Unlike the combat sets we saw, which come in a standard header-carded 'bottle bag', these historical sets come in wonderful display 'cabinets', which here gives us a lovely Imperial Chinese style building/roof reflecting the original Shaolin Monastery in Dengfeng,Henan Province, China. Six of the floatiest flying Ninja David Carradines' you'll ever see! The plastic colour makes photography hard, but they are nicely done figures, all clean shaven heads and lethal weaponry! You can see also how they seem to pair-up if you were to be minded to paint and base them as mini-vignettes or a single larger diorama. While this guy has the air of a master about him, maybe a trainer/instructor or older monk, with a heavier sword (for whacking students with the flat-side of?), bulky shield and substantial cloak. He also lacks the dynamism of the other six, but is still a nice figure. He'd also paint-up nicely as any 'biblical' era man-at-arms, albeit a bald one! Packaging scans; the others sets get variations of a castle/fortress look which is not quite as ornate as this one, so this one might be the one to go for first! They're currently available from several dealers on evilBay (which is getting very evil these days!).
About Me
- Hugh Walter
- 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.
Thursday, August 19, 2021
Ah-soh! is for Grasshopper!
Wednesday, August 18, 2021
F is for Final Pair Found
Not much I can say about them as I think it's probably the third or fourth time we've visited them, but Lion and Giraffe, Imagination Play 2 Discover, open-fronted display box, in some Poundlands, but it might take a year or two to find all six pairs, but they are consistent pairs and seem to be constantly topped-up as a standard of the small toy section. That's it, model Lion and Giraffe, Giraffe and Lion models, did I say they come in an open-fronted display box . . . but is it even a box? It only has one-and-some-bits sides, more a display standee-carton'ee thingy!
Tuesday, August 17, 2021
P is for Poundland's Prehistoric Plastic II, not!
The TXA is backed-up by a "Produced by PLOZ" of Walsall (West Midlands), so still a phantom brand or brand-mark, but for Poundland. These are larger than the pairs, still also carrying the Prehisterror line-title and only one per card and this time they didn't even have the "...rainbow-mauve Per'Terry-dactill!" I reported passing on back in November, but they did have the other four, so I grabbed them!
You can see why I passed on it, it was leerier than the image and far from being either a Velociraptor or a Per'Terry-dactill is more of a Foh-een-ix! I am reminded of the B-Movie about the big . . . dino-bird (?) hiding in the roof of the Chrysler Building and eating sun-bathers for breakfast - can't remember the name of it?
But these are OK for a pound-a-piece, the blue eyes are a bit zombie-like, but that's the thing with cheapies - the paints always a bit simple!That's it, box ticked, they're out there, now, for a quid!
Monday, August 16, 2021
P is for Posts Passim!
One of the things I like to do here from time to time, as I'm sure you've noticed, is a few posts with a narrative tale or connection running through them but with the first post covering both Wing Lung and the Knight Toys I thought we'd already got in the tag list, with these, it was a question of do I go Wing Lung/Knight-Knight-Wing Lung or (as has been the case) Wing Lung/Knight-Wing Lung-Knight, such is the executive stress / excitement level here at Small Scale World!
As the figures are dominant the first follow-up was the Wing lung, and this post is [was going to be?] a briefer affair, leaving as many questions as it arrives with.
Two sets, this is the first and they are in no particular order, of immediate interest is that we get two brandings; JE Toys and PMS (more usually associated with 99p Stores, but I think this may pre-date those now defunct emporiums of tat) on a sticker, the back gives us a clue that PMS might have imported this set from a wholesaler in Spain?
The contents are much-of-a-muchness, with figures that could be from Pioneer or Supreme (softish vinyl) or someone else, and are copied from the larger polyethylene ones associated with the Wing Mau Trading Co., and Hing Fat. And an eclectic mix of vehicles and accessories which may be from several of the lesser makers in that part of the world.
I would point-out that the early CGI image on the back of the box is quite sophisticated and would have required a large memory to render, prior to being converted into a '2D' .jpg or .png image for print.
The second (or 'other'; there is no order here) set is branded to the aforementioned Knight and Fancy It Agencies Ltd., the same combo as the toob, two posts ago, with Gausini in the mix on that occasion!Contents are similar, but less, with the vehicles replaced by die-cast jets. The rocket, people-carrier and figures are the same, however the street furniture is different with the large 'facility sign' being a copy, although it's not clear and the different artwork could be batches rather than copying.
