EVEN MORE Toys From the 60's & 70's

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024
  • Another Toy video including AFX Racing Set, Aggravation, Penny Gumball Machine, Tootsie Toys, S & H Green Stamps, tribute to your toys and much more!
    Some of the music used here is downloaded from www.bensound.com

Komentáře • 197

  • @ricklaino8996
    @ricklaino8996 Před 3 lety +1

    I was fortunate enough to have all the toys portrayed. ......You are so right about how our generation benefited from toys and playing outside with friends. ........Unfortunately, I see very little of that in today's world!

  • @patsparks8731
    @patsparks8731 Před 2 lety

    I got an AFX set for Christmas in the early 70s. My teenage Uncle would race with me in the garage and we spent most of Christmas that afternoon having a blast. I loved the fact that he paid attention to me. He was supposedly “too old” to play with toys like that, but I never forgot that experience. He also took me and my best friend to my very first concert when I was 13....It was KISS. He passed away from Cancer about 15 years ago- I miss him but I do have these wonderful memories of him.

  • @TheSchmed
    @TheSchmed Před 3 lety +3

    AFX with magna traction, helped the cars stick to the track better.

    • @chouseification
      @chouseification Před 3 lety

      my brothers used to actually put grease on their track, so the cars would sometimes go flying at the corners; I can recall vividly when a future c-list celebrity (in his teens at the time) got hit in the nads really hard by a car launched by my brother. :P

  • @Markus_Andrew
    @Markus_Andrew Před 3 lety +2

    Who remembers Major Matt Mason? I had Matt, another astronaut in a blue spacesuit, and the alien guy, as well as sundry accessories including the Space Crawler, which was an awesome toy. It could crawl it's way over anything and had a working winch at the back. The only problem with those six-inch-high rubber astronauts was that the figure's rubber-coated wire joints would break after they been flexed back and forth enough times and the astronaut would then be permanently stuck in a spread-eagle position. You could then still bend the joints, but they'd spring back as soon as you let go. But the Space Crawler was fantastic, one of my favorite toys as a kid.

    • @christopherdean1326
      @christopherdean1326 Před 3 lety

      I remember that! Never had any of the figures, but I had a satellite launcher thing from the range of accessories.

  • @rockerdowns6051
    @rockerdowns6051 Před 3 lety +1

    Just wanted to tell you how much I appreciate watching your videos. I’ve lost both parents and my three brothers. I’m the sole living member and these videos take me back to a better time. I can still remember playing with my brothers on Lowell avenue in Chicago with many of these toys. My parents gave us a great childhood. Miss you Mom and Dad. Thanks again.

    • @AlleyPicked
      @AlleyPicked  Před 3 lety

      Sorry to hear about your family. What was your address on Lowell Ave? I grew up on Kostner Ave. just south of Lowell. Tom

  • @carlstenger5893
    @carlstenger5893 Před 3 lety +1

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane. I got that exact Aurora slot car track for Christmas in 1971. I was 12. I and my friends would race in my garage or basement for 4 or 5 years. I gave the track to my youngest brother (who got another 4 of 5 years use out of it before selling it to one of his friends). You're absolutely right about the longevity of toys back then. They lasted. They had to.

  • @mikewolosz9456
    @mikewolosz9456 Před 3 lety +2

    As a kid in the mid 60's into the 70's being outside, hanging out with friends, just being a kid was a blast. We never thought about killing each other or that stuff we just had fun. Toys were great, cartoons, TV. We just had fun..

  • @generalyellor2187
    @generalyellor2187 Před 3 lety +2

    So happy I got a glimpse of my last toy ever -- Vertibird!

    • @AlleyPicked
      @AlleyPicked  Před 3 lety +1

      That was one of my favorites! My big cousin kept bumping me out to play with my own toy when I got it for Christmas. :-) Good memories with that toy.

    • @JG-fe1gx
      @JG-fe1gx Před 3 lety

      The vertibird was terrific! I'd try for what seemed like hours (probably mere minutes in non 7 year old time) to get it to hover.

  • @lovejago
    @lovejago Před 3 lety +2

    Man i fell OLD!!!!!! LOL But wouldn't give it up for anything !!!!! 55yrs old and have lots of LOVE (wife/kids) and money!!!!! Love the good old days!!.. Just kinda worried about the way our Country is Heading today.

  • @billb.950
    @billb.950 Před 3 lety +2

    Man, I remember the smell of those motors running.

  • @Mike-pj1kv
    @Mike-pj1kv Před 3 lety +1

    I remember AFX, Aggravation, putting nickels, dimes and quarters in those machines. I am a 70's kid.

  • @DonMachado
    @DonMachado Před 3 lety +2

    I was all about the Hot Wheels and tracks. Especially loved my Sizzlers cars. And we collected Blue Chip stamps.

    • @bumpedhishead636
      @bumpedhishead636 Před 3 lety

      Me too!! Sizzlers & superchargers!! I modified my Sizzlers by taping a 9-volt battery to the top and running thin wires down to the motor. They went like heck until the motor would get hot and burn out!

  • @Hazwaste63
    @Hazwaste63 Před 3 lety

    Probably the one toy that consumed most of my time and money growing up was my HO-scale Tyco train sets, along with the buildings, trees, bushes, telephone poles, Matchbox cars, transformers, and little hand-painted plastic people that were all part of my setup. Had a corner in our basement with a 4x8 piece of plywood set up with an elaborate track setup, along with the other features mentioned. Most of my buildings had lights, and all of my switches were remotely controlled. I could sit down there driving my train sets around for hours at a time.

  • @goodtimeswerehad
    @goodtimeswerehad Před 3 lety +1

    I grew up in the UK and many of the same toys were there and I had some of them. This video was a great trip down memory lane, thanks!

  • @barryfigel9957
    @barryfigel9957 Před 3 lety +4

    Thank you for the blast of the past

  • @brianfergus839
    @brianfergus839 Před 3 lety +3

    Christmas 1971 I got a smaller AFX track layout than the one you show here but very similar. Battling Tops was my favorite game shown in this vid.

    • @AlleyPicked
      @AlleyPicked  Před 3 lety +1

      Battling tops -- one of my favorites. Maybe because one of the tops had the name "Tom" on it. I remember they all had goofy names :-)

  • @anthonydaniel8367
    @anthonydaniel8367 Před 2 lety +1

    Thank you for taking me back to when being a kid was fun

  • @janis902
    @janis902 Před 3 lety +2

    Don't forget GI Joe. I played adventure & fantasy quests with my brother & his GI Joe's. I added my Ken doll, too. He was the sissy cried who about getting muddy & he was the one who always got hurt.

    • @jw2218
      @jw2218 Před 3 lety

      I made a parachute for my G.I. Joe and then threw him off the roof of the garage, it didn’t work. Now I think back I was eight years old on the garage roof. Lol

  • @tbury2516
    @tbury2516 Před 3 lety +10

    Wow, I had almost every toy in the video (had the exact same AFX track and cars). Had forgotten about most of them. I had pretty cool parents!!

    • @lovejago
      @lovejago Před 3 lety +1

      Me to. The AFX!! the Supper ball. And the SUPERELASTICBUBBLEPLASTIC!!!! lololol WOW !!! Where in the hell did Those times go ?

  • @johncbeer
    @johncbeer Před 3 lety +2

    One of my favorites was a Hot Wheels setup that used regular tracks, but the car itself ran on a rechargeable battery, and they disguised the charger as a gas pump. Genius!!!

    • @marktreadwell549
      @marktreadwell549 Před 2 lety

      They were called sizzlers

    • @johncbeer
      @johncbeer Před 2 lety

      @@marktreadwell549 Thanks! I just might have to go hunting on ebay...

  • @johnpatterson4272
    @johnpatterson4272 Před 3 lety +4

    I remember a friend of mine getting that very AFX Race set for his birthday in 1973. It came with two cars, yet you could buy more individually. That was the epitome of being part of the CKC (the cool kids club).

  • @stevehulme9110
    @stevehulme9110 Před 3 lety +1

    When I was a kid
    I had Big Jim and lots of accessories
    Like the Ski ramp search and rescue truck rhino catching truck motorcycle boat camping truck and of June buggy as well as a few other ones loved it
    Still have lots of them from my childhood. Also had 11 1/2 inch G.I. Joe with the kung fu grip

  • @jfwfreo
    @jfwfreo Před 3 lety +1

    I think one of the single greatest toys to come out of the 60s is LEGO. The fact that a company that makes one thing (plastic building bricks) can become the world's largest toy company and beat giants like Hasbro and Mattel that make such a wide range of toys shows the staying power of LEGO as a toy.
    And how many toys let you take everything from ancient Egyptian mummies to futuristic spaceships and combine them in one single creation?

  • @mariarooney6262
    @mariarooney6262 Před 2 lety +1

    I still haven’t seen my most favorite game. OPERATION. My mom said she couldn’t get it as a Christmas present they were all out of them. Well, on Christmas there it was. It’s the most surprised I’ve ever been. We’re so trusting as children. 😊

  • @fazooleq1523
    @fazooleq1523 Před 3 lety

    I just posted about this on an unrelated forum when someone mentioned them:
    I had the steerable one - Oh Man those were a great idea that was a nightmare in reality.
    For the folks that don't know the Aurora AFX HO cars were identical to slot cars except they had no slots. There were three conductors embedded in the plastic roadway and that controlled the rear-wheel motor speed but also a motor that allowed you to actually STEER the front wheels.
    So it would allow you to change lanes where you would hit the guardrail and instantly line up with the other set of three conductors. Basically you followed by rubbing the guard rail instead of a slot.
    Now the nightmare came in because the cars would never change lanes properly and would fly all over and lose their connection.
    But an added feature was that changing lanes gave you a significant voltage spike to allow for a quick speed boost and a pass. So it took about once around the track for every kid to realize if you hold the wheel and deliberately turn against the guard rail you were already following you would get the speed boost.
    This made your car very fast until the motor burned out from over-voltage after about two laps.

    • @ricka5959
      @ricka5959 Před 3 lety

      If that was the set that had the "jam car" I had that one, and yeah, I don't think I ever got the hang of that one. If you weren't going fast enough, you would stall out trying to change lanes and if were going fast, your car would veer off the track and stall.

  • @cooperjackson614
    @cooperjackson614 Před 3 lety +1

    Great vid, thanks. Raised in Findley Ohio in the 70s where S&H was king. I could hang onto a Wham-O Superball about half a day, some how it would bounce into oblivion.

  • @ronk9830
    @ronk9830 Před 3 lety

    When I saw the Aurora AFX package, I was vaguely remembering it, wondering why it looked familiar. We had that set, and had more fun with it than anything. High maintenance, though, as you mentioned. You had to replace the brushes in the cars, and we'd have to clean the car electrical contacts with a pencil eraser. We had a track section with two humps in it (must've been an optional accessory, I don't remember). You didn't dare forget to unplug the transformer when you were done, because it would burn out if you didn't, and they were expensive. Thanks for sharing your toys. Brings back many forgotten memories.

    • @AlleyPicked
      @AlleyPicked  Před 3 lety +1

      Good memories. Part of the fun with the old toys were the interaction with friends. If the toys didn't work so well, at least it got kids working together to solve problems.

  • @johntwelvegage6430
    @johntwelvegage6430 Před 3 lety

    YEAH, The Good Old Times 🤠
    3:20 the Nürnberg Ring in the nursery 🤣
    WONDERFULL GREAT AMAZING VIDEO 👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻

  • @DrunkenUFOPilot
    @DrunkenUFOPilot Před 3 lety +1

    My dad *did* make an Aggravation board out of wood! We called it "The Marble Game" and my sister and I had no idea there was such a thing as a commercial store-sold version. We thought our dad was a genius game inventor. That game got used a million times.

  • @uneducatedruralmistake9311

    Oh man. The memories. My first baseball glove, a Rawlings Billy Williams model was acquired with green stamps. Rock'em Sock'ems, the slot car, etch a sketch, aggravation... nearly all of them you have shown were a big part of growing up.

  • @norcalcor5698
    @norcalcor5698 Před 3 lety

    tanks for the memories those toys brought me so much fun being a kid then

  • @williamavella7533
    @williamavella7533 Před 2 lety +1

    That race track was great! Thanks for bringing back some really great memories!

  • @peterhatzioannides7120
    @peterhatzioannides7120 Před 3 lety +5

    The AFX track was an improvement compared to pre seventies track with the two locking tabs. if one broke the track was useless. Btw run some fine grit sand paper over the rails to get the cars moving.

    • @ogarnogin5160
      @ogarnogin5160 Před 2 lety

      Later AFX track became snap together. My friend had that kind . I preferred that kind over fumbling with the pins . I accumulated around 100 feet of the ThunderJet pin types track.

  • @glennhendrickson7993
    @glennhendrickson7993 Před 3 lety +3

    If someone were to go over my backyard of my childhood home with a metal detector wonder how many hot wheels cars they would find

  • @DC-vv5ii
    @DC-vv5ii Před 3 lety

    Oh my hell, we had that Aggravation game with that box. And I had Etch-a-Sketch, Spirograph, Superball, and Gumbo and Pokey. I played with Gumbo and Pokey so much that the wire came through the it hands and legs.

  • @wesleysept6536
    @wesleysept6536 Před 2 lety

    I love " AFX"! I don't have any sets anymore, but at one time I had a killer collection. I had the adapter pieces to change to the newer track pieces, and the adapters to change to the other brand " Tyco". I even had the hill pieces from the " Turbo hoppers" Tyco set, and on Thursday nights we had tournaments at my place, and yes I always won, cause I had more practice than the people who were coming over. Great video dude. No way, you showed " Smash up derby"! I love that toy, and I do own the one you showed, I also have the Bi Centenial edition.

  • @allancove4483
    @allancove4483 Před 3 lety

    I still have my handheld electronic quarterback, & the baseball game as well. The wife & I also bought Aggravation & rock em sock robots. Plus who remembers toss across. We bought that too. Great way to cure the winter blahs during the winter.

    • @AlleyPicked
      @AlleyPicked  Před 3 lety

      I loved toss across and rock en sock em robots also. Can't ever forget that sound when the head flys up.

    • @allancove4483
      @allancove4483 Před 3 lety

      @@AlleyPicked Sad part is, they made the newer version of the robots not only smaller, but the sound when the heads fly up is not the same either. But the wife & I still love em. It's a great way to let out our frustration. lol But my all time favorite game will always be the old time classic, Stratego. I found one on either ebay or maybe it was on Amazon & I only had to pay 7 bucks for it & the game was just as I remembered it. And all the red army & the blue army were all present & accounted for & the game board was in great condition. Not a bad investment for 7 bucks if I do say so myself!!!

  • @wkruit
    @wkruit Před 3 lety +1

    Finally! An Aurora kit with more than 5 or 6 parts...

  • @bumpedhishead636
    @bumpedhishead636 Před 3 lety

    Oh jeez, I LOVED my Vertibird!! I played with that toy for YEARS. At one point, the spring that rotated at the base broke, and I managed to solder it back together using my father's soldering gun. The joint looked ugly, but it worked!

  • @jchapman8248
    @jchapman8248 Před 3 lety

    My mom use to collect both S & H Green Stamps and Blue Chip stamps. She never used them for toys though, only for household items.

  • @matthewmonsour6235
    @matthewmonsour6235 Před rokem

    I had that exact AFX! I was born in 1970 and had a brother that ❤was ❤4 years older.

  • @user-sy3vv2qt8i
    @user-sy3vv2qt8i Před 8 měsíci

    always good memories.God bless.

  • @Modernaire
    @Modernaire Před 3 lety

    I had a Tyco TCR big rig set. I LOVED it, remember every detail of when and where I my parents bought it for me. I had it until my mid 20s, bust it out at my pad at times, even expanded it with new tracks and cars, decades later!
    I had a 'unitasker' handheld game, it was a bowling game, I forget exactly the brand, but I remember my mom bought it for me at Sears. Loved that thing. Tired of playing with my toys, I'd just move to the handheld bowling, was fun. Had red lights that moved down to knock pins at the end and depending on which buttons you pushed, you'd gain points or something. Black plastic. I always wanted the baseball and football ones, never got around to getting them though. Late 70s or early 80s.
    I had those metal Tootsie toy cars. LOVED those, early to mid 70s. I'd take my light blue VW Tootsie car and 'drive it' up my dad's arm and up over his bald head while he watched Conrad with one leg up on his favorite upholstered chair! Tears of joy. Thank you.

  • @betsygodwin8938
    @betsygodwin8938 Před 3 lety +4

    LOVED this! I saw many of my old toys. Do you remember a toy called something like Vac-U-Form? I think it came out at about the same time as the "creepy crawler" maker kit. And of course, remember the very cool CHEMISTRY KITS?!!!

    • @AlleyPicked
      @AlleyPicked  Před 3 lety +3

      I never had vac-u-form. I watched a classic comercial on CZcams for it and it looked really fun. Thanks for sharing.

    • @bobwallace9814
      @bobwallace9814 Před 3 lety +2

      @@AlleyPicked My brother had a vac u form. It heated up thin plastic and then pressed it into a shape while very hot. I burned my fingers every time. I had a big wood burning kit that was even hotter. It had a pen that would get so hot it burned designs into wood. I always had burned fingers.

    • @jungleno.
      @jungleno. Před 3 lety +1

      Vac-form was my favorite toy. I did get burned plenty of times on it though which is probably why it is no longer made.

    • @matthewmonsour6235
      @matthewmonsour6235 Před rokem +1

      My bro and I had a chemistry set with a microscope and slides. It also had a frog In a jar that looked like it was standing upright in the jar.

  • @rainbowriderjt7833
    @rainbowriderjt7833 Před 3 lety

    One of my favorites were Lincoln Logs! I loved building houses and then I'd take my Johnny Lightning cars and pull up to the new house. I also loved the old GI Joe's that were 1ft tall and had a lot of the play sets. I even had one that talked when you pulled the chord. I had a scuba diving out fit that I put on the one that talked and then put him in the bath tub to see if it really was waterproof. Unfortunately it was not! He never did talk the same again. :( The 70s had some great toys!!

  • @Orlor
    @Orlor Před 3 lety

    Had so many of those.
    My dad made a track on a big plywood board and mounted it over my bed. It had a uphill corkscrew in the back corner where the cars would fly off all the time and I'd have to crawl under my bed and retrieve it.

  • @TGN941
    @TGN941 Před 3 lety

    Awesome track loved AFX!!!

  • @williamm374
    @williamm374 Před 3 lety

    I loved my Guns of Navarone play set. The Sears catalog ads for that thing are still awesome 50 years later. I had fun with that set. Then Star Wars came out!

  • @MrButtonpresser
    @MrButtonpresser Před 3 lety

    battling tops!! Oh my, haven't thought of that since the 70s. Loved that one.

  • @Flap999
    @Flap999 Před 3 lety

    The A-FX tracks were a lot of fun but they were a lot of work. If you didn’t have some light grade sandpaper you were out of luck. But I really knew that I graduated to the big times when the G plus cars came out. They had these very strong magnets that would keep the cars from flying off at the most ridiculous speeds. And they really went ridiculous speeds. Aurora made the best tracks in those days. And you had to lubricate the cars with Marvel mystery oil

  • @michaeldanao6326
    @michaeldanao6326 Před 3 lety +2

    I was 7 years old when I played " TWISTER " , and played with the girls next door ... and had an ah ha ! moment that female anatomy was EXCITING ! child hood innocent 😇

  • @wmrphotography7349
    @wmrphotography7349 Před 3 lety +1

    My mom loves telling the story of how when I was little (around 4-5) I was at the store with her and she gave me a penny and I went and got a gumball and the machine broke and ended up pouring out, I came back to her with pockets full of gum asking for another penny.

  • @bumpedhishead636
    @bumpedhishead636 Před 3 lety

    Did anyone have the Major Matt Mason space toys?? I had a ton of them - the space station, the big alien, Captain Lazer, and his crawler/tank thing, the moon suit and the jet pack. The 60s were a great time to be a kid!!

  • @Hawk1966
    @Hawk1966 Před 3 lety +3

    Jarts! We didn't use the targets. We were the targets! Fling them up as high as you could, then dodge!

    • @AlleyPicked
      @AlleyPicked  Před 3 lety +1

      Didn't see that method in the instruction manual but certainly shows your creativity :-)

    • @Hawk1966
      @Hawk1966 Před 3 lety

      @@AlleyPicked or, admittedly, our stupidity. Nobody got hurt, those were magical times I guess. . . although one lawn dart did punch its way into my cousin's hood, but he was an ass so no one minded 🤣

  • @daveduffy2823
    @daveduffy2823 Před 3 lety

    I had that race set when I was a kid and when I had my kids, they loved it too. My favorite was the Mighty Mo cannon that shot baseball size balls across the room.

  • @davidkyle5017
    @davidkyle5017 Před 3 lety

    I had that very same track back in the day! I remember bending the track contacts ugh!

  • @boydhitchcock9615
    @boydhitchcock9615 Před 3 lety +2

    Sir, That was a great Video. Bless your Heart. Can I come over to your house & play ??

  • @red0953
    @red0953 Před 3 lety

    Aww man, I'd forgotten about Verti-bird from your montage. For a while that was my favorite toy. I built stuff just to have new stuff to move or rescue. I gotta find me a new (old) Verti-bird someday.

  • @jchapman8248
    @jchapman8248 Před 3 lety

    Part of the fun was putting it together! Playing with it with afterward was the fruits of our labor!

  • @davidm4160
    @davidm4160 Před 3 lety

    I had one of those race tracks, they should have supplied the 220 grit sand paper.....I still have one of the cars hidden away in a cigar box

  • @howardgrover8908
    @howardgrover8908 Před 3 lety

    I currently have AFX super G-plus. Replaced the traction magnets with hard drive magnet. Make pick up shoes out of silver, the cars are ridiculously fast.

  • @davidgreen5099
    @davidgreen5099 Před 3 lety

    the aurora slot cars were absolutely the best.

  • @jeffburnham6611
    @jeffburnham6611 Před 3 lety

    Those klackers were dangerous. You didn't realize how heavy those two ends were until it came crashing down on your wrists. I owned a racing track game as a kid with a novelty feature, that allowed you to tap the top of the controller and the cars changed direction. It was a cops vs robbers game with a tilting bridge in the center. The goal was to trap the robber on the side of the bridge that was up so it couldnt get away. Spent countless hours with my friends chasing each other cars around the track and changing directions lol.

  • @gregoryleewalker
    @gregoryleewalker Před 3 lety

    My twin brother and I had the Aurora racetrack but the pieces that locked the track segments together were metal.

  • @imperialpresence3331
    @imperialpresence3331 Před 3 lety

    my first and last race car track was a matchbox motor speedway...it used a janky long spring inside the track to pull the cars around

  • @kenmodel3289
    @kenmodel3289 Před 3 lety

    When I grew up my mom bought me a rocket launcher. It was a metal launch site with a large rocket with a huge spring. My first launch in the house the rocket went right thru the ceiling. After that the spring mysteriously disappeared.

  • @jeffreydavidconner
    @jeffreydavidconner Před 3 lety +4

    Tarnished contacts from age. Use a pencil eraser on the contacts on the car and the track. Your speed will increase.

  • @Praetor_Fenix420
    @Praetor_Fenix420 Před 3 lety

    The Pocket Rocket: it looked like a revolver grip with a short tube attached to the top. It had a latex rubber thing that looked like the nipple on a baby bottle secured on the front of the barrel, drop a bb inside, and pull back and it would launch that bb so fast that it would go through 3 soda cans and the wooden fence behind it. The bb's made a sharp crack sound when launched which may have been made by a sonic boom. They were much more powerful than those Daisy 1077 pump bb guns. I have no idea how I survived to adulthood with these crazy things that were sold to pre-teen kids like me at Big5. And don't forget the Lawn Darts!

  • @richardguzman1491
    @richardguzman1491 Před 2 lety +1

    I loved Stanton hobbies on millwakee Ave

  • @jamesstewart7224
    @jamesstewart7224 Před 3 lety +1

    I had it.lauda and hunt
    More detail than scalextric. the front tires atually touched the track .(spring loaded contact strips ) thanks for the memories. Now Age 56 uk.👍

  • @BR5499a
    @BR5499a Před 3 lety

    I remember when Green Stamps announced it was going out of business. My mother scraped together all her stamps to go redeem them before they became useless.

  • @matthewmonsour6235
    @matthewmonsour6235 Před 3 lety

    Wow@ that thing is complete.

  • @clintwalkerjr5802
    @clintwalkerjr5802 Před 3 lety

    Man I remember my giant G.I. Joes and my Six Million Dollar Man action figures!

  • @matthewmonsour6235
    @matthewmonsour6235 Před 3 lety

    Track cars! I loved the burnt smell those gave off.

  • @guillermo3564
    @guillermo3564 Před 3 lety

    Fantastic flashback!

  • @Stephanvann1965
    @Stephanvann1965 Před 2 lety +1

    Awesome videos!

  • @elsinorebrewing3841
    @elsinorebrewing3841 Před 3 lety

    Me or my brother each got an AFX slot car set every Christmas and the sets slowly advanced with stuff like headlights and the loop the loop tracks.

  • @ilfarmboy
    @ilfarmboy Před 3 lety

    my late uncle made an aggravation game out of wood using 2 pieces when put together made a plus sign fun game

  • @TheSkydogsguitar
    @TheSkydogsguitar Před 3 lety

    I had the AFX track!!!! Wow!

  • @randydoan7536
    @randydoan7536 Před 3 lety +1

    no wonder I am so smart, I had that car set

  • @dbunk9601
    @dbunk9601 Před 3 lety

    I had an afx race set and I can’t remember if I ever made a complete circuit around the track without having to nudge it lol,but i had 3 toys that I really enjoyed was a Fort Apache play set .some sst where you polled the plastic strip and it shoots across the floor those were cool and I can’t remember the name of the toy but it was a helicopter on a stick

  • @gammawolf2000
    @gammawolf2000 Před 3 lety

    Still have my afx sets and yes they still work

  • @ddhill7150
    @ddhill7150 Před 3 lety

    There was a toy in the late seventies for boys called murder building set or something. It
    Was a set to build skyscrapers.i loved it. Anyone else remember it?

  • @adamwright4262
    @adamwright4262 Před 3 lety

    There was a bit debate as to whether Tyco or AFX was the better slot car set. However, the cars were not interchangeable. I think one kid on our block had AFX and the rest of us had Tyco. (I also had, and still have, a Tyco HO train, so it was a logical choice for slot cars, too.)
    S&H were a mostly national trading stamp, but there were regional ones, too. In SoCal, Blue Chip was the main stamp, although S&H was still around. My dad at one time worked for Gold Bond trading stamps in Minneapolis (founded by Curt Carlson of Radisson & TGI Friday's fame). How times have changed.

  • @jeffbecker8716
    @jeffbecker8716 Před 3 lety

    That AFX set is REALLY EARLY. It's still using basically the Aurora Model Motoring track. I got my set for Christmas '73 and it had quick connect track... which had a propensity for the prongs to snap off so there were metal spring clips which could be installed on the underside for repairs.

  • @popps2502
    @popps2502 Před 3 lety +1

    We would Gamble with AFX cars I set up a 20 ft long drag strip all the toys we had back then you had to work on and that made me very mechanical.

  • @morlockmeat
    @morlockmeat Před 3 lety

    That was great! Had almost every toy and game you showed! Even the Lightning Bug Glo Juice! And Super Elastic Bubble Plastic! How toxic was THAT!

    • @AlleyPicked
      @AlleyPicked  Před 3 lety +2

      I think I can almost taste those plastic bubbles still 😁

    • @morlockmeat
      @morlockmeat Před 3 lety

      @@AlleyPicked - 🤮😆

    • @morlockmeat
      @morlockmeat Před 3 lety

      @@imastupid7598 - Yes! That smell! I think I can STILL smell it! Wonder how many times we got high off those fumes and didn't know it! 😆🤪
      Yeah, sometimes you'd get a bigger bubble, if you put a big glob of the stuff on the end of the straw. But they'd never be that colorful - mostly a muddy mixture!

  • @claycountybrian5645
    @claycountybrian5645 Před 3 lety

    Greetings from Clay County, Missouri !
    wow That IS an early A/FX set . Still has the older T-Jet 500 pin-together track I thought they were all the Snap-together style.
    And I was hoping for the Auto World McLaren as shown on the box top :( but the Superbird and Camaro are cool too :)
    MY first slot car set was the Thunder Jet 500 "Golden Gate Bridge " with a Mako Shark and a Ford GT-40 ALWAYS loved the GT40
    Yes, I'm old, I remember 5 and Dimes Woolworths and TG&Y
    I also remember seeing my 1st Digital calculator at a Sears & Roebuck store. 8 digit, about 6 "wide, 12" long and 3" high had a power adapter that plugged in the wall
    4 functions +, -, x, and divide ( my keyboard doesn't even have a symbol for divide wtf? oh, wait / ) oh yeah, and a PERCENT key
    played with that thing for HOURS while my Mom was shopping hey it was 1973 about the time of Pong (other kids were already playing THAT )
    Help my Grandma with S&H green stamps seemed like kind of a rip-off even at 10
    I always thought the "S" was a DUCK, before I learned cursive , YES I learned CURSIVE in Grade 3 I AM old
    Had to smile at the EK bike and the balsa wood plane but NOT at the Gumby :( CURSE YOU, John Paul Pemberton, I WILL find you !!!
    Thanks again for the memories ! 243 thumbs UP 'scribed

  • @blueeyedsoulman
    @blueeyedsoulman Před 3 lety

    I had a lot of these. Nothing left.

  • @hlhs42
    @hlhs42 Před 3 lety

    My brothers had that race car set in the basement. It took a pro to make the dragsters turn on the corners (they were only supposed to go straight).

  • @juliereminiec4937
    @juliereminiec4937 Před 2 lety +1

    I remember the Klacker .. Kids used get a concusion by getting hit in the head
    one of the toys that I had as a very young kid( 3 years old0 was a kid sized verion of my mother's oldsmobile delta 88

  • @danielleduplantis9449
    @danielleduplantis9449 Před 2 lety

    I had a toy in the 60's that I loved...it was a pen called the beezy buzz buzz

    • @AlleyPicked
      @AlleyPicked  Před 2 lety

      There's a flash back. I googled it. I do remember that now. I never had one. Very cool!

  • @cyclenut
    @cyclenut Před 3 lety

    During the 70s I would hit woolworth stores as they had HO scale trains and slot cars marked down to almost nothing. I am not sure if I had that set, because I had enough to fill a basketball court.

  • @clearcreek69
    @clearcreek69 Před 3 lety

    Battling Tops & Smash Up Derby take me back

  • @danstone8783
    @danstone8783 Před 3 lety +1

    Do you remember the Jimmy the Greek football game that used cards on a draw pile to determine game action?

  • @craigfresch575
    @craigfresch575 Před 3 lety

    i got a bunch of different Star Trek models with my grandmas S & H green stamps :)

  • @rchiiibob
    @rchiiibob Před 3 lety

    I am 63 now. As a kid, I played with a battery operated, metal fire truck, or police car, that had siren, lights, and would drive around on its own. Underneath, it had a triangle with wheels, that changed direction, when it bumped into something. The arms turned on the steering wheel. Please show it. Thanks.

  • @johnsantos1348
    @johnsantos1348 Před 9 měsíci

    Does anyone remember ( late 60's ) a set of Futuristic battery powered cars - you could interchange parts causing the cars to run different patterns .

  • @bobwallace9814
    @bobwallace9814 Před 3 lety +1

    Those slot cars were a big deal in the 60's. There plenty of slot car tracks that parents could drop the kids off for the afternoon. The cars were a bigger scale and the tracks maybe 30 feet in length and a half dozen tracks running at all times to race on. All your parts, spare tires, slot controllers and extra car bodies were carried in a tackle box. You could buy a prebuilt car or build your own from scratch.

    • @jeffreydavidconner
      @jeffreydavidconner Před 3 lety +1

      It was a big deal. I lived in a very small town and even we had one.

  • @jasinere35
    @jasinere35 Před 3 lety

    aggrivation is known here as frustration which has the dice in a plastic push N popdome in the centre of board

    • @richardlouis8295
      @richardlouis8295 Před 3 lety

      There was one like that with the plastic bubble called Trouble