You can still get them. Seven dollars and fifty cents each. Sixteen hundred in stock.Those I don't remember but I do recall little tin boats that relied on a candle to heat water that boiled and the steam came out of a pipe under the stern and propelled the boat along. They made a little 'popping' noise as the water boiled. They were three or four inches long and you used a 1/2" section of a birthday candle set in a tray under the 'boiler'.
But of course you'd never see anything that 'dangerous' today.
Tom
That reminds me: anybody here build a CO2 car in shop class. Oh man, that was a blast. We came up with some crazy designs in our class. Some were dragster shapes with trippy paint jobs. Some were simple plain-colored missile shapes. Then we had a race when we were done. The winner was Joe, who went all-out. His was a black, pointed car - tapered toward the front. He'd used graphite on the wheels and everything.One of my all time favorites was the Cox .049 powered dragsters.
You pounded a huge nail in a couple sidewalk cracks and strung a wire between them, then you ran the car down the wire, tripping the chute at the end.
EPIC stinking nitro fun!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFsoFvAL0Xw
There's a little of 'Peter Pan' in all men. Toys keep us younger than our years.Sometimes.......
We never grow up.
I had the black 1964 Corvette Stingray w/Cox .049. You could also put it on a tether and run it in circles.....it was so fast you could hardly see the thing just before it ran out of fuel.One of my all time favorites was the Cox .049 powered dragsters.
You pounded a huge nail in a couple sidewalk cracks and strung a wire between them, then you ran the car down the wire, tripping the chute at the end.
EPIC stinking nitro fun!
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VFsoFvAL0Xw