This
week at
Flashbak I remembered Schaper’s Telesonic Toys of the 1970s, including the
robot ‘Tobor.’
Here’s
a snippet and the url (http://flashbak.com/powered-fun-thrills-remembering-schapers-telesonic-toys-mid-1970s-53252/)
“In
the 1970s, Schaper Toys was a big name (and was so until 1986, when the company
was acquired by Tyco).
For
my generation, Schaper is remembered for masterminding a (now-forgotten?) breakthrough
in disco-decade toys that it termed “Telesonics.”
Telesonics,
basically, allowed for remote control toys to go wireless. In other words, no
connecting wires were necessary to link up toy and remote instrumentation.
Today, this may seem like nothing at all, but in 1976, it was a big deal.
Schaper
released two Telesonic toys from 1976-1978, both highly collectible today.
The
first was called The Max Machine. Made
of “durable bright yellow plastic,”
it is essentially a toy van or camper.
This “mean machine” runs on 2
C batteries and is described in promotional materials as more than “just a toy.”
Instead,
“it’s an action van you drive by remote
control.”
The
second Telesonic toy is more up my alley, as a sci-fi Toy lover.
In
1978, Schaper manufactured a robot called Tobor. Tobor is nine-inches tall,
runs on 2 D batteries, and can use his spring-activated hands to pick up a “support module.” The Telesonic system allows for easy
communication between the “command base”
(remote control) and the robot…”
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