I was nine years old. We were so poor, a single mom and 4 kids. My oldest sister had just gotten a job. I wanted a vertibird so bad! My sister got her first paycheck and used part of it to buy one for me! It was the best toy ever! And best sister ever! Now I’m 59 years old and a pilot for 29 years.
Me too!!! Out of all I ever received as a child, the Vertibird was the BEST, with the Tyco Pro Spirit of 76 train [1974] a few years later a close 2nd. I was fascinated with the auto log dump car on that train for some reason. 😊 🇺🇸
i am a former US Army helicopter pilot. I served from 1973 to 1980. Rated in UH-1H and OH-58. I did my overseas service in ROK and was the Airfield Operation Officer at Desiderio Army Airfield at Camp Humphreys. I had one of these with me in Korea. I was THE most popular guy in the unit. Every pilot in the unit wanted to try his hand on the Verti-Bird. Thanks for posting your video. It brought back many fond memories. Gets you a "LIKE" and a subscribe.
@@Zingo-sq4vq I started thinking about a toy I had that was a helicopter with a hook on it and would pick things up. Couldn't remember the name but I sure spent hours and hours on it. Then, I saw one on TH-cam. Couldn't believe it. Of course from there I went to eBay! Lol. I, at 60yrs old am a proud owner of the coolest toy of the 70's and top 25 of all time !!! A VERTIBIRD !!! I must renew my pilot's license so the city will be safe !! Officer John.
I got this helicopter as a gift in 1976 or 1977. For me, It was the coolest thing in the world . I never forgot it and was very happy about this video.
Hi. I can't believe I found this video. I had this toy as a kid. Over 50 years ago. Always remembered enjoying it. Couldn't remember the name of it to find one as an adult. Finally watched this great clip and all the wonderful memories came back. Now can try to find one.... A million THANKS!!!
Wow, had one of these also as a kid but had forgotten all about it. I fly RC planes but not helis. One year, I got some kind of lunar lander that was a balloon tied to a base and controlled with some kind of moveable fan. Do you remember those?
During my childhood I had the verti bird , the Jackie Stewart AFX racing set, A tyco train set, and a big wheel! ....aaahhhh the good life!! Thank you Mom and Dad! May God bless you all and Merry Christmas
@@RchelicopterfunSpent hour after hour operating my VERTIBIRD. I had imaginary handcuffs to arrest the bank robbers after blockading and disarming them. Just bought myself the coolest toy of the 70's. Probably 100x what the cost was when I was 9 and I don't care.
I got one of these for Christmas in I think 1972 - just showing this to my daughter when she asked me what the best Christmas present I ever got was,...
Had this one as a Christmas gift around 1975. For a 7 years old boy, there was no better gift than this. I will also never forget the great "U-Fly-It" made by Schaper. Both are unforgettable toy for me.
This brings back great memories! This was my absolute favorite toys when I was a kid. I wish I would have taken better care of it because I would still love to play with it now that I'm 50 years old!
Hah, same at 50. They'd do a heck of a dive bomb striking the ground and keep on going. Moms still got it stashed in the attic, I'm not sure if it still works.
It seems incredible to me that this man kept this toy, in this condition, for a whole lifetime - even while playing with it: and he even still has the box.......😮
A lot more kids than you think took great care of their toys-----and even kept the boxes whenever they could. The Vertibird was great but it was not too durable even for the era it was popular in.
I had one of these back in the 1970s. It was my favorite toy. I'm 60 years old now but I can still remember all the countless hours of fun at flying my helicopter. Thank you for posting this. It has brought back many great memories. God Bless
This was by far my most favourite toy!! I had 4 brothers and we were all in line waiting for our turn! I have suggestions for the rotor vibration. Slide the 3 pronged piece of the shaft, reattach it to the blade and then balance it. 2nd suggestion would be to have a local person 3d print another one. Good luck!
