One especially fascinating toy was usually displayed next to the Johnny Seven OMA and was accorded equal footing on my wants list. This was the Gun That Shoots Round Corners and I assumed at a young age that i'd never see one.
A vintage tv advert from 1964 also shows a pistol version and a larger combat set for the gun, complete with launching grenade, plane and a pair of bolas. The next workshop project for me is adding the candy container rocket to the guns arsenal, in lieu of the original grenade! The gun is cocked by pulling a wooden shaft at the rear, but the spring is so strong, I doubt many kids would have managed it. releasing the spring fires a blast of air down the barrel, squeezing out the balls from the under barrel magazine.
Needless to say, I had to have a play with it!
The pistol version, although advertised with the rifle on the tv [Ad below coutesy of You Tube], is completely different.
A very modern looking gun and oddly enough, modern combat specialists are developing just such a weapon for use in the battlefield today!
I do vaguely remember the ads for the rifle but OMG I had that space pistol and sold it a couple of years ago without knowing exactly what it was!!
ReplyDeleteDamn! Thats a shame. Hope you git a goid price ed!
ReplyDeleteNope - sold it cheap! RATS!!
ReplyDeleteI guess wear and tear isn't as bad as when the Jerries used it for real?
ReplyDeletehttp://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z56SNHHL60U
;°)
Paul
Ha ha - well ive not managed to fire one round yet, let alone 300!
ReplyDeleteI remember a water pistol from the early-mid 1960s where the nozzle could be turned so that it fired at an angle or near-sideways.
ReplyDeleteWas that the red thunderbird one?
ReplyDeleteThink it may have been- memory is not too good on detail, there.
ReplyDeleteI challenge you toa duel Wote, my Johnny Seven V. your Corner-shooting rifle. Moonbase. Garden. This August.
ReplyDeleteWhat you need to ask yourself,woodstock, is "do you feel lucky?". Well, do ya ? Punk?
ReplyDelete