - RTM '17 - Part III - Better Crappytoys!

Into the home straight with part three and I only hope some people have got something from some of these posts, because a lot of people write-off this stuff as half-a-carat shit, and they're not wrong, but intrinsically there is no difference between a mounted Swoppet knight and a cut-n-shut Crescent Mexican copy blob, from Hong Kong!

We return to those 14's for the first half of this post, but will also look at a few similar figures. I have in addition to the 14's a second set of very similar figures, the same pose is a little smaller and I think it's a size difference, not the differnet shrinkage rates of the two materials, but it could be?

Base-edge treatment, the plastic colour and the marking (less the numeral on the PVC figures) are all so similar as to point to the same source and neither sample is big enough to be considered 'all', which means the pose differences could even-out over time/with more finds? Hoever, see below.

The other common denominator is that they are nicely sculpted, well produced figures with lots of paintable detail visible, and apart from Chuck-Noriega with his linked-belt feeding out of his hip pocket, they are all pretty useable versions of figures previously seen in Parts I & II - I particularly like this version of the running M60 gunner, although I'd be the first to admit the SMG's both look a bit 1970's Italian police?

So . . . having looked at the Jaru set yesterday with the 18's and the same card-art as this larger set, we are faced with what looks to be a set with all-14's?

Firstly, although the picture is blurred for being a low-res publicity puff-piece, you will notice there are only two poses shown, one of which isn't in 14, 18 or 20 (yet) - the standing, no: 'running' firer ('a') in the sand sample, while in the green sample, some of the figures are reversed ('b')!

This is a Photoshop'ed mock-up! It proves nothing, but it gives clues, and is therefore useful nonetheless, providing you spot the 'deliberate mistakes' that is! The tank is the same as the Hunson set we looked at yesterday (very sharp 'boat-front' to the hull's glassis casting) which is one of the clues.

Now I have been seeing the Hummers in mixed, loose lots on feeBay for a few years now (there were at least two lots with them on there last week), and as it takes a year or two for this stuff to filter through, we can assume they have been around for a while now.

Next to the Jaru mock-up is a shelfie I took last week in the new Smyth's in Farnborough (farn-brer not -burroh!) of a set by, or purporting to be by a Shing Hing which has what looks like 20's with additional poses (standing firing ex-Matchbox GI is to be expected; given the rest of my sample!) but the tank/s is/are different, being the small ones we looked at the other day (from two sources with two sets of 'additives') and a scale-up of it with a more rounded front than the older one.

But, the colour of all the green components is another clue.

Shing Hing are also marketing a large tub with four armies (also currently in Smyths), and as far as these toys go it's a good one, we've got the GI's with ex-Airfix Japs and sets of ex-Matchbox 8th Army and Afrika Korps, so in one tub you have Tobruk and Iwo Jima - and for a 'tenner -  bargain!

But ignore the other three and check the GI's, there's the running shooter, along with most of the 20 poses, but with the 14 base marking, and having handled them I can tell you they were PVC.

Jaru claim to be one of the biggest middle-men in the importation and distribution of rack-toys (they don't call them rack-toys!), and there's no reason to disbelieve them and plenty of evidence of that being the case; indeed what we seem to have here, with yesterday's post and in among the truck and tank posts that preceded these, is evidence of that 'finger in every pie' position of Jaru's.

Reiterating a line from yesterday's post: "different contract: different mix", Jaru being the lynch-pin for all these pale-jade green toy soldiers, whatever the size, material or pose mix and whatever the accompanying accessories (which will be coming from different contract-manufacturers) and - ideed - whatever the colour of the 'opposition' if any.

I would put money on 14, 17, 18A and B and 20, all having some connection, with Jaru in the procurement chain somewhere? And going back a few years! In last years RTM post H is for Hangin' on the Hook! we saw that my 20's came in a purchase with PVC 8th Army, a different color from the Shing Hing set above and Brian B also donated the Ocean set with blue ones, but another two links between them all.

These (also from Brian Berke) are similar, and almost certainly PVC but will be either licensed or bog-standard'ish copies. The Soma (Mr. So and Mr. Ma) partnership was established in 1968 and was one of the bigger contract-manufacturers for the next 20-odd years before starting to use their own brand in the mid-1980's.

Unusually for Soma these are only marked 'CHINA' and while they undoubtedly use smaller contractors for sub-assemblies, they are big enough to have made these themselves - in their 'signature' figure-material.

I've highlighted the QA-coding both on the card (red arrow) and in each bag as a strip of 'ticker-tape' (yellow arrows), this is a trend that's here to stay.

Might as well have a look at Soma's other PVC output! I'd like to find the rest of the 40mm GI's, he's the only one I've found, the little ones we've looked at before, there were 12 and they were issued with generic push-and-go jets and prop-jobs - real infant toys; I sent them straight to charity (mid/late-1990's?)

As are their juvenile 40mm's which come as pirates, Wild West (above), Robin Hood (above) and the Sheriff with their men, Medieval and the Crusades, sports, Mermaids, cartoon/anthropomorphic animals, Ninjas, Manzinger-type Autobot things, Mexican/TV-wrestlers, fairy-tales and fantasy/ horror types (I think), in sixes or twelve's and often with a second, or subsequent issues in different colour-ways (there are three Hood's, yellow (above) cream and black - that I know of). I have a load in storage so we'll look at them properly one day, but there's plenty about them on the Wibbly Wobbly Way!

Loose-ends, left to right:

Marshall's were carrying these wholesale until recently, they look like figures in previous parts, but the tub suggests they are a tad bigger so they ended-up in this folder!

Bigger, better looking figures from XMT, follow the link for a made-up-brand! They look to be ethylene? It's not even an SMG is it; it's a hair-dryer!

These look very interesting, they seem to have some of the old Arco Rambo poses, along with a couple of the Jaru poses (including the running chap who's a very decent figure sculpt), along with the almost de'riguere these days Matchbox GI poses, along with a couple of helmet-swap Airfix paratroopers, all well-finished and looking to be at least 54mm, give or take, the bino-guy is a bit challenged in the height department!

♫♪♫Short People - They got little hands...And little eyes...And they walk around...Tellin' great big lies...They got little noses...And tiny little teeth...They wear platform shoes...On their nasty little feet...♪♫♪ - Randy Newman

Also I'd draw you attention to a letter from Tomas Korecek in Plastic Warrior magazine's issue 165 (March 2017) which shows bigger-still (75mm/1:24th scale) versions of the figures we've been looking at the last three posts, currently for sale in one outlet in Prague, but they'll probably be available elsewhere, in another colour, another card . . .