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 Roskopf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Roskopf. Show all posts

Saturday, January 8, 2022

H is for How They Come In - June 2021 - 2 - Three Days in June

Toward the end of May last year I went a little mad on evilBay, call it shopping therapy, call it depression, call it extravagance . . . it wasn't a good time, there were no shows, lock-down was into its 26th month and it's comforting to go and buy shit, however transitory the feeling it brings, so that's what I did! And I like to think I have a good eye, so it's all worth a look, these are some shots I took not long after the Postman had been!

Tuesday 8th June - Parcels from the four corners of the world here, almost, with packages from Amazon, the USA, Ukraine and Greece all arriving together! From the latter came the Louizos Toys Wild West set, which I hope contains cowboys around 50/54mm and probably of the Solpa type, but I don't know as it's sealed, and having never seen one before I thought I'd better keep it sealed for now!

Below the unknown cowpokes we have a set of Teenage Mutant Ninja Hero Turtle Anthropomorphic knock-offs from the former Soviet Union, and bunch of Japanese glico-style spaceships and UFO's, but from the 'States, and a rather nice magnetic bottle-opener which was one of two I got in the last 18 months or so, I thought it looked like a Matchbox GI-copy, but it's closer to the Marx 60mm sculpt.

This single parcel arriving the next day was several lots from the same seller (Tony; a friend of the Blog), and contained all sorts of nice things, starting in the top left-hand corner, and moving vaguely clockwise - several swoppet knights, some Elastolin 54mm and some Hong Kong copies of Britains mounted Swoppets.

Below which is a handful of the RP issue of Co-Ma's Roman sculpts, with enough duplicates for me to send the five I hadn't previously been able to, to Peter, small thanks for all he sends to the blog, and who I'd originally sent my only one, we now both have a full set!

An empty swoppet box I can fill at some point! Two empty Airfix boxes and a bunch of loose Airfix figures, two of the new 1:144 war-gaming AFV's which have become popular, literally over the lifetime of the Blog! Below them are two Roskopf blisters, which are nice as I previously only had them loose, or in the small tan boxes, while in the bottom corner two sets of the Roco-Minitanks 'Artillery Group' (copies of Tamiya's 1:35th scale desert-attired 25lbr crew), so I will - at some point - make one up.

The 'box-square' of figures to their left are more modern HK/China (Rado) & Caesar and older Roco and Eidai figures in various amounts with a Japanese officer from Marx Miniature Masterpiece's lines.

To their left a mix of larger figures and above them smaller Giant, post-Giant and Montaplex, other HK figures of interest and a 45mm Ri-Toys (a.k.a. Rado) French soldier taken from Airfix. In the centre we have an Airfix boxed 6x6 truck, a post-Giant two-horsed, articulated chariot, Eidai FlaK's (one mounted on a  half-track) and Roco SPG.

While the 11th brought a very eclectic mix, which I thought to shoot, but not the best photograph of the three, nevertheless full of nice things!

In the distance, lined-up on the laptop is some Comansi Wild West, but not just any-old Wild West, they are the five character sculpts (husband, wife, two kids and uncle) from the High Chaparral, in front of them some cake-decorations (I can't even remember - one looks Chinese?), a 20,000 Leagues Under the Sea (Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea . . . heehee!) diver from Remco, another PVC bird from that set we looked at the other day and some Toy Major knights.

We saw the two Soviet-era AFV's back in the summer or autumn, the V2 will be made up at some point, I intend to compare all three - Condor, Eidai and Revell! While I'd forgotten the two Hong Kong AFV's, they are the same maker as the one we looked at the other day, so I'll be able to cannibalise one of the Dingo's to give the Humber it's missing set of wheels.

Other AFV's include two guns and the weird six-wheeled AMX30! Three swans (?) a bag of ? (something), and finally; a set of Supreme Saracen/Livonian type knights made up an eclectic list of arrivals. Most got sorted away quite quickly and sent up to the storage unit, some just packed in 'To be Sorted' boxes, so I will have the fun of discovering them all again at some point!

