One of the only
Airfix sets which had no counterpart sets or 'enemy'. By going down the
NASA route and using non-warlike designs based on actual or planned equipment from the real-world
Airfix lost the possibility of adding vicious space-alien sets and expanding the range exponentially, had they done so, we might never have heard of
Games Workshop and
White Dwarf might have remained the interesting and eclectic magazine it was for its first few issues!!
Instead,
GW became the 'Evil Empire' even as
Airfix folded.
However, it was still a great favourite at the time, men had walked on the moon the year before this set was issued, and with all the little plug-together accessories there was play-value, the cameraman clearly had a ray-gun, the bloke carrying stuff was obviously carrying charges - nuclear charges!!
The chap with the probe was undoubtedly doing something horrible to the dustbin-lid entries on the
Clanger's underground complex while the hover-platform men carried two para-munitions either side of the platform...what? You actually played 'NASA' exploration?...There's some'in wrong wi'yer!
The moon-buggy, a lovely piece, not that accurate but there were so many pre-production prototypes it would have been hard for the
Airfix pattern-makers to get it right, without the limitations of production methods and budget to boot.
Word of warning to collectors - Like the
Waterloo French Artillery wheels, these are now very hard to remove without pulling the mounting spigot/axle off and ruining the thing for all time, so its best to either keep them on or use a tooth-pick or other soft'ish, blunt'ish thin-thing to push the spigot/rod through the wheel, rather than pulling on the wheel itself.
The 'hover platform', not something that actually saw service, but like assault infantry backpacks; something that was experimented with from the 1950's through to the 70's! This 'Fleep' (flying Jeep) actually
looks more like the next one down!
The 'Lander'...no...I haven't the faintest idea...I'm hoping one of the boys from
Moonbase Central will visit here and put me right on this one!! [Thanks to
JFBen (see comments) we now know it's a
Bell Aeronautics LFV or
Lunar Flying Device, there was a one-man version that looked similar]
But...clearly a powerful weapon system for engaging the
Giant space aliens or the evil - scaling-out to - 7-foot-something
LP/Triang humanoids!!
The rear view also shows the (power cable?) difference in back-packs for the moon-buggy crew, these push into the floor-pan of the buggy to aid stability, all the other figures get a normal pack.
Artwork from late catalogues, these seem to be the illustrations from the Long Boxes and look to be very nice watercolours when enlarged. The 1982 image is from the German language version of the catalogue.
For those interested - the font I've used for the dates is a free download called TR2N (ie; TRON) and can be found here
Dafont - TR2N.
OBE's - Once more; I don't have many of these, but they give an idea of the two camps...
NASA realists against militarised warmongers (Me sir! Me!). I think a couple of them have the Space 1999 schemes? And...more
Airfix matt vermilion! (see; High Chaparral).
Re-issued a few years ago in a silver plastic, that's the only real variant for these, there were two hard styrene plastic ones in the Eagle-Lander Module kit which I will add here when time allows.
We've found a monolith on the dark side sir!
Is it a big oblong box-like structure made of something too hard to penetrate and unknown to man, emanating the cry of the universal God-child?
No sir, it's hollow and has Bon-bon Buddies on the underside!
2013 - A Space Oddity!! A complete set congregate round a capsule-egg, to see if there is anything sugery left...
The breakdown of a complete set, the little balls (gyroscopic levellers? They should have had Segways!) for the hover platform are 'the bugger' with this set, being often overlooked at the de-sprueing phase, or easily lost.
Someone wrote the amounts on these sheets (photocopies), unmarked originals, and the newer layout, are both further down the page.
Thanks to Greek follower of the blog Kostas, we have this collage of the box-art and blurb from the 1975 catalogue, the rover here has much larger rubber-tyred wheels than the contents of the box, and seems to have a raised battery on the front deck, the actual one had sort of tension/compression-stressed wire-basket wheels.
We've looked at these over on the other blog, and they appeared on Moonbase, but they need to be here too!
Montaplex; from the vehicle range, they came with a sea-plane/float-plane and a 54mm scaled moped/scooter. The astronaut is larger, while the alien (?) crew of the saucer are much smaller.
Montaplex also produced a set of vaguely HO scale spacemen (or Aliens, the detail is poor!) which included an odd-looking rubber-boat like transporter with seated figures and these small chaps and chapesses. I tend to think they are the children of an Earth colony, helping/learning how to wreak another planet!
