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My first spaceship
The good old "no nonsense days" when rocket ships came with disentgrator
rays and/or atomic space torpedeos as standard equipment. I had the Rocket Cockpit from Space Patrol - it shot "atomic" soda straws using rubber bands through small rectangular tubes on both sides. Val Kraut "Pat Flannery" wrote in message ne... I had one of these as a kid: http://blog.modernmechanix.com/2011/...rd-space-ship/ The star map was a real one for navigation and was printed by the Naval Observatory; controls on the instrument panel were made out of tinker toys - here's some more on it: http://wesclark.com/am/space.html Pat |
#2
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My first spaceship
I had one of these as a kid:
http://blog.modernmechanix.com/2011/...rd-space-ship/ The star map was a real one for navigation and was printed by the Naval Observatory; controls on the instrument panel were made out of tinker toys - here's some more on it: http://wesclark.com/am/space.html Pat |
#3
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My first spaceship
" Never saw one of those; sounds like it would be a major collector's item nowadays. As with most of the quarter and a box top fare it was coordinated with the show. The new Top Secret Rocket Cockpit included not just a faster than light space drive - but also a time drive. This was a fold together 3-d model with rotating controls etc. You could select pictures of different planets on the view screen etc. You punched out the dials etc, and installed them with brass things with fold out tabs used to hold paper stacks together. One show theme was The Theft of the Rocket Cockpit - two criminals steal the unit and go back to 1950s, Buzz and Happy chase them around Yucca Flats during a Nuclear test - and remember there was no Gamma Null in the drug stores those days. The other goodies included a space helmet with one way visor, Martian Totem Head, special message rocket among others. Val Kraut |
#4
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My first spaceship
On 5/18/2011 11:50 AM, Val Kraut wrote:
The good old "no nonsense days" when rocket ships came with disentgrator rays and/or atomic space torpedeos as standard equipment. I had the Rocket Cockpit from Space Patrol - it shot "atomic" soda straws using rubber bands through small rectangular tubes on both sides. Never saw one of those; sounds like it would be a major collector's item nowadays. Years and years back, I made a cutaway model of the "Polaris" from the "Tom Corbett, Space Cadet" books out of an Aurora Skipjack submarine model and leftover model parts. On the cardboard rocketship the nose gun could be slid in and out to simulate it recoiling on firing, and swiveled a bit up-and-down and side-to-side. The star map really had me going when I first got it, as it was all based on named stars seen from the Earth's surface and their latitude and longitude in the sky, rather than their location in space. I imagine you could really use such a chart for navigation inside the Solar System, but I had wider ambitions. ;-) Pat |
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My first spaceship
On 19/05/2011 9:39 AM, Pat Flannery wrote:
On 5/18/2011 11:50 AM, Val Kraut wrote: The good old "no nonsense days" when rocket ships came with disentgrator rays and/or atomic space torpedeos as standard equipment. I had the Rocket Cockpit from Space Patrol - it shot "atomic" soda straws using rubber bands through small rectangular tubes on both sides. Never saw one of those; sounds like it would be a major collector's item nowadays. Years and years back, I made a cutaway model of the "Polaris" from the "Tom Corbett, Space Cadet" books out of an Aurora Skipjack submarine model and leftover model parts. On the cardboard rocketship the nose gun could be slid in and out to simulate it recoiling on firing, and swiveled a bit up-and-down and side-to-side. The star map really had me going when I first got it, as it was all based on named stars seen from the Earth's surface and their latitude and longitude in the sky, rather than their location in space. I imagine you could really use such a chart for navigation inside the Solar System, but I had wider ambitions. ;-) Pat I've still got one of those books! It's in a packing carton somewhere, but I've still got it. |
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My first spaceship
On 5/18/2011 2:59 PM, Val Kraut wrote:
" Never saw one of those; sounds like it would be a major collector's item nowadays. As with most of the quarter and a box top fare it was coordinated with the show. The new Top Secret Rocket Cockpit included not just a faster than light space drive - but also a time drive. This was a fold together 3-d model with rotating controls etc. You could select pictures of different planets on the view screen etc. You punched out the dials etc, and installed them with brass things with fold out tabs used to hold paper stacks together. One show theme was The Theft of the Rocket Cockpit - two criminals steal the unit and go back to 1950s, I ran across that episode today while looking for info on the control panel toy. Buzz and Happy chase them around Yucca Flats during a Nuclear test - and remember there was no Gamma Null in the drug stores those days. I never saw any episode of that show; oldest stuff I saw first-run was "Men Into Space" and old reruns of Captain Midnight retitled as "Jet Jackson". The other goodies included a space helmet with one way visor, Martian Totem Head, special message rocket among others. Never saw any of those either. Pat |
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My first spaceship
"Pat Flannery" wrote in message ne... I had one of these as a kid: http://blog.modernmechanix.com/2011/...rd-space-ship/ The star map was a real one for navigation and was printed by the Naval Observatory; controls on the instrument panel were made out of tinker toys - here's some more on it: http://wesclark.com/am/space.html As a kid I bought almost the same thing, except it was a big cardboard submarine, not a spaceship. I only remember it costs $6, it had a periscope and had to wait weeks and weeks for it to arrive. http://www.dograt.com/2008/06/20/csi...rine-immersed/ Pat |
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The new Top Secret Rocket Cockpit included not just a faster than
light space drive - but also a time drive. This was a fold together 3-d model with rotating controls etc. |
#9
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My first spaceship
On Wed, 18 May 2011 14:38:28 -0800, Pat Flannery wrote:
I had one of these as a kid: http://blog.modernmechanix.com/2011/...rd-space-ship/ The star map was a real one for navigation and was printed by the Naval Observatory; controls on the instrument panel were made out of tinker toys - here's some more on it: http://wesclark.com/am/space.html Pat Damn! I can remember seeing this on the back of my comic books when I was a kid! Thanks for posting it. I also seem to remember a spaceship, possibly a prize in a contest, that sat four. Anyone remember anything like that? I also remember a contest on the back of the comics where the lucky winners whole baseball team would be furnished with equipment. Damn, those were the days. I can recall sending in a dollar and a boxtop from a cereal and getting an model B-58 Hustler bomber that would drop "The Big One" when you pushed a button pn the top of the fuselage! Wish I was ten again, but only in the Fifties. |
#10
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My first spaceship
On 5/21/2011 4:38 AM, Dimkah wrote:
The new Top Secret Rocket Cockpit included not just a faster than light space drive - but also a time drive. This was a fold together 3-d model with rotating controls etc. You can't fool me, this thing was a disguised TARDIS. Was there any odd acting guy around wearing a big scarf and a beat-up hat when it showed up in the mail? ;-) Pat |
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