Saturday, February 16, 2019

R is for Roskopf

'Redhead' and I think I'm guilty of nearly always using Roscopf with a 'c' in the past, and will probably do so again in the future, my bad, but I'll try to get in right in this post! A post which is really only a small-scale box-ticker; looking briefly at the figural output of this Austrian maker's military range.

1 Roskopf Miniatur-Modell 100th HO NATO Warpack Plastic Toy Soldier Figures DSCN0568
How they came in! Each set was available painted or unpainted and seem to have been removed from the runners in the factory or at the out-painters, unlike their German rival Roco Minitanks' which tended to be sold on the runner, but unpainted only. RMM stands for Roskopf Miniatur-Modell.

151; 151a; 181; 181a; 183; 183a; 184; 184a; 185; 185a; 1:100th Scale; AFV Kit Figures; AFV Kits; ATGW; Austrian Toy Soldier; Cold War Era Troops; HO - Gauge; Machine Gunners; Made in Austria; MG Gunners; Miniatur Modell; Mortar Man; Mortar Team; NATO; Plastic Toy Soldiers; Rmm; Roskopf; Roskopf Miniatur-Modell; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Warpack; Warsaw Pact;
Marching and advancing infantry; Set 181 - 8 Soldiers with Weapons (set 181a painted) consisted of only four figure posess, and they are quite thin and crude sculpts, but when they came out there wasn't so much opposition and very little in the nominal scale of 1:100th, although that is a moot point as we will see in a forthcoming post.

There's a possibility that the unpainted set is also numbered 151 in some catalogues, either as a foursome or, possibly from before (or after?) the painted sets were offered, or even just a typo?

151; 151a; 181; 181a; 183; 183a; 184; 184a; 185; 185a; 1:100th Scale; AFV Kit Figures; AFV Kits; ATGW; Austrian Toy Soldier; Cold War Era Troops; HO - Gauge; Machine Gunners; Made in Austria; MG Gunners; Miniatur Modell; Mortar Man; Mortar Team; NATO; Plastic Toy Soldiers; Rmm; Roskopf; Roskopf Miniatur-Modell; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Warpack; Warsaw Pact;
185/185a Five Soldiers with Infantry Weapons, this set reveals exactly the era it was issued in, with the now anachronistic bazooka and the ground-launched, wire-guided missile operator on a camp-stool (ammo-box!) with his clear line-of-sight to the people firing-back at him! They are based on other figures around at the time (Monograms 40mm and Roco's copies) but I think it's more familiarity of the others leading to similarity, rather than any direct piracy?

I have lost the two Sagger-looking rockets which accomany this set in the unpainted lot, and the painted lot's are both damaged!

151; 151a; 181; 181a; 183; 183a; 184; 184a; 185; 185a; 1:100th Scale; AFV Kit Figures; AFV Kits; ATGW; Austrian Toy Soldier; Cold War Era Troops; HO - Gauge; Machine Gunners; Made in Austria; MG Gunners; Miniatur Modell; Mortar Man; Mortar Team; NATO; Plastic Toy Soldiers; Rmm; Roskopf; Roskopf Miniatur-Modell; Small Scale World; smallscaleworld.blogspot.com; Warpack; Warsaw Pact;
Sets' 183 - Sitting Figures & 184 - Drivers and Passengers and 183a/184a were seated figures for the AFV range the figures were designed to accompany, and I only have partial samples of each.

With drivers and co-drivers/convoy sentries (184/184a) on the left, and 'loads' for troop-carrying trucks etc . . . (183a) on the right. Again there is a hint of Monogram/Roco in the trooper and again; these also seem to be the basis of the similar EKO set, which also produced them in the same dark-green polystyrene.

As well as being pretty crude, these figures are also quite generic and could be used with NATO, Soviet or neutral state equipment, especially after a bit of paint - both the lack of detail and the diminutive stature hiding a multitude of sins!

I suspect I still have to track down the contents/examples of a 182/182a unless they are the rockets for 181?

