Continue to Site

Eng-Tips is the largest engineering community on the Internet

Intelligent Work Forums for Engineering Professionals

  • Congratulations waross on being selected by the Eng-Tips community for having the most helpful posts in the forums last week. Way to Go!

Were you influenced by any of these as a kid...

Status
Not open for further replies.
I also had that block set... mentioning the lintel sections, door and windows confirmed my vague memories of it. I do remember playing with it with my matchbox cars.

“Know the rules well, so you can break them effectively.”
-Dalai Lama XIV
 
I am surprised no one mentioned Knight and EICO kits. AND the biggest most versatile toy; picking up a used car for $50 +/- (in the 50's). You could play with distributors, carburators, voltage regulators, transmissions, brakes, -----no end of stuff; and then see if you could make it run again.
 
This brings back memories.

7 out of 10 for me (sort of). Aurora slot cars, HO trains not Lionel, Gilbert chemistry set, erector set, balsa wood planes ( I forgot the brand name. When I was about 9 my father & I built a bi-plane with a 3-foot wingspan. A few years later I built a Spitfire. After a while my brother & I set it on fire and flew it out our bedroom window), Lincoln Logs, and last but not least the Girder & Panel. I had several - the basic small building, a larger building set that had a working conveyor belt and elevator, bridge & turnpike, the residential set, hydrodynamic, and skyrail.

I also had the red bricks and the white "cmu" blocks in the cardboard tube. Mike- did your cmu bricks come with green and red doors & windows.

My HO trains really annoyed my father. I hardly ran them. He could never understand that I enjoyed rebuilding my layout every few days far more than running the trains.
 
BB:

Yes.

Mike McCann
MMC Engineering

 
One I have not heard mentioned, in the 1950s I had a " House building set" it had a base with perforations that took metal rods about 1mm in diameter. It then had a series of different sized and colored bricks that had matching holes so you could slide them down over the rods.
There were also window sills and door frames, and roof members.
You plugged the metal rods into the base then slid bricks down the rods to make your house added the roof formers and Voila a house.
B.E.

You are judged not by what you know, but by what you can do.
 
This is about as complex as I ever got by following the instructions (I can assure you that there was no fancy cabinet for my very secondhand bitsa collection of meccano)


after that we built robots to fight each other with levers and winches and grabs, but we had to be very patient as all the winding of string onto drums etc was slow. We sometimes used rubber bands to trigger motions.

Of course being the eldest I generally built both machines and decided which I was going to drive, but my next brother was used to that, probably relieved that I wasn't building some sort of torture device.

Here's the steam engine I built from a kit of castings


It never ran on steam, it does run on compressed air, about 25 psi due to some alignment issues in the main bearings.




Cheers

Greg Locock


New here? Try reading these, they might help FAQ731-376
 
Here's the lathe, my dad used it to build several live steam locos, none of which I have seen move along a track! A track int he garden was always a retirement project, I'm guessing not any more.




Cheers

Greg Locock


New here? Try reading these, they might help FAQ731-376
 
GregLocock (Automotive)
That lathe brings back some serious memories.
We had an ML 7 and a ML6 in our school metal shop, I think I was 12 years old when I was first allowed to touch either one of them.
My first project on it was to make a sprocket extractor, this involved cutting a 6" long by 3/8" diameter screw thread using single point tooling. The teacher made us calculate the gearing then select the gear train for the thread form. We then put the anchor bar onto a 4 jaw chuck, centered the hole in it with the tailstock then tapped that hole using the tailstock to hold the tap square.
An exercise that came in handy many years later when I had to use a lathe in real life.
This teacher was the man who persuaded to go into metalworking rather than electronics.
B.E.

You are judged not by what you know, but by what you can do.
 
I had one of those, you could get it to go quite fast if you superheated the steam tube with another meths burner. Yes Virginia, I did melt all the solder.

Cheers

Greg Locock


New here? Try reading these, they might help FAQ731-376
 
Weren't those engines made for Meccano by Mammod. It looks very much like the Mammod SP1.
B.E.

You are judged not by what you know, but by what you can do.
 