In all the complication of trying to ascribe rack-toys to producers, the only thing that really matters to a figure collector is the figures, and these are they! Soft'ish PVC vinyl and around 30mm, there only seem to be the three poses in this size - here compared with the venerable Airfix set.As I said above the donors were probably Wing Mau (Hing Fat being the next-generation pirate) but the maker could just as easily be Pioneer, Supreme or an unknown party. Also I think I logiced (I know, but it should be a word!) that Wing Mau (or their owner) were probably middle men, while early Hing Fat seem to have copied Rado Industries late stuff, so even the donors are a question mark!
Indeed given that Pioneer are essentially a die-caster of small vehicles, and given the number of figures associated with their vehicle sets now, both home-branded and generics/other brand-marks, it may be they were themselves buying them in from a third party, in which case I'd be tempted to say Supreme/SP Toys, but, their own 40mm figures are so poor, they can't have produced the more delightful figures we've seen from Pioneer associated sets!
Now JE Toys are known to the die-cast collectors (there's a less than clear thread here), while PMS are an old-school importer/sourcer/wholesaler from the UK via Hong Kong (now also with offices in Shanghai and India) and not the in-house brand I'd suggested when I kept finding their stuff in 99p Stores - mea culpa!While - with two sets in three days jointly fingering Knight/Fancy It - we might assume they are a joint shipping-branding exercise, who happened to select another set/set-combination from whichever middle-man in Hong Kong/China was putting these together to hawk round the trade fairs in the 1990's. They now seem to have moved out of toys and lost the fancy knight on horseback!
The few JE Toys the die-cast guys have identified seem to be at the poorer end of such production, garish decorated and slightly squashed, die-cast uppers on plastic lower-halves (I think I may have some of their AFV's), while these (the upper set) are more Pioneer in quality? Equally if an import from Spain (juguete Espania?) there may be two JE's under discussion here!
The two motorcycles in the initial set above are completely different, one a reasonable quality, mostly die-cast with plastic finishes, rendition of a Harley Electraglide (or Roadster?), the other a cheap, generic, all-plastic model of a Japanese street-racer of the sort you might find in a capsule-dispensing machine, Christmas cracker or lucky-bag type setting, so probably came from two different of the up to 600-odd [at any one time] yet to be named (within the hobby) toy makers recorded in Hong Kong over the years?
So it all proves nothing other than that it's never clear, wheels within wheels . . .
RTM is for Return To More - Wing Lung
Looked at these when I first ID'd them even though my sample here was rather pathetic, and despite the bulk still being in storage, enough have come in now to give a better picture and confirm better the base marking which makes these easy to sort from the chaff of all the other clones!
RTM is the best place to do that and having mentioned them in the previous post now is the time! With thanks to Chris Smith and Peter Evans as the latter sent the on-runner examples, while the former sends a few in each of his donations to the blog, to be shared here with you!
Starting chronologically; the Wild West are all Airfix clones and come in the same colours they used for their WWII stuff, six poses each of foot cowboys and Native American Indians, gives plenty of play-value from a rack-toy. I haven't got a bagged or carded set yet so I don't know if they got accessories or what they may have been, maybe a Tee-pee/Tipi or one of the smaller-sized Britains Herald totem-poles, which do come in oxide-brown? American infantry; before and after cleaning! Im not sure what poses are missing, Matchbox bazooka and Airfix running Marine clones; is my best guess! but it's not that simple as we'll see next: The Afrika Korps; All Matchbox piracies, but with the British officer giving commands instead of the original German, in a larger scale sample of Brit's in oxide red I have the other pose, clearly in a clean 'British' sample, but I suspect that the larger missing samples will have loads of this chap in the wrong bag! The running chap - bottom left on the green baize - looks a bit suss' too! The British; Again all-Matchbox clones, with the conversion Tom spotted years ago, the prone Bren-gunner is also ex-Eighth Army, while the crawling guy is taken down from 54mm.In all four cases they seem to have gone with ten-to-twelve poses (as per the 20mm), being the non-support-weapon/accessory-needing poses. Which is easy with the Brit's and Yank's, a mystery as to the missing DAK officer though, while the German Infantry however . . .
. . . get three Americans - MG-gunner, grenade thrower (Matchbox Germans had their own Airfix-likey - seen opposite him on the runner) and the platoon commander with walkie-talkie! And so little effort has gone into converting the helmets, there will be a big ol' sorting when I do get the others out of storage/the garage!But this is why I'm reticent to commit to more than a guess on the two Americans missing from the runner above, until I get the whole lot together (there's loads of these in store, including metallic green ones and chocolate brown ones in a very small sort of 15mil who may not be Wing Lung) there are still questions to be answered.
