Saturday, 4 April 2026

Even Mo' Molab!

Cereal producer Kellogg's had an established tradition of including a small toy or novelty in boxes of cornflakes, as an incentive to buy the cereal. Australian novelty manufacturer Rosenhain & Lipmann Ltd had been supplying small plastic model kits to Kellogg's for a number of years previously, including Gerry Anderson shows Thunderbirds and Captain Scarlet as well as Wacky Races and many others. With the new series 'Joe 90' adorning the boxes of 'Sugar Smacks' cereal, Kelloggs added a series of space vehicles to the line of models. 


R & L as they were referred to, made 8 simple snap together models featuring a space theme, with a mix of real and conceptual vehicles. Among them was a vehicle described variously as a 'Moon Exploration Rocket Car', 'Moon Vehicle' and 'Shuttle'. The little bubble shaped car had fins and intakes, more reminiscent of a streamlined submarine and a large circular cockpit window with a smaller turret on top. This was the perfect kind of incentive I needed to get my mum to buy more cereal, but as I wasn't fond of the sugary confection, she was very resistant to spending money on something that would invariably get wasted. After much cajolling, whining and badgering, I was eventually allowed to get a box of Sugar Smacks and amazingly, inside was the little buggy I had been desperate to find.

The little kit was sealed inside a cellophane wrapper and moulded in two colours of plastic. The modelling was excellent, with fine detail and smooth castings with no spare flashing. I hastily made it up and added it to my fleet of small space toys. It still survives to this day, battered, repaired, painted, glued and with almost all of the six wheels replaced.
Somehow I also managed to procure the Atlas Rocket on Gantry and my second favourite, the Rocket Transporter. Neither of these have survived the intervening years, but I have since been able to find replacements.
Another later acquisition is the rather cool space station, the design of which is copied directly from a piece of concept art by the Northop Corporation in the mid-sixties.
The same premiums were issued by Kellogg's Japan, but with different packaging art.

The R&L model story did not end there however and it transpired that as the practice of putting small items in children's cereal was phased out due to safety concerns, the company found another way to re-use the kits and the tooling necessary to produce them. The late Andy Yanchus, a model maker and employee of the Aurora Model Kit company, was approached by R & L with a view towards marketing the small kits in a toy line called 'Snap A Roos'. See Andy's fabulous Flickr feed here: Kellogg's Sugar Smacks - Joe 90 Space Vehicle premiums | Flickr

The same models then appeared in a large set by Spanish company Diko  with a cardboard moonscape and 12 mixed models from the range.


In the early 1970's British toy company Tri-ang, which had found great success with a series of inexpensive space toys called Spacex Interspace Miniatures, was preparing the release of a second series of toys, as the company ran into financial difficulties. Most of the second wave of toys made it onto store shelves, including a very distinctive design of moon buggy, which Tri-ang called a 'Molab'.


The Molab shared its design with the little Kellogg's vehicle, with bubble shaped body, jet streamed fins and four large wheels and it was apparent that both Tri-ang and R&L had used the same concept for their model.


Previously, in 1953,  Alex Schomburg had provided a painting for the cover of a short lived pulp magazine called 'Rocket Stories'. It only lasted 3 issues, but the July 1953 issue featured a streamlined red moon buggy, which was indisputably the inspiration for both models. The illustration was also reprinted in a text book in 1964 by Collins: 'Men on the Moon: Based on America's Project Apollo'.

Although the book clearly does not reflect the 'Project Apollo' at all, it is an interesting read, with lots of clear painted illustrations, which have probably been culled from other publications. However, the publication date (and the american version a year earlier) clearly point to a definite source of reference for the two models, although it is clear that both designs evolved independently of each other, as the R&L model has two spare wheels at the rear of the hull.
Despite the fragility and disposable nature of the premiums, a lot still survive, almost half a century later, both as unmade, sealed packs or as pre-built models. Since buying my first box of Sugar Smacks and securing the light green model, I have managed to find three more. Some, such as the latest grey version, were missing wheels, but they are easy to replace, along with a small aerial made from extruded plastic sprue.







I was lucky enough to find a pale blue Rocket Transporter from the same seller, too - the version I originally had back in 1970!

15 comments:

  1. I like these a lot and remember them fondly from the first time around! I've got the Thunderbirds ones and the Captain Scarlet ones but am missing the Mercury Atlas and launch tower.

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    1. they turn up regularly in Australian auctions, but do pop up now and again here

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  2. Mo' Molab ?
    Wasn't she the Northern Ireland Secretery in the last Labour government ?!

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  3. Great post Wrote. Glad the new models arrived safe. They look great. I never had any of these models I don't think. Did Mexico have access to R&L moulds? There are so many Mexican cereal models including tons of space designs like the Nova and Booster Rockets. Are they official releases Bill?

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    1. R&L sold off all the tooling and moulds to a company in Mexico, so there are some premiums - like Crater Critters available today. The more complex models like these are not as readily available, but the single piece castings of figures, turn up quite often, usually in dayglo coloured plastics. Bill

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    2. Ta Bill. The Mexican space range is huge.

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    3. I’m not sure if the Valigursky designs are R &L originals though, I think they are later, but not sure who made them. Bill

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  4. Wow, wow, wow. What a terrific article, on an obscure side of the toy (and model) industry. These tiny space models are too cool for words, and their origins are even more amazing. Great work! SFZ

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  5. LUV IT! Great post Bill!!! While I've seen most of the toys in this post, the rocket transporter is new to me - excellent!

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  6. Paul Adams from New Zealand4/04/2026 8:43 pm

    Academy did a boxed set called Transportation in Miniature, which included 16 assorted cereal kits - planes, cars, ships, and space. The Apollo CSM and Lander, Astronaut, and a radar dish. Around the 1980s. I think these were the R&L toys ?
    A really great article, and history. Thank you.

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    1. They probably would be the same models Paul, as R&L sold off all the tooling when they went bust around then Bill

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  7. Fantastic post Bill . I find the cross fertilisation of some of the designs fascinating. Will O

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  8. Yes! Fantastic post! These miniatures were a part of my childhood and I still love the designs.

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  9. A good story well-told, Bill! And very good to see your photos on the subject again plus the wonderful new ones! Best -- Paul

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