Saturday, October 15, 2011

T is For Trucks - Overview

A bit of a gratuitous post today, these are mostly old photographs I took about ten years ago with my old 35mm Zenit, and in the course of packing for a forthcoming move, I though I'd scan them into the PC, they seemed to scan OK so I collaged them, and am throwing them up here for the hell of it!

Top left to bottom right, clockwise; Airfix (both Types) double convoy of NFIC, the three Tudor*Rose trucks and some slightly smaller trucks from the Beeju stable, with a 'Home Farm' Blue Box type Bedford.

Hong Kong cheepies, modern style to the left of the older - but still available - rack-toy trucks. Below them a 'Mini-car' from VEB Plasticart on the left and some kits on the right, Matchbox, Airfix and Hasegawa in front; Esci behind.

Two scratch builds from Airfix, and an assortment of die-casts top, Matchbox and Dinky bottom left with various other bits bottom right - Corgi x2, HK, Montaplex and a Dime-store toy from the states by...can't remember! A birds name I think...Montana? I'll have to look when I get home! [Mohawk!]

The inset image is the other reason for this post, linking in with both the stuff I posted a few weeks ago, and the forthcoming article on these mini-copies of the old Lone*Star/Kleeware truck, a Kleeware is on the far end of the row, the very tiny one is from a resent Christmas Cracker.

Marx reissues and an original ambulance (copied from the Dinky Daimler of the 1950's), Roco-minitanks early pattern Unimog (correction; I think this is the Roskopf one?), one each from Jean (right) and Manurba (left) and three Blue Box.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

V is for Volkseigener Betrieb (VEB) Part 4; Military Plastics

The Mini Car G5 Army Crane-wagon, one of the favourites from my collection, VEB Plasticart produced a really nice range of trucks - primarily for the model rail market - and military versions of many were turned-out. Given the neither Roco nor Roscopf made much Warsaw Pact stuff, it is worth tracking these down if you wish to war game the Cold War in 1:76 (not far-off HO).

Tracked stuff in Plasticart/Espewe packaging, the best - in my opinion - is the Soviet designated; ZSU 57-2, here called a Fla-SFL 57. Far more successful than Sgt. York (and pre-dating it by a decade or two!) and much cheaper than the Gepard family. The BTR 50P, as already mentioned is the first to carry a MAB die-cast body, while retaining Plasticart packaging.

A comparison shot (click on it for a better look, until I post it I won't know how good it is, as I've had to work on it in Picasa, and it's pixelation may have been degraded?). From left to right, rear of each pair first;

Roco Minitanks - plastic T34/76
Roco Minitanks - plastic T34/85 (same chassis)
Roco Minitanks - plastic T44
Roco Minitanks - plastic T54/55 (same chassis)
Unknown Russian - die-cast T34/44/54 (???)
Plasticart/Espewe - plastic T54/55
Roscopf - plastic PT76
MAB Mobile - die-cast & plastic PT 76

This image throws up some interesting stuff, not least of which is the Russian effort, these were sold right through the 1960's/'70's and '80's, yet have all the sophistication of the funny little semi-fictional slush-casts of 1930's/40's American companies like Barclay, Manoil, Grey Iron and Ideal. A lot of these simple Russian toys (which I will cover in greater detail another day) were produced 'ad-hock' during factory down-time, in facility's that were - in the normal scheme of events - supposed to be producing tractors or washing-machines!!

Roco claimed to produce in 1:87 scale and Roscopf claimed 1:90 as their preferred scale and this is born out in the photo, however, the plasticart T54/55 is a tad on the small side while the MAB Mobile PT76 is equally off the other end of the scale, being to big!. It's worth noting that the Roscopf range of 'warpac' stuff while not great, was considerably better than the Roco Range, as they were different scales, there is no 'not treading on each others toes' reason for this , and it made using them as recognition models in the forces problematical, as soldiers got the impression all Soviet stuff was smaller than the equivalent NATO vehicles!!!

Also - given the rarity of models of T44's in any scale, I will continue to believe the Russian one is supposed to be a '44, note the flat sides to the turret and post-war extended fuel tank positioning!!!! IT'S A FORTY-FOUR!!!