However a small sample of the 20mm's (one of each known pose) does suggest the two missing figures might be taken from Airfix, as Airfix seems to have been the No.1 donor in the smallest size. And the German para's are a rare beast in rack-toy circles, not as common even as the US para's where I think we've ID'd three with two still looking for a surname. Confirming my previous wittering on base mark, the real giveaway is not the marks themselves but the fact that the ovoid cartouches are pretty constant between sets and/or lines/scales. I think I've only found the Wild West in 30mm, where they go well with the various cake-decorations, Lines-Waddington/Rosas y Malarat and Gulliver clones. The WWII might also be in a 50/54mm size, but I've not found any and someone (early Rado Industries?) has similar Airfix 8th Army clones in the larger size, with similar bases, but the are not so uniform in their geometry, and the marking is different with a 'made in-' prefix.So - as a final aside - to answer Tom's question of a few years back, I think the Matchbox poses were limited to the 30 and 40mm sets, while the Airfix were confined to 20mm, with the odd figure (Airfix US officer) in all three sizes?
We will return to these, probably twice (three times with the A-Z entry), but for now that's a quick overview!
Sunday, August 15, 2021
M is for Multiple Branding
So this is a right minestrone of a Curate's egg; the figures are definitely Wing Lung, the packaging carries branding for Knight and Gausini, import details for Fancy It Agencies and there was probably another agency (packer/shipper in Hong Kong/China) bringing the contracts together?
I thought Knight has been seen here before, but they haven't (there is another one coming), Gausini seems or sounds Italian, but now redirects to Dteinei which also sounds Italian but has Chinese spellings and seems to be Canadian? Fancy It will be the bone fide UK-importer, and the contents could be bought-in from several sources of which one is definitely Wing Lung.
The contents are run-of-the-mill stuff and with the exception of the known Wing Lung figures, nothing more than generic fare, stuffed in a toob with a cord carry-handle which dates them to the 1990's/2010's . . . not that such toys aren't still around, they are! Just that that's how long they've been in the collection! The toob is packed out with two vac-formed end-cups; another recent practice, while the rest of the contents are second or third generation copies of old 1970's products found in one version or another in many rack-toy play-sets. The known Wing Lung portion of the contents (and everything in the previous image may also be Wing Lung's output?) consists of a small number of copies of the Matchbox US and German WWII figures (and a couple of Brit's) in the 40mm size, going quite well with the Ideal radar trailer - bottom right.Saturday, August 14, 2021
T is for Two - Novelty Vehicular Thingies!
We get used to seeing the Award, Grace or Star branded wagons - copied from European originals, typically Timpo or Britains - on feebleBay from time to time, but how about a money-box!
Imported by a D.A.S. of London in an otherwise un-branded/generic packaging. I think this is (or was) quite recent, from the CE mark; 1980's or 90's maybe, I also suspect it was a charity-shop purchase, but can't actually remember where it came from or when, one of those last Birmingham shows, 2011?
She looks a tad Britains in origin, he . . . Elastolin medieval? The whole wagon (with figures) is in hard polystyrene with 'propylene wheels and horses and an 'ethylene plug to release the savings, hopefully to buy another wagon!It would benefit from a 'paint down' from the current scheme of psychedelic puke! Obviously, painted or not, it's wholly compatible with 50-60mm war gaming or figure collections which is why it's in mine!
While this is more geared toward H0 or 00-compatible war-gaming collections, for which a coat of grey or olive-green would be the minimum requirement! No branding at all beyond the CF stock code prefix, it's a fun thing with two forms of power/locomotion.Verging on 'shelf' or 'big-box' toy rather
than rack-toy, it would have been rack toy budgeted I suspect and it's possibly
a bit earlier than the wagon above - late 1970's? It may - of course - have been an overpriced element of the Hoverspeed gift-shop/duty-free exercise? I well remember the piles of Airfix ferry models at the Purser's window of the Enterprise Spirit class ferries we used to get - now a much sought-after kit!
That's it, a couple of boxed-items, box-ticked!
Tuesday, August 10, 2021
News, Views Etc . . . Not Giant!
http://butisitgiant.blogspot.com/2021/08/golden-trojans-non-giant-gold-plastic.html
Sunday, August 8, 2021
S is for Spiritual Spruce and Sacred Sequoia
I think we've probably seen all of them (or versions of them before) and both Chris and Peter can be thanked for some of these I think, along with some deliberate purcheses by yours truly and a Charity Shop one or two?
Of particular interest is that the marked-Comansi one (PVC, forth from the left blue-on-red giving a purplish look) is smaller than the polystyrene China-made copy (2nd from left, red, white & blue), this is because pantographing can go either way, and those who tell you it always makes smaller copies don't understand the tech'! The silver one is near-flat and the Britains Hong Kong one is missing a base but was in the bag so got in the shot!
