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.
Showing posts with label Aurora. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aurora. Show all posts

Thursday, June 17, 2010

1960; [WWII] German Infantry (1st Type), S5 / 01705 - HO/OO

Some people hate this set with a vengeance, I actually quite like it. Yes, like the Combat Group they are little nondescript blobs, with dodgy weapons, but...once you'd got your second type, or a few Esci or Revell - or any of the dozens of sets released in the last 12/15 years (how many German sets?), with their good detail and manly 23mm HO-going-on-1:72 sizing, these make fantastic Hitler Youth!

Lots of Panzerfaust, Panzerschrecht and the little AT rifle thing (28mm AT gun Model 41, s.PzB 41) are all lovely for a last stand at the cross-roads. And yes - I know there are Hitler Youth now in one or two of those 20 or more recent issues, but have you seen them? Horrible little dwarven lumps sculpted like metal war-games figures from the '70's.

"Ah!" I hear you say, aren't these the same?...Well, not really, these are steeped in nostalgia for one, and for another they are - if anything - sculpted for/like composition production, not lumpy metal, the masters being sculpted in wax from the look of them?

Aren't they lovely? OK, they're little blobs, but they're rather nice little blobs if you are a child of the late 1960's-early 1970's! The AT rifle was very useful for conversions, particularly for half-tracks. Favourite poses (way back when) were the officer with his riding breeches, his No. 2 (with the binoculars) and - for the pre-pubescent giggle factor - the wounded guy holding his nut-sack like a squirrel!

Favourite poses now include the kneeling ready with SMG, don't know what SMG, but he gives me a nostalgia hit as does the grenade thrower, and I still like the little gun with its wooden crew!

Little bags like these could be either Christmas Cracker gifts or 'novelties' or cake decorators supplies, but were easily as likely to be found included in 'Lucky-bags'. I know we got these jade-green coloured figures in Lucky-bags around the mid/late-1970's, but  don't remember the 'planes or ships at the time, so I suspect Christmas Crackers for these combination bags.

The aircraft are MPC 'Minis' copies and were issued with all sorts of Hong Kong rack-toys, gum-balls and the like, the boats too have been seen with other HK sets.

Comparison between Matchbox's set and the old and tired (retired by the time they came out) Airfix boys. Although the Airfix set had been withdrawn, it continued to be issued in 'fort' play sets for some time after the Matchbox figures were issued (1976). There is no comparison, although we hated the bases when these first came out, and they are a bit 'flat' due to the limits of the moulding technology at Matchbox, the detail is fine, the animation is much better and they had a mortar and proper MG's!

Fujimi comparison shot, not the best sample of the Fujimi, but I may have a better sample made-up in storage so we can re-do this at some point, they were a mix of the then 1:32 scale Airfix (officer) and Britains Deetail poses, along with several prone figure-poses apparently lovingly hand-sculpted from a pile of cow-muck with the blunt-end of a broken shovel!

This set (like most of the sets with figures) continued to clear the 'old type' long after the 2nd version had been released, and it was late issues of this play-set that contained the Japanese contaminant. I'm not sure why I haven't included a photo here yet as I have a couple around somewhere, but he may be in the Japanese bag....although I've done those pictures too, so he may be in storage with the Miscellaneous Airfix box? I'll add them below when it happens as they need to go on the Jap page and the WW1 German page as well.

Aurora copied the set for their Anzio Beach play-set/kit. My mate David Anderson had the set when we were kids, and although he left it at home, he brought to school and gave to me one each of the pile of tentage/tarps, stack of boxes and an oil drum to prove it existed and I still have them, much treasured possessions - despite having a mint set and several part sets now.

Hong Kong copied these prolifically before better figures (to copy) came along, with different companies (the loosest use of the word 'company'!) apparently copying a different 'menu' of poses, although there more than in this shot, which is what has come-in in the last few years, again storage holds the master-collection of these and larger samples will give-up the fuller picture in the future.

Airfix originals are the bottom rank, and sometimes these come with a mix of Airfix 8th Army copies and a falling casualty, who could be from the Combat Group, but is probably taken from the Britains Lilliput set. The blue row are from the same source as the jade ones in the little bags further up the post, and each row is from a different source. We will return to them below when I get the images sorted out and look at the various sets.











Montaplex-Hobbyplast used the figures in various sets and here we see them in the German Combat Group and El Alamein envelopes, equipped with a [captured!] Radar Jeep in the former and a couple of sub-scale trucks (radio-shack and runway control - I think!) in the latter, which also has a runner of 8th Army knock-offs.