@@An2oineI had both Evil and this whirly bird, I remember dropping little bombs of rolled up paper towel on the helicopter, trying to make it crash, probably why I don't have it anymore, it's amazing to still have this toy in that kind of condition.
This was definitely up there with the greatest toys ever created. I did have some James Bond toys like a pocket knife that would turn into a pistol and a radio that would turn into a machine gun.
I had one in the early 70’s .. absolutely loved it . such a lot of fun! Played with so much it wore out, but to this day still sits in the attic . Occasionally I bring it out for nostalgia. Seeing your video was amazing, and your bird is in such incredible condition!
I still remember flying that little helicopter for hours and hours. One of my favorite toys ever. The drive spring in the base broke and it was done but it had hundreds of hours on it. Seeing yours flying now broke back lots of fond memories, I might have to look for one now. Thanks for sharing.
This was my NUMBER 1 toy as kid. It broke and got patched up many times before it eventually bit the dust. The spring in the control tower went I seem to remember. I would love to have one of these again.
I've damaged few in my day and one of the scariest was the ends of the prop had been shortened due to an accident and the helicopter still flew but only at full throttle with the blades spinning much too quickly with quite sharp edges.😂 I fixed it after the next accident
I had to be about 7 or 8 when the spoiled kid down the block got one of these. I was Soooo jealous! - Gave my parents royal hell for weeks until they finally got one for me, but only after I had done 10 times more chores than the thing was worth. Yeah it was worth it, IMHO.
Thanks for posting. I'm 55 years old now but I had one of these when I was a kid. It has always been my favorite toy by far. Today I fly a DJI Mavic air drone. For me its very easy to fly because the vertibird or wherley bird taught me the basic skills. I have friends who are afraid of their drones. Not me. I was pre-programmed by this toy at an early age to fly. Back then, I flew mine so much that I wore out the springs and motor. I cried for weeks when the piano wire detached from the spring and the plastic part at the base broke. Now that I have a drone, my faith in this world has been restored. Hahahaha. Great video.
Awesome!!!! I was born in 1966. Had two of these during my preteen years and these were by far one of my most favorite and cherish toys during my childhood. You are so fortunate you kept yours. I’d do anything to have mine back again. I don’t know what happened to them. This might’ve been the inspiration for me as later in life I ended up getting my private pilots license (1989). I want to give you a special thanks for taking your time to publish this video and show us your childhood toy. This brought back some wonderful memories! Please continue to cherish and guard your VerdiBird. Stay safe!!!!
They were so silly though. At least for the time didn't have much better. But all you would do is just fly it around in a loop. Although seems like was a challenge to control the hovering as I recall.
I won one in a competition - I absolutely loved it. It chewed batteries so I eventually connected the transformer from my model railyway - it worked a treat although for some reason bypassed the 'throttle' on the vertibird so you had to use the rotary power control on the train controller. The model was very well engineered and surprisingly robust! Happy memories!
I won 1st prize in my counties ( UK Home Counties ) drawing competition for a wild west themed picture aged 8 in 1976,. After a posh reception, and photos for the press, I got a £ 5 voucher and went to Debenhams toy section to buy one of these , BUT they had sold out. Instead I bough an action man hang glider and it was total shit. Flew it straight into the barbed wire at our local park and that was the end of that. Never did get the chopper, although I have made up for that many times over with big boys toys.
Thank you for this! My son (and I) played with this in the 70's. He was much better at it than I was. Your video brought back such wonderful memories. It's possible this may have influenced him, since after he grew up, he became a commercial airline captain, and after he retired started a successful drone business!
This was the best toy of my childhood! We built a power adapter so we could plug it into the wall and save some batteries, and I flew endless "missions" around the living room floor. Still have one somewhere...
Brings back fond memories. I had the VertiBird Helicopter Coast Guard Rescue Ship. Spent many hours on rescue missions "at sea" in my livingroom. I also had the Schaper U-Fly-It. Like you, John, these toys got me hooked on model planes and much later RC flying planes and helicopters.