The current rack-toy one on the left is the biggest, with copies of Britains Herald and Timpo featuring, along with a grey version of the previously seen brown one from CTS or BMC - can't remember! The other brown one is also a copy of a European original I think, but again I can't remember and haven't the time to look it up [minutes later - Marx re-issue, it's on the old posts!] . . . that's it; Totem Poles . . . again!
Saturday, August 7, 2021
W is for Who Knew! 54mm . . . Giant?
Fly Time for a dollar . . . reduced for quick-sale to 69-cents! And another of the ones I've seen was similarly reduced so it was a 'batch thing'. You get a bunch of 'summer activity' toys (as this stuff is not appreciated, by parents, in-doors!), including two gliders, two 'sycamore' propeller novelties and a parachute toy of a blue 'space capsule', within which you can secrete the figure.
The twisted steel bar is the launcher for the propellers, the small red flicky-bar is for the gliders and the larger red handle is for the capsule.
It took me a while to work out he went in the capsule, as I thought he WAS the 'parachute toy' as a space-parachtist - there are several out there, and that while he could be used as such though the loops formed by his arms, the artwork suggested that's his flying pose or something if you pretended he has a back-pack, or maybe he wass supposed to fall out of the capsule at apogee and fall back?Anyway, whatever the truth (there's no instructions on the reverse of the card), he has a plug-in back-pack and some minimal paint and seems to be a unique pose?
These ex-MPC figures turn-up from time to time, the gold paint, poor detail and lack of originality suggest they are nothing to do with the Giant sets, but they may well be, or from similar '2nd generation' knock-off sets? I've seen two or three different poses now, and both the white plastic and black boots are/can be obvious similarities/coincidences? Despite what some say, Giant were never manufacturers, being only 'jobbers', and as a result we can find the same stuff in other sets, here the capsule, parachute and figure are marked-up to a M. Shimmel Sons Incorporated (MSS) also of New York, and it has instructions! Which explain exactly how you string him up - as a parachutist - set him in the capsule in a specific way and then launch the capsule, so he does parachute back to earth, while the capsule crashes into the ground, momentarily forgotten!Giant; isn't it . . . or not . . . as the case may be!
Friday, August 6, 2021
I is for Isn't it Always the Way!
I've just added an image to the bottom of the Zulu Follow-up post, it's explained there!
https://smallscaleworld.blogspot.com/2021/08/f-is-for-follow-up-native-american-zulus.html
Thursday, August 5, 2021
B is for Britains' Mini-Clones!
For such a relatively short-lived and unsuccessful range as the Britains Mini-Sets, it is rather amazing that there are not one generation of copies but two!
These came in with a mixed lot of figures from Greece just in time for rack-toy month; very crude copies of the Britains Mini-Set US GI's with new, integral bases - I think the standing-firer's base is a truncated 'short shot' moulding, not the intended extent of the design. And - sorry; I still haven't learnt about red backgrounds, especially with tangerine figures!
There's an Indian too! I wonder how much of the range was copied and why . . . die-cast toy vehicle accessories . . . not an Indian surely? Sweet or candy premiums, 'Lucky-Bags'? Ice cream . . . something like that, and likely to be Greek production rather than Hong Kong? The clones are polyethylene against the PVC of the originals and slightly below the donor's 40mm.
I live to collect this stuff!
A is for Ackerman
The first is the nicer play-value wise, if you consider three simplified sandbag walls an improvement over none! And you'll recognise the 'airport fire tender' VAB with twin foam-generators and 6x6 truck from the big overview I did on these back in RTM 2017, which was when it became clear how many of these cheapie die-casts are out of Pioneer's factory/ies.
The 6x6 truck has a less common short tilt, no troop-carrier this one; cargo-carrying in inclement weather! The Hummer's markings have it looking a bit Chinese . . . have they copied it? Oh yes! The Dongfeng EQ2050!
Another set which I shot as one before breaking them down into the thematic tubs this stuff goes to now and probably from a minor maker rather than Pioneer; one of their copyists! King Tiger has banana-barrel; a line you probably never thought you'd read here or anywhere else! Again, these came 'clean' from a charity shop in the last year or two and are clearly painted to type and belong together, actually quite nice; scale's not so shot-to bits, as it often is with these 'matchox' scaled sets, coming-in at around 1:90th? But an interesting choice of subjects which include a Sherman Firefly (or even an Israeli 'Super-Sherman?), late war German SWS (Schwerer Wehrmachtschlepper - Heavy Military Tractor) 3.7cm 'flak-wagon' and an American M20 scout-car.Wednesday, August 4, 2021
Metro is for Play Set
A classic rack-toy; which, when bought (late 1990's) was probably still in the sub-pound price-bracket. An under-scale house, raised flower-bed, picket fence in three parts and store-front, all in polystyrene (or polypropylene - I've never opened it), a blow-moulded soda-dispensing coin-op' machine, a die-cast pick-up truck in the Matchbox 1-75 or Hot Wheels style and a small PVC figurine. It's notable for being aimed more specifically at little girls, rather than boys with blokey army-men or both siblings with a unisex plaything.