Straight comparison, Montaplex really pushed the boat out with this particular act of piracy, copying no less than fourteen of the original poses with no duplicates. Figures are a bit smaller and slighter and suffer from the usual loss of finer detail.

Another set, another colour and a Japanese-looking bomber! France prepares to fold as the Prussians roll across their green, leafy. rural idyll for the third time in 70 years! Will they ever learn?

Nitto's set is the only one capable of claiming to be superior to it's then rival Fujimi (now stable-mates), based - I think - on Tamiya (or Bandai?) 1:35th scale kit figures and with separate weapons, they are still poor sculpts, just not as poor as the Fujimi set!

Sorting sets back in 2007/'08, the reason for laying them out is that it becomes easy to spot damaged, miss-moulded or converted figures by running you eye along the row, also any paint remnants stand-out like a sore thumb - see the brownish prone figure in the top right of the bottom left image.

You can see four sets already sorted on the other box top, and by counting the streatchers (top left) you know you're looking for another six sets, although out of shot were more bags of bits to be added as those seen are picked...I tended to do a light grey set then a dark grey set, fill the gaps and go again, the fifth set would be a more specific colour (there are some blueish-grey sets).

You keep going until you're down to the last few which you do as mixed (colour/shade) bags to knock-out ofr  a couple of quid at a show, the bargains causing customers to stop at your table, hopefully spotting something else while they wait for their change!

The late WWII sets from Atlantic were much bigger (here showing their homage to the Airfix 1:32/late set), and you can see what I mean about the old Airfix set as making good Hitler Youth!

Atlantic 'Hitler and the Brown Shirts', from the earlier sets however, is a much better match, and while the figure stands higher, that is down to the depth of the base. Careful use of a variable-speed belt-sander, held upside-down in a vice can solve that problem for ever!

Eidai-Grip-Arii also copied the 1st version Airfix Germans, three of them, along with the crew of the risible Sd.Kfz.234 Armoured Car from the same company. The whole set was also included in the big German Secret Strong Point play set, issued again by Arii in recent times and not very 'secret' as it's garrisoned by everything in the range!

I've miss-matched the kneeling figure but no matter, you get the idea! As with the HK and Spanish copies, these lose size and detail (but not as much of the latter) through the poor use of a pantograph, to copy from the original figures. The other two figures are - of course - from the Airfix Sd.Kfz.234 eight-wheeled armoured-car model kit, with the idiot mudguards.

First version 'cartoon artwork' boxes are my favourite, although they pretty-much pre-date me as a toy soldier fan, there were still a few on the revolving wire-rack dispensing 'trees', or at the back of the shelf in Webb's newsagents as I grew into Airfix in the late 1960's.

Comparison with the contemporary Lone Star offering, and LS wins hands-down, the detail on their figures wouldn't be seen on Airfix for some time still, and while probably equally invented, the flame-thrower works better with it's loop of hose and the kneeling firer knows how to fire, while kneeling!

1963 [WWII] U.S. Marines (1st Type), S16 / 1716 / 01716 - HO/OO

Still a favourite set of mine, if only because of the powerful force known as nostalgia! They don't stack-up next to the modern efforts of Pegasus, but there are so many out there they are useful for filling the ranks in large invasion forces!

Airfix never produced a specific set of 'US Infantry' so these doubled-up in the European theatres of many a war gamer, the uniforms being pretty rudimentary - in the sculpting - meant there was little or no danger of rivet counters banging-on about leggings or bayonet sheaths"

A complete set; usually I try to photograph an unpainted set, but I rather like this batch, they came in with a large 1970's war games collection back at the turn of the century and I love the apple-green helmets and the fact that the two dead guys follow the Star Trek rule...those who are about to die; dress in red!....the fat lady in the civilian set has a similar rule!

This is one of the easiest sets to sort without consulting PSR, ATF or Williamson (or these pages!) as it's a simple rule; two of each with boat and bazooka vignettes for a total of 46 pieces.

Colour variations, early sets come in various pallets of dark olive or olive green, later ones are in the paler herb greens or light-olive. When I get a set that is 'clean' but incomplete, the label on the right of the little self-seal bags reads "Incomplete 36 of 46" or something similar, and every few years I have a session with the spares bag, trying to colour match to complete the set.

You loose a lot of the colour difference when you use flash, so I thought I'd try scanning this time...as you can see, the scans are completely different depending on the colour of the background...so that worked! The flash image (top) has the second two in a different order so I've numbered them. between the three pictures you get some idea of the colour range available.

