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SCALE: 1/350 |
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INITIAL RELEASE: 1958 |
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MEDIUM: Polystyrene |
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RARITY: (3) |
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U.S. Space Station in Orbit |
ABOUT THE DESIGN |
ABOUT THE KIT |
This was another blatant Von Braun rip-off, borrowing heavily from the good doctor's space station as featured in Collier's magazine circa 1953. Like the original Von Braun design, Lindberg's version was a wheel that rotated to produce artificial gravity (side-mounted rockets controlled the rate of spin) and generated electricity by using solar energy to vaporize mercury which was then run through small turbines. One of the few original features of this design was its hub-mounted "space taxi" pad and the little shuttles designed to ferry passengers between the station and passing space ships. |
The Lindberg Line first released this kit as simply the "U.S. Space Station" in 1958. In the 1960's it was the "Mars Probe Space Station," then the "Star Probe Space Base" in the 1970s. The original 1958 version featured clear red-tinted plastic portholes; by the '60s, these had become less expensive opaque pieces, although still molded in red. The kit was also released by Lindberg in the mid-1950s as part of a five-part "Spaceships of the Future" collector's set. This model is from the 1970's "Star Probe" series. |
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Original Box Art |
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"Mars Probe" Box Art |
"Star Probe" Box Art |
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"Space Ships of the Future" Collector's Set |
Concept Spacecraft |
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