Actually . . . I think the 'store front' might be the raised deck of the house!
But, I hope the more observant of you will be thinking "He's shown us this before" - I haven't, or "I recognise that figure" - you should! It's the Galoob 'everyday' clothes Pink Power Ranger figurine, copied in a larger size and they've hardly changed the paint-job!
Fully marked to Pioneer, this is on one level only circumstantial evidence, but strong enough to become empirical over time if the absence of something stronger continues. I have suggested those Realtoy-Daron copies of Galoob soldiers might be connected to Pioneer and that some of the other 'might be Pioneer' figures . . . err . . . might be Pioneer! Also there's the question marks over the Zita and yesterday's Stonegalleon (and the contributed Firefighters - which I haven't forgotten about; Theo and Brian!).Well, I suspect quite a bit of it is Pioneer, probably most of it and that those larger copies of the Galoob figures used by Dacron, Realtoy and Sky Marks ARE Pioneer as is this figure, along with the carrier deck-crews and possibly both baseings and sizes of the firefighter/mechanics and the painted/unpainted GI's seen in previous posts, even the Zita/Stonegalleon may well be Pioneer, as all the combat types/sizes/paint treatments share some poses. It even explains the one softer Realtoy firer in flat-green paint.
Contemporary with the other known makers I keep mentioning in these posts - New Ray, Smart, Soma, Supreme - as they were, if not working together, at least watching each-other very closely as they exploited the same pocket-money and window-box niches in the late 1980's and 1990's. With the lesser Wing Mau and K&M (before they adopted the Wild Republic moniker) also producing bits of this stuff. While in their larger 1:32nd scale Street Muscle series, Pioneer produce very detailed and well made/painted driver-figures
And it's ironic that 2019's frantic Google'ing, astronaut post and firefighter/mechanic follow-ups have been confirmed by something so inconsequential which was in the collection all along! I imagine today's card was one of four-to-six with the other everyday-clothes Power Rangers similarly scaled-up.
And if this is all confusing, the Pioneer or Realtoy tags will get all the musings up on one or two pages, in reverse order of the evidence coming together - with help! I would have brought them all together and re-shot them, but they are away already! I have had some more of the smaller unpainted green ones come-in and they confirm the links tighter with pose duplications.
Oh! And it's sub-branded to the UK importer HKT with a sticker!
Tuesday, August 3, 2021
E is for Enforce . . . Peace!
Continuing a theme, and these are contemporaneous with the Woolbro set we saw earlier; real, proper rack toys I was picking-up in odd newsagents and general stores as I drove around Britain in the late 1990's and early 2000's in a variety of driving jobs or jobs with a lot of driving involved - one store opposite a car park, off a one-way system in either Uckfield or Hailsham (?) on the A22 gave-up a lot of interesting stuff, some of which wended it's way to PW Towers!
Casually branded to a 'Stonegalleon' with randomly positioned stickers, these are in every other respect generics, but a brand is a brand for labeling purposes, and I thought we'd seen my single loose example here as Stonegalleon before, but I only mentioned him in passing, so this is the confirmation!Simple polyethylene 'readymade' and die-cast AFV's, polystyrene traffic signs and a PVC figure each, they were probably around .99p each or £1.50 at a stretch?
Similar to the named stuff from Realtoy, Smart and Supreme, and the bits I suspect to have originated from Pioneer, the figures are around 45/50mm and quite soft, and the SAM-launcher chap is referencing the Galoob-Realtoy pose. I don't think these are Pioneer production, but copying it; the camouflage is simpler that my green (believed to be Pioneer) one or the Zita imports, and they are a tad smaller, but not as small as the other Pioneer line.
The LAV-alike (bottom corner of left-hand set) is poor, while the 'technicals' are cheapo die-casts, but this Marder MICV is all-plastic and probably a poor copy of the - now quite venerable - Roco-Minitanks model? That's it . . . more peacekeepers . . . enforcing!


































