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Matchbox Toy Cars: How They Are Made (1965) | British Pathé

British Pathé · Youtube · 57 HN points · 0 HN comments
HN Theater has aggregated all Hacker News stories and comments that mention British Pathé's video "Matchbox Toy Cars: How They Are Made (1965) | British Pathé".
Youtube Summary
Check out the process of how Matchbox toy cars were made in 1965 at the Matchbox cars factory in Hackney, London.

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#BritishPathé #History #Cars #Matchbox #Toys

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(FILM ID: 315.05)
Cuts exist - see separate record.

Hackney, London.

Begins with fabulous shots of model cars and trucks on a moving conveyor belt. Looks like a surreal motorway with brightly coloured cars moving along it. Traffic a go-go!

Matchbox Cars factory. Shots of men at their drawing boards designing Matchbox models. C/Us of prototypes being created - tiny parts are painted then a wooden prototype is created. Mould is made then scaled down. Man operates a pantograph - cutting a mould. Various shots of cars being made. They are then placed on a conveyor belt and are spun around as they are sprayed by a paint machine. C/Us of wheels being applied and women working on a conveyor belt adding small details like clip in seats.

BRITISH PATHÉ'S STORY
Before television, people came to movie theatres to watch the news. British Pathé was at the forefront of cinematic journalism, blending information with entertainment to popular effect. Over the course of a century, it documented everything from major armed conflicts and seismic political crises to the curious hobbies and eccentric lives of ordinary people. If it happened, British Pathé filmed it.

Now considered to be the finest newsreel archive in the world, British Pathé is a treasure trove of 85,000 films unrivalled in their historical and cultural significance.

British Pathé also represents the Reuters historical collection, which includes more than 136,000 items from the news agencies Gaumont Graphic (1910-1932), Empire News Bulletin (1926-1930), British Paramount (1931-1957), and Gaumont British (1934-1959), as well as Visnews content from 1957 to the end of 1984. All footage can be viewed on the British Pathé website. https://www.britishpathe.com/
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May 29, 2017 · 57 points, 24 comments · submitted by Overtonwindow
DashRattlesnake
I liked this one better:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7baalgg9ZDE

It sound like it was from Reading Rainbow.

djmips
Another one back to the original Matchbox, repeats but a few more details. https://youtu.be/d_Yjyy_Rp2A
amelius
I wonder how many people here, as kids, preferred constructive toys like LEGO over cars. I suspect most people, but I could be wrong.
olyjohn
While a car sitting alone on a shelf is not constructive, there's nothing that prevents the car from becoming a component of a collection of toys that become constructive when put together.

I used to build roads, buildings, garages, towns... I'd set up small construction sites, and even try to engineer my own traffic intersections. You can set up hot wheels tracks, and learn about physics. I learned how to take apart the cars and swap out parts on them. Many of the cars became just another Lego as well.

Sometimes the cars themselves are what would inspire me to build a structure to support them out of Legos or Lincoln Logs, etc.

ourmandave
I kind of did the opposite. I'd take toys apart to see how they worked and then couldn't get them back together. =(
akhilcacharya
Same.

I considered that to be a personal failing at the time.

cr0sh
As a young kid, I loved my Matchbox (and Hot Wheels) cars, but as I got older, I played with my Lego (and Capsela, and other construction) toys more.

I still have all of my toy cars (and cases) - and my last recent addition to my "collection" was three versions of the Isuzu VehiCROSS that Hot Wheels put out; I purchased four of them - one out of the packaging, which I keep on my keyboard as a "fidget toy" - and three others in packaging (sadly, one of the colors wasn't "Ebony Black" - which is the color of my VX - I've been thinking about getting another Hot Wheels VX and custom painting it).

I also still have all of my Lego; in fact, I actually still own most of my childhood toys. I don't know how common this is. I've gotten rid of some of them (I gave away all of my Capsela to a former boss' son who seemed to have an interest in such toys - so maybe that kid will grow up to be another engineer in some form). I also still own my first microcomputers, too (TRS-80 Color Computer 2 and 3).

Has anyone else done this? I just wonder how common (or not) keeping such kinds of stuff is...

vibrolax
I still have every one of my Hot Wheels cars from my childhood collecting years (approximately 1968 - 1972). Except for the dozen or so I repainted in youthful folly, the other ~70 are in fine shape. After my mother passed away, I found another 4 or 5 still in the blister packs that she had hidden away as handy rewards for me or my brother. My plan was to hand these (and some other childhood toys) down to my adult children, but they aren't settled enough yet to care for them.
dugmartin
I loved both as a kid. Almost 40 years later I can still remember glimpses of what I was imagining when I moved the gullwing doors up on my favorite car. Lego was great for realizing what I was imagining - Matchbox cars were great for just getting lost in my imagination.
dec0dedab0de
I definitely did, but my friend had a ton of cars. We used to build huge forts with ramps in them for the cars to roll down.
ghaff
Not really. I was particularly into playing around with slot cars for a number of years.
Graham24
I has and enjoyed both, but did prefer the lego.
Graham24
I had
jdblair
I liked to drive my cars around my lego creations.

Of course, my favorite childhood gift combined the two: Expert Builder Set 8860, the Lego car chassis with working steering, differential, transmission and moving engine pistons. That set is how I learned how the drivetrain in a car works.

lttlrck
I loved that set. The differential was a magical thing to 7 year old me. I rigged up a handbrake using two rack gears that squeezed a gear on the end of the drive shaft. It definitely spurred my interest in engineering.
jimjimjim
Still better than hotwheels.
crispyambulance
Yes, Matchbox was WAY BETTER. They rolled better and looked more cool. I still remember the sound of matchbox cars rolling on linoleum floor.

I recall being super protective of my favorite cars. Whenever I allowed the wrong kid to play with it, they would get rough with it and end up bending the axle. After that, the Matchbox would NEVER roll straight again. Pissed me off so much!

olyjohn
I was surprised to find that they are both owned by Mattel.
bluejekyll
As I remember it, hot wheels tended to have fixed axles, and matchboxes had a plastic tooth over the axle for suspension. Hot wheels were often faster on tracks, but matchboxes more fun.
dang
Url changed from http://www.core77.com/posts/66441/The-Matchbox-Auto-Design-n..., which points to this.
Overtonwindow
Yeah probably the admins cleaning things up.
jstanley
dang is an admin; it was him cleaning things up.
dang
Usually I throw a first-person pronoun in there to make it clearer.
ogfomk
Definitely brought a smile to my face. I loved Matchbox and I liked Hotwheels cars. I would play for hours and hours. I think the best part of the whole toy was the size. Easy to put in your pocket as a kid and with two there was a whole adventure to be had anywhere.

I loved to take car with me on a road trip and just peek through the windows as if I was driving in the car. Great stuff. Again, the size was what made these cars a great toy.

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