Girder and Panel Set, Model Rockets, Tinker Toys, Lincoln Logs, Gilbert Chemistry Set, Erector Set (including my Dad's set), All matter of Balsa Wood Planes (my Dad was heavy into this also), I had the Gilbert American Flyer trains (didn't see the Lionel third rail as realistic), and Slot Cars. I had a pretty awesome childhood and now understand why at age 60 I still don't know what I want to be when I grow up!
 
I never had a House building set but played with one at times. Even as a fairly small boy they struck me as dangerous with all those rods to stab yourself on. My favourites were Mecanno, Airfix models, Lego and an O gauge clockwork train set plus Scaletrix cars. I also had a construction toy with which you could build bridges and which consisted on red plastic I beams and columns that dovetailed into each other. It also had panels to make the road surface.
The best toy of the lot was the farm we lived on - tractors, stationary engines, farm machinery and the livestock - never thought any of that was dangerous though!
 
Blacksmith--your comment about Lionel's third rail cracked me up. I felt the same way and that is why I had American Flyer S gauge trains. Transitioned to HO when I got a little older.
 
I have four sons, so all the toys that were out of reach when I was a kid are now in reach, and I have the perfect excuse to buy them...my first RC car was purchased "for" my 1-yr. old son...

But yes, the ones they always go back to are the Legos, Erector set, etc. Figuring out and building your own idea is always more interesting, no matter what the age.

 
Ornery... Greigers... there's a name I haven't heard of in 50 years... used to get all sorts of semi-precious gems... they were quite inexpensive and had a grinder and tumbler set up in the basement... Bought the odd Heath kit and they were well thought out and quite well made...

Was a time when people used to throw out old TV's, picture tube gone... I showed the neighbourhood kids how to tear the high voltage circut out of them... a relatively safe source of 15,000 to 20,000 volts... just what kids need... I still remember the first time I got bit by the anode...

Dik
 
Dik, it seems to me that I was still receiving their catalog into the mid or late 70's. My father was the one that got me into lapidary, had a grinding and polishing setup in our basement, too! My first project was an enormous jasp-agate cabochon. I found the rough in a gravel pit. At the high point of my hobby, I also had a sphere grinder and 2 18 inch diamond saws, but now I'm down to a geologist's pick. Sad how relocations over the years can thin out the equipment. When traveling, I still cannot drive past a rock shop without stopping, much to the annoyance of my wife.

It is better to have enough ideas for some of them to be wrong, than to be always right by having no ideas at all.
 
Forgot about my steam engine. And here I am working at a shipyard ... hmm
 
Used to buy electronic componenst from Lafyette Electronics and build things with them.
I had a lot of the Kenner Girder and Panel sets. Buildings, highway intercahnge and even a chemical plant one.
Didn't do rockets, but my kids did for a while. Had friends who built one and sent a mouse up in it.
Tinkertoys, Lincoln Logs and Erector sets were in use for many years. My kids got some of them.
Chemistry sets were fun. I had a hugs supply of chemicals and used to mix and play to see what they would do.
Balsa airplanes were bought by the dozen for $0.10 each.
American flyer trains were on a table, made from 3 sheets of 4'x8' plywood in a 'U' shape with a raised conductor control panel with switch controls and dual power supplies. It was in the attic, until lightning hit the house and burned that part of the attic. little damage to the train set, but didn't play with them much after that. The fire was the day that Johnny Miller won the US Open at Baltusrol. We were going to a meeting to hear him speak, but the win meant that he had to change his plans. We were on the way back after finding it was cancelled and the car broke down and my dad tried to call mom and could not get through since the fire dept had disconnected the phones.
Slot cars were hand built and run down at the lcal track with races and all. Fun customizing the cars and making them go faster.
I had those red bricks before my brother started gettintg into Lego. I have a partially assemblied 1/2 scale Lego Ferrari F1 car that my kids got me for Christmas a few years ago.


"Wildfires are dangerous, hard to control, and economically catastrophic."

Ben Loosli
 
I went to the Maker Faire in San Mateo the week before last, and found a guy selling Meccano sets.
He said " In 2000 Meccano bought the Erector brand, which had been sold in the United States since 1913, and unified its presence on all continents. Even today, Meccano is sold under the Erector brand in the United States. "
They had the big tower crane and a locomotive built of meccano .
B.E.

You are judged not by what you know, but by what you can do.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Part and Inventory Search

Sponsor