Due to it's age, this set has more variations in colour and shade that all others bar the Paratroopers and Infantry Combat Group, the 1st version Commandos coming a poor 4th! Early sets vary more, as they were still hand-dying the neutral granules at the point of production, later sets would have used pre-coloured granules, and there is better consistency, however, batches and variables like the operating heat still means that late sets (2nd type British Infantry for an example) do have variations, as do the later grey sets such as the Mountain Troops or German Para's.

More scans...this time the ones to the left of the crawling pose are later paler colours (to the eye), the ones to the right are the darker, yet they meld into a complete mix under the scan light.

The only way to get good colour matches is to sort on a bright sunlit day, on a desk facing a window but not in direct sunlight, and with two desk lamps facing across the desk from either side, both equipped with 'daylight' bulbs. The exercise makes you eyes hurt and can't be done by someone with colour blindness. To get a set as 'complete' as possible, you are trying to find figures that passed through the factory within hours or minutes of each other, 40 or 50 years ago! From a pile of figures with dozens of subtle colour differences.

On the left an example of lovely sculpting given the limitations of the still (then) quite new technology. On the right a common problem with this set.

As the plastic moves through the mould runners it is already cooling, it needs to cool in a few seconds, before the moulding is released, as a result where you have a large cavity (in relation to the other cavities in the same mould) there is a danger that the plastic will form an internal membrane where the two travelling blobs (slugs?) meet. In this case it coincides with a detail element as well, causing a weak-point to be created, which over time parts in play!

Another bugger's efforts, I like that he's consulted the old Osprey (or was it a Military Modelling magazine article?) for helmet markings.

A simple scheme of boots, weapons, helmets and flesh; with the exception of the Napoleonics, allied ground crew sets (all the cream sets really!) and the orange-brown 'neutral' sets, this was the intention behind Airfix's plastic colour system with these little figures.

Another 'fault' figure, this is the only on I have among all the loose figures (spread-out on the bed for this photo-session), although I do have a memory of removing this little rock from between the legs of a couple of figures when I was painting a batch back in 1977!

If you found this figure in a tin of mixed junk from a car-boot you'd easily think he was a HK pirate...bright green, flashy, lump of stuff...but he's Airfix all right. I'm not sure how it happened either, it looks to be a chunk of the mould missing, but if that was the case he'd turn-up more often, so I guess it might be extra-plastic (still molten) spilling (under pressure) from the mould as the two halves were parted? Yet the two I remember fixing had the same shape, which means it is a piece of missing mould, so they may just be the final production, showing the need for a new sculpt which followed soon after?

More OBE's, this time there is one of mine...the guy wading with his rifle above his head and the dun-coloured pack is the last of my original figures - the rest are around, but long-ago paint-stripped. He's not from the '77 batch (they never got finished!), he's from about '74 (I was ten!).

The officer, two to the left of mine is particularly well-painted, the gloss green ones have unit details painted on the bases and are from another war gamers army...recognise any as your work?

Comparison with the set that replaced them, while all the poses in the new set had a match in the old set, the pose-count of the old set wasn't matched by the replacements (9 figures to the right). The new ones are immeasurably better sculpts though, and there's really nothing in the size.

The bazooka-man in the new set didn't get a No.2, but as the loader in the old set had spent ten years trying to force a mortar-bomb of nearly twice the calibre into the back of the bazooka the new guy was probably better-off doing his own loading!

The cause of the trouble. Matchbox only produced 7 sets, but they were a breath of fresh-air at the time. There had been no decent competition for Airfix since the start, and while Atlantic were around by 1977, they were hard to locate in the UK to start with, and the range was not that close to Airfix, apart from the Wild West range and there were scale-compatibility issues. The Matchbox on the other hand went mano'a'mano against the sacred-cows of Airfix's WWII oeuvre in the same 1:76th scale. And won...hands-down against these!

To illustrate the point above, lets look at the Atlantic offering...The box had exiting 'comic-book graphics which was an instant 'hook', and a comedy blurb on the back"...did they take part in D-Day? I always thought they were held for the pacific where they were developing a method for dealing with the Japanese that was very different to the slogging in Europe?

Blue-plastic figures are supposed to be the French, also from Atlantic, but they do appear mint in US Marine Corps boxes from time to time. You can see the influence of the 2nd version Airfix figures in these, but given the timeings, they would have been based on the 1:32 scale poses of Airfix's US Infantry - as were most of the offereings we'll be looking at here (Fujimi, Esci, Hong Kong...). They - the Atlantics - are a bit bigger, but a lot of the mismatch is down to the huge bases.

