452-1: Mobile Ground Tracking Station, 1979. Doors in back swing open to reveal a computer terminal. I 💛 mobile lab sets.
Mark Pospesel (Coding and Other Stuff)
Coding, tech, living abroad, travel, hiking, vintage plastic bricks
452-1: Mobile Ground Tracking Station, 1979. Doors in back swing open to reveal a computer terminal. I 💛 mobile lab sets.
493-1: Space Command Center, 1978. Open floor plan, two ground vehicles, four astronauts, radar dishes, tv antennas, and lots of yellow windows. LL2079!
497-1: Galaxy Explorer, 1979. Flagship of Classic Space. This thing had it all. Swooshable ship, landing pad, small base, rover and 4 astronauts. 🚀
889-1: Radar Truck, 1979. Not particularly exciting, but a solid little vehicle with a red astronaut. Bonus points for the laser gun.
886-1: Space Buggy, 1979. Other smallest Classic Space set. A small rover with antenna, astronaut, and a laser gun. That gun was my favorite piece!
Small spacecraft comparison (442 Space Shuttle vs 885 Space Scooter)
885-1: Space Scooter, 1979. One of the smallest Classic Space sets. Blue round bricks stuck in a fence for engines. Maybe too simple.
442-1: Space Shuttle, 1979. Room for two, dual steering wheels, jets, positioning thrusters, computer, laser gun, and antenna. Simple, swooshable.
462-1: Mobile Rocket Launcher, 1978. Two astronauts, vehicle, trailer, rocket, computer console, and radar dish for tracking. Simple yet functional.