Friday, 17 February 2012

The Promise Of A Quercetti Fireball XL5 Spaceship

During the mid sixties my family and I spent a week  at a Pontins holiday camp at Middleton Towers near Morecambe. It was notable for being the largest camp in the Pontins empire and for having a huge entertainment centre built in the shape of an ocean liner, named the  S.S. Berengaria.                         
 
But for me one of it’s main attractions was a gift shop selling toys.
 
In the shop one particular item stood out from the rest, a Quercetti Fireball XL5 spaceship.
 
Not many XL5 toys or models were available at the time.  I was never  aware of the Fairylite version and the plastic kit from Lyons Maid Zoom was only available mail order. The Quercetti XL5 was extensively advertised in comics exploiting the colourful box artwork and it looked great.
 
For a holiday treat I asked my Dad for the spacecraft with the catapult. That was my mistake, I should have been more specific.  I was given the Quercetti Tor spacecraft. A fun toy, I’m sure you’ll agree - but it isn’t an XL5.
To make matters worst the spoilt brat in the next chalet to us got a Fireball, although, after one day of play he did lose it on a chalet roof!
 
Anyway, from that day on I promised myself that eventually  I’d possess a Quercetti XL5 and fire it into space, avoiding chalet roofs of course! .
 
The years passed and life moved on. The next time  I came across a Quercetti XL5 was when I attended the first Fanderson Convention in 1981. During the charity auction a boxed example was offered. It went for far more than I could afford. - and dealers had a nice high book price to work with.
 
Fast forward to the present , and the evils of eBay.
 
All I wanted was a reasonable example of a toy that is, let’s face it,  nearly fifty years old.  I’d seen a few dog eared, well used and dubious examples of my target toy, but then a decent and apparently unused one came up. I bid and won it.  I probably paid too much for it but what the heck, I had been waiting for a long, long time.
 
And what do I think of the toy after my wait?
 
Well, considering it’s a flying toy it’s a pretty good representation of it’s TV counterpart. Any deviations are probably there to aid it’s performance in the air and to accommodate Quercetti’s clever parachute opening system  . The durable yellow Fireball Junior of which there are two versions depending on the weather, no doubt helps in finding the toy following landing . The instructions enclosed are very detailed, even giving technical notes about the working principles of the Fireball. The decals are quite adequate considering that the odd scratch would be unavoidable.  The only real downside is the Steve Zodiac figure which is simply a generic spaceman.
 
Much as I‘d like to fit the decals and catapult my Fireball way up to 200ft in the air, thereby finally fulfilling part of a promise made all those years ago, obviously that’s not going to happen.
 
The damn thing is just too precious now.
 
Still, in spite of that my heart is still a Fireball and it was well worth the wait.
 
Mike B (age 6 years & 564 months)

13 comments:

  1. Great story, Mike. Curiously quite a few MIMB examples of this particular Quercetti XL5 have been popping up on eBay over the last couple of years, been wondering from where they originate. Still going for hefty prices.

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  2. Glad you got one after all those years.

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  3. Tell me about it... :(

    Being the type of toy this is, not many bought ones would have survived intact. Mine's never been used so I suspect it's probably some ex stock find or something which found its way into the collectors market.

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  4. Mike, that's a super story. And the "age 6 years & 564 months" is hilarious! And I did the calculation ... (grins).

    I tried doing my age the same way, but the calculator persists is saying there is some kind of overflow error. Cheek!

    The generic spaceman is rather nice in himself, but I agree it is a pity three wasn't an actual Steve Zodiac figure. That seems a bit of a surprise, given the effort they put into the XL5. Sigh.

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  5. Wotan, if you're willing to "gen up" a bit, some of my fellow model rocketeers have built and flown flying models of Fireball XL5 - and with real rocket power, not a wimpy (no offense!) catapult! (NO, I CAN'T build one to launch off a rail - safety rules mean you have to point them straight up!!)
    Grif

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  6. I agree with you regarding the spaceman, Toad. Considering there's a nice depiction of Zodiac and his parachute on the box, you'd think Quercetti would have gone the extra mile.

    BTW Trust you to do the calculation on the months : D

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  7. (laughs) ... well, you know me. Plus, I am studying for GCSE maths this year - teacher says we should take every opportunity to practice.

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  8. Don't try flying it; I had one, and it never performed half as well as the Tor rockets!

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  9. Don't worry, Andy. My XL5 is staying safely on the ground.

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  10. That is spooky. I had one as a kid. But I lost it on a chalet roof at a holiday camp! Nah, can’t have been me, I wasn’t a spoilt brat.

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  11. I had one of these, purchased whilst on holiday in Ayr.

    I left an impression! a nasty scratch along my face and neck where the outer wing rocket caught my face as it launched. ouch

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  12. I had one when I was about 3 or 4 when it cost 10/6 - got another one when I was about 8 or 9 for around 2/6 - obviously old stock. I acquired another two (in their boxes, but costing considerably more) quite a number of years ago - one exactly like the one in your picture (the same as I had as a kid) and another one which is all silver, with an orange Fireball Junior. There's no alternate nose cone with the all silver version - it's not even mentioned in the instructions.

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