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  2. WHEE-LO - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whee-Lo

    A plastic piece at one end of the track serves as both a handhold for the toy and an adjustable slider to position the width of the track. The narrower the track, the faster the wheel goes, because the axle is thicker in the middle and you get more distance per each rotation of the wheel. Widen the track, and the wheel goes slower.

  3. TootsieToy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TootsieToy

    Arms protruding from the underside of the body were pinched around the axles after the wheels were added, which held wheels and axles in place. Many Tootsietoy cars are still made in this basic manner, though in the 1970s and 1980s, plastic interiors and other parts were also added. [citation needed] late 70's 3.5" Tootsietoy

  4. Auburn Rubber Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Auburn_Rubber_Company

    The Auburn Rubber Company was a rubber products manufacturer best known for its line of children's toys. [1] It was probably the largest producer of rubber and vinyl toys in the world, though Norway's Tomte Laerdal, Finland's Plasto, and Sweden's Galanite were major European producers.

  5. Polistil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Polistil

    By 1968, the company had also experimented with plastic wheels on low-friction axles – similar to changes made by Dinky, Corgi, Lonestar and others in reaction to the success of Hot Wheels. These added to the play value but detracted from the realism.

  6. Model car - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model_car

    Toys in the United States almost always were simpler castings of zinc alloy (zamak), pressed steel or plastic and often castings of only seven parts (a car body, four plastic wheels and two axles) – while more complex plastic and zamak models in Europe often had precision detail with more working features.

  7. Wiking Modellbau - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wiking_Modellbau

    In 1947, Wiking started to produce simple car models that usually consisted of a single part - with no windows or chassis. These were made of plastic in roughly 1:100 scale. Vehicle axles were made of wire with flat pinched ends, that when squeezed into the still warm plastic wheels, could not rotate - thus the axles rolled with the wheels.

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  9. Construx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Construx

    Construx is a brand of plastic building toys introduced by Fisher-Price in 1983. Unlike other building toys such as Lego, Construx feature beam-like pieces of varying lengths that snapped on to cubical connector knots in order to build large shapes. These are relatively secure even though no nuts or bolts were used.

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