We (my brother and I) each had a similar version, no ship, but had to rescue the guy in the lifeboat. It also had a cardboard landing pad for the helicopter. Hours and hours of fun. I’m now 60 years old, wish I had it now. I’d share with the grandkids.
I had the one with the coast guard ship as well. If I remember correctly, it came with a hinged space capsule that allowed you to extract the astronaut.
Wow, the memories that come flooding back. This was by far my favorite toy as a child. It’s also the reason I retired my Ricochet Racer. Thanks for posting this.
I remember when I had this the one thing I added was some light. I attached a 1.5volt battery where the radar is with sellotape and ran the wire along the arm which was wired to a little bulb which was fitted inside the helicopter. Lots of night time fun for a young boy back in the seventies.
I used to add little lights to my stuff too. Just had to talk mom into a trip to radio shack! I really loved the little LED bulbs , seems like most were red yellow or green. Oh and white/clear!
I had this as a child in the 70s and loved it. I also have a "Schaper U-Fly-It", which allowed you to land a plane on a runway. The plane ran down a greased fishing line. We made a very long run in our backyard. My older brother had a control line gasoline powered plane. I remember him cutting the line, tying the throttle down and launching it straight up. We never saw it again.
I was just about to reply about having both and I saw your post. Hook on end to a chair or something elevated and the other end was connected to a flight yoke and the plane would slide down along the line towards you and your job was to land on the paper/plastic runway. I played with that thing for hours. You're the first person I've come across that even remembers it most don't.
I had two. The one like you have and the arctic set up in styrofoam to look like snow. Loved them. Looking back, that toy is what started my interest and eventually my career in aviation.
wow... what in instant, vivid memory! I had one too, my favorite toy. I was obsessed with helicopters and still am. I grew up to become a commercial helicopter pilot. I think this may have had something to do with it. I distinctly remember not thinking of it as a 'toy' and being very serious about operating it and picking things up with it.
This sparked an old memory. Thank you for this. One of the best toys ever made along with the sandbox excavator that you sit in and circles 360 degrees and has manual levers pitch down and scoop.
I love this. I had something similar called Super Copter, I'd guess around mid to late 1970s. The big difference from what you've shown is that it was a twin rotor. The controls only gave you 3 options - Hover in place, go clockwise or anticlockwise. Being a geek and electronics nerd, I hooked up the twin motors to my train set controller and got the thing lifting much heavier loads and spinning around fast! Teehee, great memories.
It wasn't as advanced as this one, though. Mine was just spinning around, and it didn't have any controller to operate the helicopter if I remember correctly. It was a Russian toy probably haha
I got one for Christmas and haven't stop thinking about flying since. I was a young adult before I started dabbling into RC airplanes. I never new RC Helicopters were a thing until a few years ago. I found your website when I was researching them and you inspired me to take up the challenge. Now I have too many..... Nah, no such thing!
Brings back great memories! The Vertibird and the Dareplane Stunter biplane (also by Mattel) were awesome cable-powered flying toys.. The Vertibird was more reliable and durable as it had a more rigid drive cable than the Dareplane, which would kink during maneuvers.
This was absolutely my favorite toy from childhood. I remember the feeling of sadness at the realization that the batteries were getting too low after playing with it for hours.
Aye, that was a bummer! Fortunately, Dad had spare batteries... A neighborhood friend had one, and his father, being an electrical engineer, had wired up a six volt power supply with sufficient amperage to keep it flying indefinitely, or at least until his son had reached the limit of his attention span, or dinner, whichever came first. His also ran much smoother than mine, as his father knew just the right lubrication to use on all moving parts. He even dynamically balanced the rotor blades by adding a single wrap of black electrical tape at just the right point. Smooooth...
This is great . My son who is turning 60 soon often talks about his favourite Christmas gift he received as a child . The Vertibird . Thanks for posting he'll get a kick out of this .
