times since the counter was installed.
This page is primarily concerned with my own collection of Dinky Toys from Meccano Ltd. of England; it will also delve into the former A. C. Gilbert ERECTOR SET line, apparently since bought out by Meccano, Meccano's own line of mechanical building sets, and Hornby trains. It would appear that Meccano was first brought out by Hornby.
PAGE INDEX:
On the main Meccano Dinky
Ca. 1950 Dinky Toys Catalogs.
Drawerful of Dinky Toys.
On this Meccano Dinky Continuation Page 1:
Dinky Meccano Aircraft Models (moved from Aviation
cont. page 4 on 12 Feb 04)
Motorized Dinky Airplanes?
(21 Mar 08)
Hornby Trains (to follow).
On separate pages:
TRACKS (for tanks and artillery tractors) - does anyone out there know where a correspondent can get replacement chain-link tracks (not the later rubber tracks)?
From the main Aviation page, here are the images of the Armstrong Whitworth Ensign and other models of the WWII era, from old Dinky Meccano catalogs, as supplied by the Dutch correspondent:


Just for comparison, here's the Dinky Meccano model of the Avro York; quite different, with a rectangular fuselage and a triple vertical stabilizer (tail) empennage:

This is ALL wrong! The model in the box has broad, rounded horizontal planes and the Ensign has high-aspect-ratio trapzoidal planes and a single tail fin! ???
[Dec 99 - Corgi makes an Avro York in a slightly larger scale (1/72? - my old Dinky was probably 1/144) and now has an executive version@.]
@ - from Corgi: "Corgi 47204 - AVRO YORK - RAF Kings Flight - Avro York LV633 "Ascalon" was built for use by King George VI and Winston Churchill. It began service in May 1943 and was mainly used by the Prime Minister. After the war it served in the Far East for three years and was scrapped in 1954. (Available April) - Wingspan 216mm."
The Dutch gentleman kindly sent this cutaway of the Ensign (artistic license makes it look like a civilian British version of our giant Boeing B-15):
(21 Mar 08)
Other than the olive drab wheels with white rubber t(i)(y)res (noted on the previous page) from old Britains vehicles, I didn't recall that I had ANY surviving Britains, Ltd. (or William Britain) pieces (other than late-model RCMP and London Guards figures) until it dawned on me that there was a modified cannon in my "Fourth of July" box. Sure enough, there it was (I was sure that I'd just written this up elsewhere - it turned up on my Military Miniatures page - more there); I had modified the breech so that, when I fired caps in it, the smoke and flame would issue from the muzzle, instead of spewing sideways from under the striker. I assume it is a 24/25-pounder:

(10 Aug 2005 photos by and © S. Berliner, III - all righhts reserved)
There is no model number on the piece, only the name "BRITAINS" under the trail and an auctioneer lists it as a "Naval Gun".
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