Category:Hornby Speedboats
Meccano/Hornby/Dinky :
Hornby Series | Dublo | Speedboats | Modelled Miniatures |
Serie Hornby | ACHO |
Toy Brands and Manufacturers |
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Hornby Speedboats |
1932 - |
July 1932: "Launch" of the original Hornby Speed Boat, 1932 [image info]
Hornby speedboat, gold foil sticker [image info]
June 1934: "Summer Time is Hornby Speed Boat Time" - another double-page advert centrefold, from 1934. The scale of the boat is somewhat exaggerated... [image info]
July 1934: "Hornby Speed Boat Time", double page centrespread advert in Meccano Magazine, July 1934 [image info]
JUne 1961:Post-war, Hornby Speedboats numbers 3, 4 and 5 [image info]
Hornby speedboats, post-war (circa ~1963} [image info]
"The NEW Hornby Speedboat" was advertised in Meccano Magazine in 1932. Choice was initially limited to a single model available in three two-tone colour schemes, but before long, Meccano Ltd. had a whole range of very good-looking enamelled metal clockwork-powered Speed Boats and Racing Boats.
The spelling of "Speedboat" was variable - Company advertising tended to break it into two words ("Speed Boat"), while the gold foil sticker on our museum example says "Speedboat" as one word.
The NEW Hornby Speed Boat: 500 feet on one windng!
Boys, here is a new thrill – tthe Hornby Speed Boat! She has finer lines than any you ever saw, with speed written in every inch of her streamlined hull. On one winding of the powerful motor she races away for a distance of 500 feet, smoothly riding the waves, just as real speed boats do.
The Hornby Speed Boat measures 16½ inches from bow to stern and 3½ inches in beam. She is available in three different colour schemes: Green and Ivory, Red and Cream, and Blue and White. Her motor is made on the same lines as the motors of the famous Hornby Trains.
If you want to have the jolliest of summers this year buy a Hornby Speed Boat and have races with your friends.
— , Meccano Ltd., , Meccano Magazine, , 1932
Prewar range
The initial range of Hornby speedboats were available until 1939, and by ~1936 the range consisted of a clutch of named speedboats:
- Hornby Speed Boat No.1, Hawk,
- Hornby Speed Boat No.2, Swift,
- Hornby Speed Boat No.3, Gannet,
- Hornby Speed Boat No.3, Condor,
- Hornby Speed Boat No.3, Curlew,
- Hornby Limousine Boat No.4, Venture,
- Hornby Cabin Cruiser No.5, Viking,
, three "racers":
- Hornby Racing Boat No.1, Racer I,
- Hornby Racing Boat No.2, Racer II,
- Hornby Racing Boat No.3, Racer II,
, and a clockwork Duck Hornby Water Toy, which was presumably not meant for racing.
The boats were heavily advertised during the 1930s in Meccano Magazine, often having the colour back page, and several times earning a double-page centrespread advert (in black and white).
Relaunch, 1960
The boats stopped being available in 1939 with the outbreak of war, but a new range of plastic-shelled Hornby Speed Boats (with brass propellors and rudders) was launched in 1960.
Hornby Speed Boats
Famed for Reliabiliy and Realism
Here are three excellent scale models of popular marine craft. Each ispowered by a strorng nickel-plated clockwork motor, giving 120 to 140 feet on one winding. Propellors and adjustable rudders are of solid brass. You'll be proud to own a Hornby Speedboat. The use of high impact Polystyrene in these models enables toughness and strength to be combined with greater buoyancy and accurate detailing of the decks and superstructure.
— , Meccano Ltd., , Meccano Magazine, , June 1961
A genuinely innovative touch that Hornby advertised in the Sixties was their use of a "key float" – a red and yellow high-visiblity hollow plastic float that was tied to the key. This addressed a number of problems: the boat did nothing without the key, but unike a clockwork locomotive, if the owner mislaid the key, even if they had a spare it was likely to be at home and they would probably not realise that they needed it until they were already at the boating pond and wanting to wind up their boat. Keys were easy to lose in grass, and even easier to lose in the water of a boating pond, when one was fumbling with the side of a boat with cold, wet, slippery hands, and looking for the keyhole.
Pages in category ‘Hornby Speedboats’
The following 6 pages are in this category, out of 6 total.
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Media in category ‘Hornby Speedboats’
The following 25 files are in this category, out of 25 total.
- Colouring-in sheet - Racer III.jpg 3,508 × 2,482; 812 KB
- Hornby Cabin Cruiser No5, 'Viking' (1935 BHTMP).jpg 1,247 × 801; 111 KB
- Hornby Limousine Boat No4, 'Venture' (1935 BHTMP).jpg 1,245 × 702; 93 KB
- Hornby Racing Boat No1, 'Racer I' (1935 BHTMP).jpg 959 × 411; 44 KB
- Hornby Racing Boat No2, 'Racer II' (1935 BHTMP).jpg 1,031 × 413; 49 KB
- Hornby Racing Boat No3, 'Racer III' (1935 BHTMP).jpg 1,253 × 403; 60 KB
- Hornby Speed Boat Club Badge (1935 BHTMP).jpg 260 × 260; 13 KB
- Hornby Speed Boat No1, 'Hawk' (1935 BHTMP).jpg 899 × 591; 75 KB
- Hornby Speed Boat No2, 'Swift' (1935 BHTMP).jpg 1,019 × 625; 81 KB
- Hornby Speed Boat No3, 'Curlew' (1935 BHTMP).jpg 1,240 × 633; 104 KB
- Hornby Speed Boat stands (MM 1936-10).jpg 709 × 1,035; 140 KB
- Hornby Speed Boat Time double-page (MM 1934-07).jpg 2,438 × 1,609; 521 KB
- Hornby Speed Boat, new (MM 1932-07).jpg 1,204 × 1,635; 521 KB
- Hornby Speed Boats (MM 1934-06).jpg 2,431 × 1,581; 522 KB
- Hornby Speed Boats (MM 1935-06).jpg 1,605 × 2,155; 826 KB
- Hornby Speed Boats (MM 1935-09).jpg 1,605 × 2,163; 778 KB
- Hornby Speed Boats (MM 1936-09).jpg 1,204 × 1,622; 476 KB
- Hornby Speed Boats double-page (MM 1933-04).jpg 1,620 × 1,086; 333 KB
- Hornby Speed Boats double-page (MM 1933-08).jpg 1,618 × 1,076; 307 KB
- Hornby Speed Boats No3 No4 No5 (MM 1961-06).jpg 1,106 × 1,400; 285 KB
- Hornby Speed Boats twopage (MM 1935-06).jpg 1,601 × 1,072; 348 KB
- Hornby Speedboat No3 Twin Cockpit River Launch, Una (MM 1961-06).jpg 835 × 463; 68 KB
- Hornby Speedboat, sticker.jpg 800 × 600; 165 KB
- Hornby Speedboats (MCat ~1963).jpg 1,600 × 1,121; 261 KB
- Hornby Water Toy (Duck) (1935 BHTMP).jpg 858 × 407; 50 KB