About Tin Toy Robots
By Arturo Ronzon
These are the days of remote-controlled-state-of-the-art toys. This case is especially
true with toy robots. The Robosapien is a good example of how complex toy robots
have become. The Robosapien can walk, talk, navigate obstacles and pick up objects
all at the touch of a button or even by voice commands. It runs on batteries and
has potential for a lot of fun. A long time ago, toy robots were made of tin. Complexity
was way simpler but the fun factor is still the same. After all, a toy needs to
provide you with hours of fun – be it a tin toy or an electronic toy.
Tin toy robots were generally built with squarish parts. They normally come with
a square tin head with some robotic feature or another. The robot bodies were also
square or rectangular. I guess this is because mass producing square shaped tin
parts were simpler and helped keep the cost down. As production methods improved,
tin toy robots of various shapes and sizes started to hit the shelves. Rounded shapes
started to become common and more complex functions for a tin toy became the norm.
The simplest tin toy robots were basically a tin cube with movable appendages bolted
on. The attraction came from the painted features of the tin toy. Wound up springs
and some simple gearing gave other tin toy robots limited mobility. You just needed
to wind up the toy and set it on the ground. The tin robot would walk in a straight
line most of the time. It did not matter that most robots tend to veer a little
to one side because suddenly, you are the master of a little tin Frankenstein monster!
Manufacturers became more and more creative over time. As a result, more nifty features
were added onto tin toy robots. There were robots that would walk after being wound
up and then pause for a short while to emit sparks from their mouths. Some tin toy
robots had multi-colored gears mounted on the front panel of their tin bodies that
would rotate while the tin robot was in motion.
Tin toy robots could also take a fair amount of abuse. Rough play will result in
scratches and dents but the tin bodies offer a decent enough protection for the
tin robots to keep on functioning. Nowadays, tin toy robots are a collector’s item
and can fetch a good price on the tin toy collector’s market.
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