Comparisons with other makes/brands: the top shot is of vuagly 25mm vinyl monster aliens, somewhere - in styling - between
Games Workshop's Tyranids and
Bluebird Havok's Pteravore, anyone know who/what/where on them?
2nd shot down is the Jean astronauts, sort of the right era clothing, but definitely the wrong size!
3rd lot are generic rack-toy scale-ups of the
Galoob Expanders line, again too big, but what's scale when you're dealing with giant alien attack-fleet marines from the low-grav sector three rim-worlds?
Final line-up compares the
Airfix bods with three random figures from (left to right) unknown recent play-set,
Kinder and a gum-ball spacewoman
More comparisons;
LP LB spaceman and robot top-left, then clockwise; unknown (but known somewhere in the files - much, much later;
MB (
Milton Bradley) 'Star Bird' figures) astronaut, gum-ball robots and the X-30..."
You can take the helmet off mate, th'dog's fine!"
Top, gum-ball trolls (sans hair), middle the
TSR Buck Rogers Battle for the 25th Century board-game pieces and at the bottom the
Galanites from
Coma...waaaay too big really!
The chap on the left came in a pocket play-set and I keep ID'ing him and then losing the reference...last time was about a week ago! The other is a gum-ball witch, just the sort of thing you might encounter on the dark side...
Bits of a
Payton spaceman's 'Missile Helmet' make the surface station, various other space toys arranged to give the
Airfix chaps (who are otherwise a bit boring!) something to do!
The LB
(Lik Be, formally LP) small scale as supplied to Tri-Ang (Spacex) and MPC (Golden Astronauts) in gold-chrome, but
seen here in their LB Carded/Boxed
set or Culpitt's cake-decoration
versions - top and undecorated in the middle - with the smaller, later MPC clones (for which they probably
didn’t have the necessary permission) at the bottom.
LB later added a pair of more recognisable NASA-Apollo type astronauts
to their range and these are they, they get a slightly sub-scale 'landing
module'; Eagle, and a small flag.
MPC weren’t the only ones to copy LB's
originals, these are Hong Kong generics, and being smaller are pretty-much in
scale with the Airfix, but wearing
the suits of the Gemini/Mercury programs.
K&M issued this rover with a set of larger 45/50mm figures, modern PVC
(probably PVC-substitute) and with non-working wheels, it's still a bit too
large to be recruited into the Airfix
space program!
Other moon buggies/rovers; here from the left, and after the Airfix are - Safari's smaller offering, similar to the K&M one, Realtoy (probably made by Pioneer), the similar but more detailed/accurate model from New Ray's 'Moon Adventure' set and a premium/freebie giveaway from the US powdered drinks giant Tang, which has a simple wind-up elastic motor, leaving a dragging arm visible on the rear right wheel and two studs on the rear left.
The same four machines from the side, obviously the Realtoy and New Ray versions are closest to the original machines, the other two are quite simplified and toy-like, but the Tang has some features in common with the Airfix rendering, leaving me more sure some prototype with a clear front deck might have been consulted for some of these, or Airfix end-up with the Worst Model award!
Peter
Pan Plaything's' provide some near-compatible space
marines in their Operation Aliens
board game, along with a bunch of aliens who must be in scale, as they can be
any-scale from multi-legged dog size to around ten-foot tall! Airfix's chaps wouldn't last long with a
camera and a sample-probe!
A better line-up of the Jean Höffler, and three Giant Plastic Corp. clones, issued as
generics and by Woolbro, these are
probably the 2nd generation copies and a flat red iteration also exists - which
probably means other colours are out there?
These are miniaturised versions of the old Wing Mau/Hing Fat sculpts, or at least
three of them, and they were issued in various generic sets carried by
importers such as JE Toys, PMS and Fancy It Agencies, maker unknown, but they are soft PVC which puts
both Pioneer and Supreme in the frame.
I wondered if the NASA official press-release image on the right, which was used a
lot - back in the day - and is often found in books on the moon-landings/space
race, might be the starting point for the oddly-angled, drunk-looking Airfix pose?
Here's a similar shot, but he's leaning the other way, clearly this is the 'moon stance' - a combination of the low gravity, the weight of his equipment, the way the life-support pack's center of gravity shifts as he walks and finally; the sheer bulk of the multiple layers he's wearing? The Fame
Master 4D puzzle, clip-together, rigid-PVC or similar material Eagle Lander model is a tad on the small
size, but looks the part with the Airfix
figures!
