Showing posts with label the explorer and vanguard tracking station. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the explorer and vanguard tracking station. Show all posts

Thursday, August 20, 2015

Imagining In 3D: Space Age Cool For Kids

It begins with a box:
The Explorer And Vanguard Tracking Station
Every smart space age kid knew that Explorer 1 was the first U.S. Earth satellite launched on 1 February 1958. It looked like this:

Image via NASA and the Jet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) at the California Institute of Technology
Vanguard 1 was the second U.S. Earth satellite to achieve orbit - it was launched 17 March 1958. Vanguard 1 was the first solar powered satellite with six solar power cells attached. This satellite achieved a higher orbit than Explorer 1 and it remains as the oldest human artifact in space. It looks like this:

Image via Encyclopaedia Britannica
So now that you know what to look for, let's get a look at what's inside that box at the top of this post. The Structoys 1958 battery operated Explorer and Vanguard Tacking Station:

You'll first notice the 'radar scope' window - looking inside you'll see Earth which is lit by an eerie green glow when the station is in operation. Revolving around Earth are Explorer 1 and Vanguard 1. On the top left of the station is a rotating radar dish. The red and green lights below the dish on the console alternately blink on and off. On the top left of the console is a telegraph tower topped with a red beacon. Below the tower on the base of the console is a red metal 'code signal key' for Morse code telegraphy. A buzz can be heard as the code is tapped out on the signal key and the beacon atop the tower blinks. A red nob on the center of the base controls the on/off function of the unit.

The Tracking Station is a tin litho beauty with super graphics all the way around.

Tracking Station back view, top view, and left side view.
With a unit like this a kid's imagination could step out of internal space and right into the world of 3D -  creating a realism of imagination that could not only be seen and heard, but touched as well. And that's way cool.

The images in this post are via Grand Old Toys - this particular pristine, completely functional unit in the original box was sold online for $610.

H/T to Luis Cesar for reminding me about this fab space age toy.