 French Box

 Nitto
 Aurora
 Fujimi
 1st Type boxes
 1975 - Thanks to Kostas
Floating - Just! Due to the two-part construction, it quickly fills with water, something that could be cured by 'glueing' with silicon-sealer...however, if the boat isn't full of water; water-tension pulls the paddlers out and they float-off face-down in the briny! Having the water in the boat actually keeps the figures in situ long enough for a quick photo-shoot.

Meccano magazine from May 1969 has the chaps acting as Bundeswher troops with a Roco-minitanks AFV in the battle-taxi/fire-support role.


Andrzej Kawecki's recycled PVC rubber, kiosk 'Miniatures' Set 2 US Marines compared to the Airfix set, there's a loss of size all round, but the level of copying vis-à-vis detail reproduced is not bad, and a rubber boat made of rubber is going to float a darn-sight better than the Airfix offering. Thanks to Konrad Lesiek for helping ID these.


01716-1; 1/76 scale; 1963 to 1978; 1:72nd; 1:76th; 1:76th - 1:72nd; 20mm; 20mm Figures; 20mm Toys; 24 Poses; Airfix; Airfix 1:72nd Scale; Airfix Model Figures; Airfix Toy Soldier; Contents 44 figures; Date Released 1963; HO - Gauge; HO - OO Figures; HO - OO Models; HO - OO-Gauge; HO OO; HO-Gauge Compatible; Hong Kong Armoured Car; Hong Kong Piracy; Made in England; Made in Hong Kong; MPC (USA); MPC 2-1205 Chopper! Chopper!; MPC 2-1208 Pearl Harbor Attack; MPC 2-8003 Iwo Jima; MPC 2-8005 D-Day Omaha; MPC 2-8052 Breakout From Normandy; OO-Gauge; Plasty (Germany); Plasty 1007; S16; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Marines; US Plastic Soldiers;
Main artwork from the first version box, they all had a listing (not always 100% accurate) on the back, and this one shows how easy it is to sort out a set of these from loose figures; two-each of every pose, one-each of the bazooka-team and both halves of the rubber-boat remembering that the two paddlers are different poses and Bob's-your-Uncle!

01716-1; 1/76 scale; 1963 to 1978; 1:72nd; 1:76th; 1:76th - 1:72nd; 20mm; 20mm Figures; 20mm Toys; 24 Poses; Airfix; Airfix 1:72nd Scale; Airfix Model Figures; Airfix Toy Soldier; Contents 44 figures; Date Released 1963; HO - Gauge; HO - OO Figures; HO - OO Models; HO - OO-Gauge; HO OO; HO-Gauge Compatible; Hong Kong Armoured Car; Hong Kong Piracy; Made in England; Made in Hong Kong; MPC (USA); MPC 2-1205 Chopper! Chopper!; MPC 2-1208 Pearl Harbor Attack; MPC 2-8003 Iwo Jima; MPC 2-8005 D-Day Omaha; MPC 2-8052 Breakout From Normandy; OO-Gauge; Plasty (Germany); Plasty 1007; S16; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Marines; US Plastic Soldiers;
One of the stranger piracies to come out of the hallowed hacking halls of Hong Kong was this crude copy of the US Marines grenade thrower, used as an AFV commander in one of the wackiest versions of several pseudo-Saladin armoured cars!

01716-1; 1/76 scale; 1963 to 1978; 1:72nd; 1:76th; 1:76th - 1:72nd; 20mm; 20mm Figures; 20mm Toys; 24 Poses; Airfix; Airfix 1:72nd Scale; Airfix Model Figures; Airfix Toy Soldier; Contents 44 figures; Date Released 1963; HO - Gauge; HO - OO Figures; HO - OO Models; HO - OO-Gauge; HO OO; HO-Gauge Compatible; Hong Kong Armoured Car; Hong Kong Piracy; Made in England; Made in Hong Kong; MPC (USA); MPC 2-1205 Chopper! Chopper!; MPC 2-1208 Pearl Harbor Attack; MPC 2-8003 Iwo Jima; MPC 2-8005 D-Day Omaha; MPC 2-8052 Breakout From Normandy; OO-Gauge; Plasty (Germany); Plasty 1007; S16; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; US Marines; US Plastic Soldiers;
OBE's; Someone has gone to great lengths in a very small scale to convert the useless 'running-aimlessly-and-unarmed-guy' into a snow-trooper, no idea who's army he is supposed to be in, but with an M1 helmet: late war Italian 'Allies' or the later Korea? Very brittle now, sadly.

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