How could all of us late boomer techies forget this one!! This toy plus the Jaycopter ride at the '64 World's Fair got me totally hooked on helicopters. When the Internet boom happened I was finally able to fund the training for a rotor craft PPL. Thanks for these great time travel moments.
Oh God. This was my absolute favorite. As I remember it actually took a good bit of skill (through practice) to fly it smoothly. You can tell THIS guy is a veteran.👌
I stumbled across this video and it's exactly what I had back in the seventies received it as a Christmas gift and would not let it out of my sight was playing with this thing made paper objects so the helicopter could pick it up this gift is one of the all-time classics and guaranteed a big seller during the Christmas season!!! I'm sure if they ever brought it back with a modified version it would be a big hit instead of today he's sitting in front of the iPads and don't move,,,
Sooo much fun, that toy. I had one in the 70's or 80's (don't recall exactly). One of my favorite toys along with the Big Trak. Thank you for resurrecting those VERY old and fond memories.
Ah the Big Trak - yep I remember those. Never had one and I can't remember if any of my friends had one, but it's funny how just seeing the name of it, I can recall exactly what it was - the beginning of programable toys. Thanks for sharing another fun 70/80's memory.
Took me straight back to my days as a kid! I got mine around age 10 and I love love loved it! When I got mine out an flew it, I would be alone in my own world free from the "pressures" of being a little boy of that age. I played with mine until I was old enough to start riding dirt bikes and that was pretty much it for the Vertibird, Years later I retrieved it from my childhood closet but sadly one of the piano wires was either warped or broken. Sometime later I guess my Mom put it in the trash to make room for something else. Watching this video was a blast to the past, thank you so much for keeping yours so that you could share it with the World!
This was one of my favorite toys when growing up. The Armatron from Tandy, Radio Shack was another favorite of mine. It was a great time back then from the 70's to the 80's from mechanical to electronical. Electromechanical to digital. I have one of the first digital pinball machines that uses digital readout instead of electromechanical reels from 1977. Genie pinball machine. Great game.
When I was 7, my father worked for TRW across the street from Mattel HQ in Redondo Beach CA. They has a program where the Engineers at TRW could have their kids be toy testers for Mattel and submit reports as to what broke or worked on their toys. I had 3 of these helicopters back then, none lasted more than a week before the gears failed. The first one was probably my fault, but I really loved the toy, so I was extra careful with the next 2, but they broke fast. I hope the production units were improved by my broken hearted kid testing. I did get into RC airplanes and helicopters as an adult, when it became affordable to me to do so. Not that the hobby was affordable, just I made enough to afford it. I always wanted another one of these until I bought a RC kit helicopter and built it myself.
My father died just before Xmas 24, this popped up randomly. To me it was him reminding me of our fun with this toy a long time back. RIP Dad have a good sleep xx
I had one. It was awesome. I loved that thing. Yep, had no problem picking stuff up. Things were simpler back then, this was out of the ordinary. There was a pretty cool Evel Knievel motorcycle that would run on it's own for a bit. It also came with a little ramp and did jumps pretty good. Super cool toy also.
I miss mine. Got it around the same time you did. Loads of fun. Mine had a carboard insert for the canopy/cockpit. We also had a Starship Enterprise with similar mechanics. Not as much fun. I found a remake of the Vertibird on the local Target Store shelves years ago. I bought it as a present for someone. Should have picked one up for myself.
My little brother had the yellow air rescue version and I think I played with it as much as he did if not more. We built obstacle courses and other things with Lego for the chopper to navigate through. Such a brilliant toy.
Definitely brought back a lot of memories. My parents always bought me cool toys and this was one of them. Thank you for this video and it bringing me fond memories of Mom & Dad!
