Category:Scalecraft Limited

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Toy Brands and Manufacturers

Scalecraft Electric Kits, logo.jpg

Scalecraft Limited

Scalecraft Limited of Twickenham produced a range of motorised snap-together plastic kit vehicles. The range included a number fo racing cars and a go-kart (refelecting the popular interest in motor racing in the Sixties), and then a set of disparate examples of one of each of a bit of everythign else that might be motorisable: a breakdoen lorry, a few boats, three quite diferent tpyes of aeroplane (including a Spitfire), a helipcopter, a traction engine, and a tank.

Motors

The kits were advertised as "Made in England" / "Motor Empire Made", which in this case, meant that the motors came from Hong Kong, manufactured by Kim Toys (whose logo was designed to look like a cross-section through an electric motor). The examples we've seen so far just used a single AA-sized 1.5V battery.

1963 advertising text:

" Scalecraft CLIP-TOGETHER Kits'
Made from durable Plastic. Easily assembled – NO TOOLS! NO CEMENT! All complete with battery-operated electric motor. Can be built and rebuilt. Figures, where illustrated, are not available nor supplied with kits. "

Addresses

  • SCALECRAFT LIMITED, Colne Road Works, Twickenham, Middlesex

Range

Paperwork supplied with the "Electric Skiboat" kit that we have in the museum lists the range as being:

  • Cooper Special
  • Go-Kart Racer
  • AA Breakdown Lorry
  • Lotus "25"
  • B.R.M Grand Prix
  • Aquaplane
  • Motor Torpedo Boat
  • Jaguar "E" Type
  • Westland Helicopter
  • 1940 Spitfire
  • Speedboat and Water Skier
  • "Medway Queen" Paddle Steamer
  • Cessna 180 Seaplane
  • Aveling Porter Traction Engine
  • Mark VIII Centurion Tank

The listing on the lid of the box for a Lotus 25 also lists

  • Patrol Jeep with gun
  • "Ikwerre" Jetting Fireboat Tug

, so presumably these two appeared a little later.

The exact names of the models varied across listings, depending on how much space the names had to fit into (in some places, the Cessna 180 might just be listed as "Seaplane"), so the above list of names are partly canonical, and partly expanded from information given in Scalecraft's descriptions. We dont know if there might be further, later models not listed above ... but since the range already seems reasonably thorough, there might not be.

External links

Pages in category ‘Scalecraft Limited’

The following 2 pages are in this category, out of 2 total.