Cool toys you had when you were a kid

The Sonic Ear
Loved that damn thing.

I had SSP Racers and Smash Up Derby cars.

I had 5 acres of woods, best “toy” ever!

Another couple of cool toys from when I was really young: the Fisher-Price Tool Kit and the Fisher-Price Medical Kit.

Hey Mooch, google “wind-up Zoids”. I had those too.

I had a Sonic Fazer, with a red LED in the back and a horizontal sliding switch that let you select from five different sound effects.

When I was about seven, my parents bought me a Coleco Telstar Arcade. This thing was huge and awesome as hell and I’m pretty sure it predated the Atari VCS. The console was a giant brown triangle, one side held the gun (which looked like a real revolver), another side was the steering wheel complete with gear shift lever, and the remaining side held the pong paddles. The silver colored game cartridges were also triangle and connected to the console by snapping flat on the top.

I had a stick.
Seriously, after Billy Zech got scraped up falling down the ravine “on maneuvers”, our moms decided we were getting too violent. So they took away all our toy guns… INCLUDING THE EXACT ONE JOHN WAYNE USED IN THE GREEN BERETS.(Yes, The Duke was carrying a Mattel M-16 in that film).

So we found some perfect Tommy Gun-shaped sticks, and lovingly stripped and sanded and oiled them until they were perfect “Nazi-Huntin’ Guns”.

Big +1 on the Big Trak, one of my favourite toys ever! They make adesktop version now with the same functionality!
also had the Smash Up Derby sets, I loved using the station wagon or the Beetle. They flew rather well off out second story balcony…Finding the pieces always took a while.

Estes rockets, GI Joe without kung-fu grip. Boy was I pissed when that came out a year later…
Best toy ever was my Matchbox cars! I spent more time with those than anything else I think. Not Hot Wheels, Not Johnny Lightning, Matchbox! They were always faster on the tracks…My Dad brought me anew one every payday for the 5 years we were stationed in Germany. I suspect that I probably had almost all of them at one point…

Hot Wheels Sizzlers!

And AFX race cars.

I had a water powered rocket. This looks like the exact same model.
http://www.coolest-toys.com/201003/classic-toys-–-water-rockets.htm

The pump also made a good Sonic Screwdriver

I never got them to work well. You’d think a budding engineer would figure out the incompressible liquid thing :rolleyes:

I had about 60 matchbox models. I outgrew them about the time hot wheels came about. I’d play with them with my kenner bridge and girder sets using a sheet of pegboard that never got attached to a wall.

Mixing up Civil War figures, Lincoln Logs and those damned plastic bricks that didn’t have enough windows and doors was pretty cool.
Blew a lot of shit up with the cannon that fired tiny plastic projectiles.

Back in the day, you could get frogmen and submarines as toys in your cereal box. You put baking soda into a little compartment, and as water seeped in through the small hole, the baking soda would produce gas to propel the boat or to make bubbles come out of the frogman’s face mask. Great bathtub toys until you discovered your boy parts made more than bubbles.

1.) The Cosmorama, a toy planetarium that you could set for any latitude, looking noth or south, at any date and time. It was an amazingly complex assembly, filled with chains of plastic gears, and had a huge quarter-of-a-sphere overhead quasi-dome. Incredibly complex to assemble, but worth it. I still have mine, although it doesn’t work so well. I have another toy planetarium that I’ve inherited, but the Cosmorama is WAY cooler

http://www.pielock.com/cosmorama.htm

http://home.roadrunner.com/~limited58/planetarium.htm

2.) The Vac-U-Form – a toy vacuform unit, complete with a heating element and hand-operated pump. You ciould buy sheets of thermoform plastic that fit into its holding frame and make toy car bodies, medals, transparent plastic domes, and other things. Makeup artist Dick Smith recommended it for elaborate special effects makeup. Unfortunately, they stopped selling the sheets of plastic, which weren’t easy to replace. The heating element was exactly the same as the one for the Thingmaker and Incredible Edibles, so the unit was still usable.

http://www.spookshows.com/toys/vacuform/vacuform.htm

3.) the Digicomp – a mechanical computer, using plastic parts, wires (as support units – no electricity) and plastic tubes. There was a marble-operated Digicomp II, but I never had that. They also made the Dr. Nym mechanical compurter game. But Digicomp was more versatile. It had a 3-bit readout.

http://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images?_adv_prop=image&fr=yfp-t-900&va=Digicomp+toy

4.) All the chemistry and science kits, which were way cooler than anything today – I had kits that let me make plastics, electroplate things, gold-coat things, make sodium silicate crystal “gardens”, and other stuff. Older kits used to have spinthariscopes and other nuclear toys. Today’s chemistry kits are missing even the things you need to make Prussian Blue!

+1 on both!

…as well as…this car.
“Why the Hell would you want to buy a car painted silver? Nobody drives those…! Have you even looked at that nice shade of blue!?” :wink:

Anyone else remember Mirconauts?

Back in the early 40’s I had a real live Chemistry Set. Full of things like potassium nitrate, charcoal, and sulfur. Guess what one can make using these ingredients, especially in the ratio 75/15/10.

And things like powered magnesium so it would sparkle as well as go boom. Things were a lot funner back then.

One Christmas I got a Merlin. It was so cool that all my cousins passed it around and I didn’t get to play it for days. It taught me to gamble.

My dad sold International Harvester heavy equipment. He brought me one of these electric remote control bulldozers. You used the box to turn it by changing the speed of the tractor treads. It had a real low gear and was incredibly powerful. For a little toy. That’s one I’d like back.

Most of mine have already been mentioned. I was a serious tomboy and something of a spoiled only child, so I had a lot of toys. The cool ones I remember were:

Vertibird
Creepy Crawlers (though the parents took this away from me shortly thereafter–I think they realized I wasn’t old enough for it after the fact. I was like 6, so I think they were right)
Hot Wheels Sizzlers with the Juice Machine
A whole bunch of Johnny and Jane West figures, clothes, horses, and gear, including a buckboard that was the perfect size to hitch up to the cat (the cat was not amused…I was, though! No cats were harmed in this experiment)
Steve Scout and a bunch of his gear
Big Jim and gear, including his camper (which was way cool)
Evel Knievel Stunt Cycle
SSP Racers (I had two of these–one gold metallic and the other I think was red metallic)
A really cool metal Tonka crane with working hopper thing
Whizzers (honestly I didn’t think these were all that cool, but they were popular)
Which Witch? and Mouse Trap games
The only “girl” toys I had that I remembered enjoying were EZ Bake Oven (until I ran out of mixes for it) and Malibu Skipper (who was less overly girly than Barbie)