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Britains Deetail Waterloo British Soldier - Kneeling Back (Playworn) Britains' Deetail toy soldiers were a popular product in the 1970s and 1980s. Manufactured in England by W. Britain, the 1/32 (54mm) scale plastic figures were finished with hand painted details and came with sturdy Zamak metal bases.
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The 3.75-inch G.I. Joe: A Real American Hero line of figures and vehicles is in this scale, although the figures are compatible with 1:16 vehicles rather than 1:18 cars. Action figures marketed as 3.75 inches, 3 + 3 ⁄ 4 inches, or 4 inches approximate this scale; this includes the original Star Wars action figures from Kenner, as well as the ...
1:32 was once so common a scale for toy trains, autos, and soldiers that it was known as "standard size" in the industry (not to be confused with Lionel's "Standard Gauge"). 1:32 is the scale for Gauge 1 toy and model trains. It was the scale of some of the earliest plastic model car kits.
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A 1/100 scale model line focusing on replicating surface detail and complex "gimmick points" without the use of an inner frame like Master Grades. The line debuted in 2016 to coincide with the second season of Iron-Blooded Orphans before relaunching in 2021 with suits from Mobile Suit Gundam SEED and The Witch From Mercury.
In computer user interface design, a master–detail interface displays a master list and the details for the currently selected item. The original motivation for master detail was that such a view table on old 1980s 80-character-wide displays could only comfortably show about four columns on the screen at once, while a typical data entity will have some twenty fields.