Saturday, April 5, 2025

Flimsy Flyer

I decided to open up a pack of the 1967 Topps Fighter Planes the other day, thanks to one that popped up on eBay and called my name.  I had an unopened pack already (the five cent version and not the rarer ten cent one) and the example I snagged was also a nickel product, but with some pencil marks and a little dirt on the flip side of the wrapper.  So I opted for a surgical strike and happily managed to open the bottom flap of my new acquisition without causing any real damage to the envelope. Upon removing the contents I was greeted with some surprises.

Here's the pack and what was once inside:


Surprise number one: despite looking like a military-centric version of the Styrofoam Flying Things, which were being sold at the same time, they are made of very thin cardboard with a light gloss on both sides. The cardboard is not much thicker than a stiff piece of paper. I have to say the quality of the graphics was pretty good overall.

Surprise number two: the fuselage had a metal nose clip already attached but a spare was knocking about in there as well.

Surprise number three was that the other side of the fuselage didn't have the MIG-15 designation showing on both sides. Like the Flying Things however, the underside of the wings and tail were black, but unlike FT, there was no manufacturing information present thereon:


I'm not sure these fragile planes would have survived more than two or three flights, which might help to partially explain their scarcity today.  They were known too as a failed test, as this circa 1967-68 Topps trade ad shows them at the bottom right:


But let's face it, Topps always found ways to dump as much failed or unsold product as they possibly could before trashing something. 

I find it intriguing the ad mentions test stores across the country.  I suspect some test boxes were handed out by various Topps salesmen or jobbers as they made their normal rounds. Also of note-there's a small fortune in unopened packs and boxes sitting there!

1 comment:

Brett Alan said...

I had never heard of Captain Nice. Apparently it was a CBS attempt to make a Batman-style camp superhero show, starring William Daniels later of St. Elsewhere fame. It lasted 15 episodes, so if they really did a test issue of it, by the time the test was over it was probably not needed.