The greatest toy of my childhood, right next to my HO slot car set from then. I spent hours playing with that little chopper, no idea how many batteries I went through. I eventually wore it out, probably from load testing to carry way more weight. I seem to recall the spring ends letting go and my dad soldered them back, and eventually the control handles got weak and broke and I ended up jamming some sticks or ball point pen tubes in the control box so I could keep going. I would still play with one if I had one, and I am 60.
Oh man you brought back memories. I got one of those in 1976 and it was the greatest toy I had ever gotten. I went through many batteries flying that around and had numerous sore fingers from catching them in the blades. The fun unfortunately ended when the shag carpet got all tangled in the chopper internals. Always wanted to be a helicopter pilot because of that toy.
I had one of these as a child and I was actually thinking about it recently ! What are the odds of this video randomly appearing on my recommendations?! It's brought back so many memories.
I had the Mattel Vertibird with the Apollo capsule. Then I was flying line control in my late teens (yes, Cox planes). Then finally in 2013 I got my first RC plane. I am currently flying the E-Flight Twin Otter. I'm surprised yours is still working all these years later.
Absolutely my all time favorite toy when I was a kid. Hours & hours of fun. Unfortunately, having 3 brothers meant it got a LOT of use and didn’t survive as well as yours. Thanks much for sharing.
Had this as a hand-me-down when I was a kid. Later in life, I became a product developer and worked for a biiiig toy company (not Mattel) and this toy was my benchmark in play value, story, skill-building and fun (flow experience to use the psychological term). *Unmatched to this day* - especially when you consider the price point!
@@starshiphopper7044 Yes, but in a different domain: LEGO is optimized around what psychologists are calling "flow" and "need states". Lego is a great concept in many areas but agility and hand-eye-coordination are not their strong points. That's the price you have to pay when building a system from universal/multi-purpose elements. I see Lego as a great design prototyping system and the VertiBird as a type of stationary sportive play experience. In an ideal world, you would have BOTH, the Mattel toy AND the old Technic 852 from 1977 (which I did as a kid...). Side note - Iater in life I became the head of the Technic design team (and turned down the Mattel offer) but that was 20 years later...
I had the orange one as a kid. I always wondered if it was really "flying" or if the rotating blades were just cosmetic, so good info here. I later had an airplane version with a yellow foam F4U Corsair. It most definitely was not flying, or even powered, since it didn't have a working prop.
Such a great toy at the time. I was fortunate to get one at Christmas, the Virtibird attached to a long styrofoam boat with marked landing pad. When I got bored with it, I detached it from the foam boat and it was game on again. Cheers!
I cover the Vertibird in much more detail on my website: www.rchelicopterfun.com/mattel-vertibird.html I also want to thank several viewers/subscribers for reaching out and sending me their original Verti rotor blades. Vibration free flying once again - thanks so much folks! It's also very interesting that so many people also kindly offering a fix, suggest 3D printing a new rotor as an easy solution. I thank them too for their thoughtful feedback, but I would like to take the time to point out what that actually involves for those with no 3D printing experience. As an FDM 3D printing hobbyist myself (as I demonstrated in the R2-D2 building series: th-cam.com/play/PLZV8xZm3OCXz8I0FoPzIeU--13oWWJfZv.html ), printing a rotor for this Vertibird is far from easy or practical, especially when you don't have an STL/OBJ 3D print file and there are none available. So you either need very good propeller CAD design skills to make up an exact working replica of the original in Fusion 360/similar, or have a good quality high resolution 3D scanner to accurately scan a good known rotor. Then there's the question of what thermoplastic material to use to print the new rotor with; most being too brittle to work in this application. Nylon is the obvious choice but very difficult for the average FDM printing hobbyist. We won't even get into removing the layer lines in Nylon as this rotor like all, has to be be more or less glass smooth to create lift without too much drag. Resin printing would be the better option to eliminate the layer lines that all FDM 3D printing produces, but I've read most resins are even more brittle than most thermoplastics? Thoughts?
