If this is your first visit, be sure to
check out the FAQ by clicking the
link above. You may have to register
before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages,
select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.
I wanted a Cabbage Patch Doll when i was growing up, i never got one though, i would get presents that were creative, like craft sets, plastering kits to make models then paint them, i did enjoy them though. I remember my brother got a chemistry set one Christmas and we tried to make stink bombs with it.
There were lots of them as far as I was concerned, mostly because my parents were never the middle-class "Ask the Family" sort who play Monopoly or the Game of Life after the turkey and trifle on Christmas Day. I was jealous of how the other half lived, I can tell you.
I was someone who "conveniently" forgot when it was Toy Day on the last day of term.
Thanks, Marc. The name doesn't ring a bell but that's the one I recall. Thinking about it, I can well imagine those nylon lines getting very twisted and snagged. I suppose it comes under the Mouse Trap banner of it looking good but reality revealing it to be very different.
I can't recall its name, but it was a mock-up of an aircraft carrier flight deck. You could launch a model Phantom, fly it around and land it back on the deck via a system of wires. The advert made it seem so cool but I never got one so no idea what they were really like.
My cousin had this. It was called Super Flightdeck. The reality was, after a couple of successful landings, it was boring. There was also the problem of the wires, nylon fishing line, getting tangled. It looked good on the TV advert, but in reality a total waste of money.
I can't recall its name, but it was a mock-up of an aircraft carrier flight deck. You could launch a model Phantom, fly it around and land it back on the deck via a system of wires. The advert made it seem so cool but I never got one so no idea what they were really like.
Corgi Volkswagen 1200 with steerable front wheels. There was also a driving school and German police version.
I had all of these. I don't recall the rhino coming with the red safari VW, I probably lost it or it got lost in the zoo set from Britains.
The German VW was green and white and had a light on the top which turned the wheels. The driving school corgi I had (light blue iirc) was a morris oxford with a big red steering wheel on the top.
OK, what I meant was chemicals that could be used for things like, for example, bombs, poisons etc...
I know this because my brother used to buy them so he could make things explode!
Actually, it's not that difficult if you know what to mix. Sugar is a fine example. A lump of coal ground to fine dust was another good example. Could we make a bright flash with coal dust..........
As a kid we'd play this album at Christmas and i'd always look at the Rockem Sockem Robots and wish I had one (and the Action Man Scorpion Tank):
Then for my birthday the other week, my mate bought me one! My very own Rockem Sockem Robots! (albeit the new reissue which isn't quite as good but still) that's one toy i NEVER had crossed off my list!
OK, what I meant was chemicals that could be used for things like, for example, bombs, poisons etc...
There was plenty of stuff in the chemistry lab at secondary school that could be used to make explosives. My classmates in Y7 reckoned that I couldn't make nitroglycerine with a few commonly used chemicals until I blew up a fume cupboard! I should have used more ice.
Leave a comment: