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The Cincinnati Enquirer. Retrieved August 10, 2010. "Online auction bought by eBay is going local". The Cincinnati Post. March 23, 1999. "four rode 'net to riches". The Cincinnati Post. March 18, 1999. "Top toys auctioned on Internet". The Cincinnati Post. December 13, 1997. Cohen, Adam (2003). The Perfect Store: Inside EBay. Back Bay. p. 135.
Pages in category "Toy cars and trucks" The following 117 pages are in this category, out of 117 total. This list may not reflect recent changes. 0–9. 1:12 scale;
Serpent – Dutch radio controlled cars. Sesame – French toy plastic trucks [84] SG Racing Cars – Italian radio-controlled cars; Shepherd Micro Racing – Italian 1:8 radio-controlled IC track cars; Shinsei Mini Power (models) – Cranes and construction vehicles, also plastic toy and remote control cars. Siccom – Italian 1:8 radio ...
Toy cars and trucks (5 C, 118 P) M. Model rocketry (1 C, 35 P) P. ... Pages in category "Toy vehicles" The following 3 pages are in this category, out of 3 total.
Doepke Model Toys are a series of model toys produced by the Doepke Toy Company, based near Cincinnati, Ohio, USA. Doepke made several different types of toys including model automobiles such as the MG , 1955 Jaguar , a fire engine , trains and construction vehicles including bulldozers , graders , loaders , earth movers and cranes .
Tootsietoy is a manufacturer of die cast toy cars and other toy vehicles which was originally based in Chicago, Illinois. Though the Tootsietoy name has been used since the 1920s, the company's origins date from about 1890. An enduring marque, toys with the Tootsietoy name were consistently popular from the 1930s through the 1990s.
A separate gift pack offered this truck with five cars. Another truck in the series was a Husky moving van with "Husky" molded and brightly lettered in red on the sides. The first models featured dark grey one-piece plastic wheels and chromed plastic bases. These cheaper bases made the models lighter and perhaps less durable than Matchbox cars. [3]
At around 1:64 scale, ZipZaps were only slightly larger than popular die-cast toy cars such as Hot Wheels and Matchbox. [5] A tiny 5-segment commutator less than 2 mm in diameter, on a direct-current motor in a toy radio control ZipZaps car. ZipZaps were unique among toy-style micro R/C vehicles in that they could be customized much like large ...