View Single Post
  #16  
Old 12-20-2012, 10:19 PM
Earl's Avatar
Earl Earl is offline
Apollo Nut
 
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 4,893
Default

Well, geez guys, you folks are just useless!

I thought someone here would know SOMETHING about this kit!

Sorry for the delay in posting back. Most of my YORF time happens in the eves on the iPad after work while I'm doing sitting duties with my disabled parent or in the morning while getting her to eat breakfast before work. Sometimes her dementia behaviors allow little time for this stuff at either time of the day.

Seriously, thanks for at least making me feel a bit less ignorant, because I didn't know anything about this kit either. Then again, I'm much more of a Centuri collector/builder so I thought maybe this version of the kit was something I just simply missed out on back in the day and that someone here might be very familiar with this kit. Apparently not.

This kit box IS open and in general is in very good condition for a kit that is over forty years old. It was an ebay purchase about a month ago. I contacted the seller after I received the kit to see if they could tell me anything about the history of ownership of the kit. The seller, who was from a small town south of the Atlanta area, said they were handling it as a consignment sale for an estate. So, the original owner, whoever that might have been, is now deceased.

The seller did at least do a superb job of packing it for shipment over to me and it suffered no damage in shipment.

The parts inside the box are packed in a dense wad of shredded newspaper, a Sunday Denver Post. The newspaper shredded strips are roughly 1/8th to 1/4 inch wide, so it is hard to try to find any 'dated' info that might give some indication of the newspaper date. The only clue that I've been able to piece together from it is part of a movie ad for the movie "True Grit". That would put it sometime in '69 as I recall the year of that movie which I recall seeing as a kid at the now gone South Expressway Drive-In near Morrow, Georgia south of Atlanta, which is where I am from originally.

That so fat is about all I have been able to piece together on dating the kit itself, other than the fact that the box label is pre-Damon, which would date it, in general, before September of '69 which is when the Damon merger took place.

The kit parts seem to be the standard Estes Saturn V kit parts, but there are no motor mount tubes, centering rings for the stuffer tube, nor no parachutes or shock cords.

The instruction set is specific to this kit too and does not feature the Apollo 11 launch photo with Estes kit in the foreground that Vern made during the actual launch of Apollo 11 at KSC.

I will when I can post some photos of the kit contents and instruction sheets, but it may be a few days. I'm terribly behind on Christmas present purchases with little time remaining on the clock. But as soon as I can, I will post some other photos.

I've been meaning to drop Vern a line on some other stuff, though I have no 'formal' friendship with him other than I've been a rocket customer of his and he's been a video customer of mine. But, I'm hoping Vern might remember something about this kit.

My assumption at this point is that it was a 'custom' kit that Estes made for the KSC Visitor Center gift shop. But, it may have been an item that ultimately did not sell well at the time and, accordingly, very few were manufactured. Maybe even only one 'batch'. Who but possibly Vern would know? But since Vern was on hand for the launch of Apollo 11 and probably made other visits to KSC in the late 60s and early 70s, I would think he would probably remember at least SOME details behind this kit.

I am surprised however that NO one so far has even HEARD of this kit. Interesting.

Earl
__________________
Earl L. Cagle, Jr.
NAR# 29523
TRA# 962
SAM# 73
Owner/Producer
Point 39 Productions

Rocket-Brained Since 1970
Reply With Quote