by MichaelB » Mon Apr 05, 2010 3:22 pm
I gotta say they were made for the low-end of the mass market! Stickers were the norm for just about everything at the time, including Matchbox. ZEE moved to tampo over time; for instance the DC-3 can be found in both stickered or printed Air Canada colors. The trend was clear.
That's a good question about when they entered the market, but I am confident that they entered in a initial "batch" of aircraft, the parameters of which I am still trying to define. The oldest note I've found is 1972 and by then they had to have been working on it for some time. Wide distribution was obviously a plan from the start.
I'd have to put the Stuka as being the oldest of the line still in production, but even it was changed from a 3piece to one piece cast during it's life. Those early Stukas, with the tail wheel and bulbous prop spinner, are among the hardest to find. I'll put up a list of rarities in due time.
The whole thing about DynaFlites is that some of them are very nice! Well beyond what would expected from a very cheap toy. Detail level, clear canopies (not any more!) could be exceptional. Their best pieces are two of the last, and happily they are commonly found: the S-3A and EA-6A. Both are right at 1/200 in scale, and the tampo marks are very good. I spent a few minutes with a black sharpied and really picked out the detail.
Would more pieces of this quality have "saved" the line? I doubt it, as the target market didn't really care about scale. Matchbox continues to produce card scale airplanes of "toy" quality, so I suppose they got the track on that.
Of course Matchbox hit a rocky road in the mid '90s as well, and got sold a few times before it's recent return to the retail arena. I remember being flabbergasted in finding a stash of the "new" ones at an out-of-town grocery store - I cleaned them out!
Is this the end of $1 plane? Probably not, but it'll never be like the good ol' days!
Michael