The Hottest Toys For All Year

Why Did Diecast Toys Appear?

Diecast toys come in a wide variety, with the favourites being cars and trucks, aircraft, military vehicles, farm equipment and trains. The technique was the main method used to produce model toys from the 1920s through until the late 1980s. Small production runs are still made in some parts of the world, now largely to satisfy a growing antiques and collectors market.

The diecasting process involves pressurized air forcing molten metal into a formed mold, allowing mass production of very detailed models. Many of these toys use plastic and rubber for some parts such as tires, propellers and accessories, and almost any items that are thin and liable to break. The alloys used for most are a mixture of copper, aluminum and zinc which tends to be brittle and thus unsuitable for protruding items such as antennas and wing mirrors.

This toy phenomenon very quickly proliferated after it was introduced in the period soon after the First World War. Particularly in the industrialized nations, many small metalworking workshops had been set up for manufacturing all the necessities of war, and a lot of these were ideally suited to diecasting and model making, which requires very little in the way of machinery and tools to get started. The economic boom during the 1920s brought about the idea of children having lots of toys to play with instead of the few that were common before.

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Diecast toys are now largely superseded as toys by plastic models, but some classics are likely to be sold for a long time to come.

Author writes for Diecast Toys.

Author: Braid Hadge
Article Source: EzineArticles.com
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