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Hi-Tek keyboard assembly in a TRS-80 Model I (1978 issue). Hi-Tek Corporation was founded in Santa Ana, California, in 1967 by Donald "Don" Hallerberg. [1] [2] Among the company's first products were solid-state, time-delay relays, available as time-adjustable and fixed-duration units. [3]
Hi-Tec Sports was founded in 1974, [4] in Shoeburyness, Essex, England, [5] by Frank Van Wezel. The company moved its headquarters to Southend-on-Sea, [6] before relocating its head office to Amsterdam. Hi-Tec Sports USA was started in Modesto, CA in 1978 by Duke and Kathy Jones. They developed the first lightweight hiking boot.
Hobbico, Inc. was a manufacturer and distributor of hobby products including radio control airplanes, boats, cars, helicopters and multirotors/drones. Other products include plastic model kits, model rockets, model trains, slot cars, crafts, jigsaw puzzles and games. The company had approximately 850 employees worldwide. [1]
In the 1992 Tyco Catalogue used in industry toy fairs to sell and promote products to major retail buyers, the first 20 pages was consumed by their lineup of radio control toys for the year. These products and their manufacturing deal with Taiyo became so important that they took a significant ownership stake in the company, and began to ...
Grand Phoenix Model Products (USA) Great Wall Hobby (China) Greenbank Castle (USA) Greenmax (Japan) Griffon (Japan) - Only produced one kit (Su-22 in 1/72nd scale) before disappearing. Grip (Japan) - ex-Eidai; Gunze Sangyo (Japan) Hapdong Tech (Korea) Hasegawa Corporation (Japan) - first products in 1961; Hawk (USA) Hehexing (China) Heller SA ...
Horizon Hobby, LLC is an American multinational hobby-grade RC radio control (RC) model, model train manufacturer, and distributor. It was founded by Rick Stephens, Janet Ottmers, Debra Love, and Eric Meyers, [1] in July 1985, [2] and headquartered in Champaign, Illinois. [3] Horizon Hobby products are sold in more than 50 countries. [4]
Nakayama Miho no Tokimeki High School: Square, Nintendo R&D1 December 1, 1987 [1] Ice Hockey: Nintendo EAD, Pax Softnica January 21, 1988 Donkey Kong: Nintendo R&D1 April 8, 1988 Famicom Grand Prix II: 3D Hot Rally: Nintendo April 15, 1988 [75] Famicom Detective Club: The Missing Heir (Disk 1) Nintendo R&D1 April 27, 1988 [75]
Aside from the new labels that bear the XMODS Micro RC logo, the packaging was similar to the ZipZaps line. All parts (e.g. motors, wheel covers, bodies, etc.) on the XMODS Micro line were compatible between ZipZaps and vice versa, with the exception of the 2009 models, which have one-piece wheels that do not allow the swapping of wheel covers.
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