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Discussion: Pop-Pop BoatsReported This is a featured thread

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frankmcneilll
Pop-Pop Boats
Mar 26 2009, 7:30 AM EDT | Post edited: Mar 26 2009, 7:30 AM EDT
Hi All,

I am an old person who played with little tinplate pop-pop boats before WW2 when they were some of the favorite toys for kids. Anyone who doesn't know what a pop-pop boat is could find out by visiting the pop-pop pages at
<http://www.nmia.com/~vrbass/pop-pop/>. The author of this website is a member of a Yahoo discussion group at <http://groups.yahoo.com/group/pop-pop-steamboats/> that I started several years ago to encourage the development of a new generation of pop-pop boats for a new generation of kids. This hasn't happened yet because commercially available pop-pop boats are still made of tinplate steel and are not equipped for remote control that might make them more competitive with a flood of cheap remote control toys manufactured mostly in China. One of the major distributors of imported tin pop-pop boats has a website at <http://www.buzzboats.com/poppop.htm> with a Warning! These boats are not sold as children's toys as they may have sharp edges. These boats are sold as metal replica collector items only!
It is beginning to look like that new generation of kids won't play with traditional tinplate pop-pop boats, so I started another group at <http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cardboardshipsandboats/> to encourage conversion of card stock display models of ships and boats into reinforced and waterproofed working models with motors and components for remote control that might be provided by using Lego Powerfunctions components.
It would be nice if those components included servo-controls similar to those used for radio control cars, boats and planes. Perhaps someone who works for the Lego company will pass this suggestion along.

Best wishes, Frank McNeill
2  out of 3 found this valuable. Do you?    
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BrandonE
BrandonE
1. RE: Pop-Pop Boats
Mar 26 2009, 10:28 PM EDT | Post edited: Mar 26 2009, 10:28 PM EDT
Interesting... Do you find this valuable?    
Dan_Shi
Dan_Shi
2. RE: Pop-Pop Boats
Mar 31 2009, 11:10 AM EDT | Post edited: Mar 31 2009, 11:10 AM EDT
Very interesting. I have actually heard of pop-pop boats before. Do you find this valuable?    
alexanderTM
alexanderTM
3. RE: Pop-Pop Boats
Apr 4 2009, 12:21 AM EDT | Post edited: Apr 4 2009, 12:21 AM EDT
...ok are u joining? Do you find this valuable?    
Dan_Shi
Dan_Shi
4. RE: Pop-Pop Boats
Apr 4 2009, 11:38 AM EDT | Post edited: Apr 4 2009, 11:38 AM EDT
mabe Do you find this valuable?    

Posted Anonymously
5. RE: Pop-Pop Boats
Oct 21 2009, 1:20 PM EDT | Post edited: Oct 21 2009, 1:20 PM EDT
We sell pop pop boats at -
www.poppopboats.co.uk
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Posted Anonymously
6. RE: Pop-Pop Boats
Oct 21 2009, 1:21 PM EDT | Post edited: Oct 21 2009, 1:21 PM EDT
"Hi All,

I am an old person who played with little tinplate pop-pop boats before WW2 when they were some of the favorite toys for kids. Anyone who doesn't know what a pop-pop boat is could find out by visiting the pop-pop pages at
<http://www.nmia.com/~vrbass/pop-pop/>. The author of this website is a member of a Yahoo discussion group at <http://groups.yahoo.com/group/pop-pop-steamboats/> that I started several years ago to encourage the development of a new generation of pop-pop boats for a new generation of kids. This hasn't happened yet because commercially available pop-pop boats are still made of tinplate steel and are not equipped for remote control that might make them more competitive with a flood of cheap remote control toys manufactured mostly in China. One of the major distributors of imported tin pop-pop boats has a website at <http://www.buzzboats.com/poppop.htm> with a Warning! These boats are not sold as children's toys as they may have sharp edges. These boats are sold as metal replica collector items only!
It is beginning to look like that new generation of kids won't play with traditional tinplate pop-pop boats, so I started another group at <http://groups.yahoo.com/group/cardboardshipsandboats/> to encourage conversion of card stock display models of ships and boats into reinforced and waterproofed working models with motors and components for remote control that might be provided by using Lego Powerfunctions components.
It would be nice if those components included servo-controls similar to those used for radio control cars, boats and planes. Perhaps someone who works for the Lego company will pass this suggestion along.

Best wishes, Frank McNeill
"
Hi,

We sell pop pop boats at -
www.poppopboats.co.uk
Kind Regards
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