Giant/Toy
House alien and a poor-quality clone (both now on
the But Is It Giant Blog), with the newest (2019) version of Airfix astronaut
for comparison, they are a bit small; but have deadly ray-guns!
Couple of 'Astronits', the R&L fans credit them to Rosenhain and Lipmann, the Euro-premium
fans credit them to Dunkin (et al),
as they are not clip-together kits and are manufactured in softer ethylene,
it's not a call I'm going to make, but they are Airfix size-ready!
For the 50th anniversary of the first
moon-landing, Airfix re-issued them
in a white plastic and I've seen threads on forums banging on about them being
too soft, but they are (or mine are...) pretty-much the same polyethylene Airfix have always used for their figure
sets. Now in a pure white like the old farm animals set!
The odd looking Bell Aeronautics 'Hopper'
thingy actually went together better than I ever remember the original doing,
possibly because I'm older and have done the exercise more often than I ever
needed to!
Overall, this issue is a bit flashy
compared to the original and you can see one of the Fleep platforms has two failed pins in the tool, resulting in a
pair of long protrusions which have to be carefully removed without damaging
the fine edge of the platform's lower ring.
The re-issue is under the 'Vintage Classics' program, which is
more of a marketing exercise than anything else, but when you're wanting to
charge full-whack for decades old tool-production, I guess you have to get
inventive!
The 41 suffix is retained within the
stock-code, but the whole code is in a new format: A00741V. Also, the given-scale
(1:76th) is both specific and accurate for the first time in those
nearly fifty years - the set was first issued in 1971!
Oddly - having had a silver issue at some
point - the art room were given an old cream-yellow set to work with, on the packaging?
Again; with a thumbnail history of the set,
including a credit for the original artwork but not the sculptor!
The new insert is a tad more cluttered than
the old one, which will appear here if I ever get the Airfix box liberated from
one storage unit or another!
Polish copies come to us via Lew Prokolijew (Lev Prokoliev), Lew/Lev
translates literally as Lion, but I don't know if that was used/they were
branded/known as such? The artwork gives away the clone nature of the contents
even before you turn it over to view the figures, although there's more
excitement in the backgound, that ship's about to hit the dirt with a force of
a small A-bomb!
The control column hole is filled with
flash from another failed-pin in the tool (different country, different tool, same tech' problems!),
and I'm won't to drill it out given the age and rarity of the set, which came
from Chris Smith, a regular contributor to the Small Scale World Home
Blog. Also; camera-guy has no backpack (it's in the bag) as his receiving hole
is blocked with the remains of the locating-stud - another reason for not
taking a drill to the Luna Rover.
Eh-Hayyyy! Flag-waving competition! From
the left: Airfix original, larger
figure I'm pretty-sure now is Pioneer-for-Realtoy, Galoob Micromachines, Airfix
again, Airfix new and Lew Prokolijew copy.
Both sides of the first version (or "White") long-box, done in a nice sky-blue and with the little painting guide 'thumbnails', not that they were called that then!
Both sides of the earlier instruction sheet, much clearer that the current one (some shots above), and it's worth repeating; be very careful pulling the wheels off, push the locating-stud/axle back through first with a fingernail or toothpick (or something similarly gentle) or you may break them off, I have no advise for the
Bell two-man lander thing, the current re-issue seems to work better than it ever did when I was a kid!
My box also has a complaints slip in a rather fetching green, the complaints slip seems to have been phased-out during the run of these box types (and the move to France under
CPG/General Mills/MPC), probably! I might have said; UK box = slip, French box = no slip, but I don't know where British boxes with a French sticker stand in that - admitted - guesswork! In fact I did say that, but then quickly edited it, as this is a French box, so that's not a theory, it's not even sensible thinking out loud!
Just a bit of fun, but the 1970 issue of the catalogue had this on the cover, promoting the model kit, the model as photographed is a master with much finer detail than the finished kit tool, and the figures haven't even been borrowed from the set being looked at here (as they were, for the finished tool), but are apparently hand-made maquettes?
But it wasn't actually in the catalogue (the 'Seventh'), being only announced in the '1970 Construction Kits' leaflet/flyer, later in the year, alongside the moon-landing related Sea King (tranfers and paint instuctions) helicopter and the Apollo-Saturn launcher (1:144th scale) kits.