I love the fact your set is complete with the parts it came with!! I had to scrounge for mine and it took 3 years of patient waiting and eBay to finally get all the parts to finish my set. These toys were from the time before everything had to be super safe and educational. I also collect Cox control line airplanes and I wish they would bring the Cox and Testors gas line of cars and airplanes back. The younger set misses so many good toys from the 60s to the early 90s.,
Awesome, just dug mine out. Got it in '74/'75. Needs one wire soldering, the cardboard runway is missing and the hook under the chopper is snapped ( pretty sure i can make another). Apart from that it's all there, the box is a bit knocked about. I had hours of fun with this toy. 👍
I went to the website to try and understand the way it works, but was still left with one question: How do the wires that go from the controller to the base not get twisted/tangeled up when the base is spinning? I had this question for the revolving Christmas tree too, but found out how the power was transferred. It's not like that with this thing. Any help?
This was my favorite toy too. The Apollo program was in full bloom. It was my reminiscing of this toy about 4 years ago that got me into the hobby. Your rc helicopter site was the first thing I found too. I read every post and learned so much! I can’t thank you enough!
Also played with this at a wealthy neighbor's house when I was a kid in the 70s... I had almost forgotten about it. It brings real joy to be reminded by your video. Thank you 😊
Ha!ha! Brilliant toy John!I loved playing with these too.I also had a Star Trek version of this.It was counter balanced instead but worked pretty much the same.It also had little objects to snag with a hook from the "modified Enterprise".Great stuff man.🛸🚁😎
I loved that thing! I had the Coast Guard version with the big styrofoam ship. I think it came with a space capsule to lift up and put back on the deck.
That's the one! I was trying to remember which one I had. If I recall, there was a little dude in a basket like a USCG A/C Swimmer. I think it was the very first version, and the one in this video was a later iteration because I wanted this one, too! I equate that to a TV show called Chopper One that was sort of a knock off of Adam 12 with a helicopter. This was the best toy!
Thanks for the trip down memory lane. My buddy had one but didn't take proper care of it and it stopped working. I still have the little helicopter. I used to play with it with my Matchbox city and/or 1.72 army men.
Good day John, What a delightful presentation of a well designed toy! I love the radar dish following the helicopter making complete illustrative and practical attached sense. Your demonstration & explanation of the Mattel Vertibird Toy Helicopter was truly inspiring, not only for children but also for adults like myself. I did time travel back to 70's as a result. I empathized with you when it came to the unfortunate damage to the propeller blade. However, I believe that such experiences are part of the learning process, and your conservative approach in repairing it with heat was excellent. Considering that the blades are detachable and the other blade is in good condition, I personally might let my OCD get the best of me. I would guess you have thought of doing all sorts of things and probably have drawn a conservative line to how far you'd preserve or restore things before feeling satisfied. I would consider making a mold of the intact blade or even 3D scanning it. The other blade acts as a perfect mirror, and with clever positioning on the 3D printer bed, you could potentially recreate it using resin printing. Alternatively, you could also experiment with other 3D printing types or techniques, ensuring proper blade placement, and then shape it with heat using a copper dowel or angle. I imagine that the plastic used in the toy is similar to that of zip tie material. Of course, there are likely various other solutions to this issue, and these are just a few ideas that came to mind off the cuff. I simply felt inspired to engage with your excellent video presentation and wanted to express my best wishes, encouragement, and gratitude. Thank you for sharing your experience with the Mattel Vertibird Toy Helicopter, and I hope you continue to inspire others with your imaginative and creative endeavors from toys designed to stimulate just that. Best regards and wishes from the Cape of Good Hope peninsula SA.
I think I had this toy. It still stands the test of time, from a pure enjoyment perspective too. They couldn’t make a toy like this today though. It would be deemed too dangerous.
OMG I just found this. I also had a vertibird in the early 70s so fun! I forgot all about it until now. I recall playing with it in our living room. My Nana just arrived from the airport for a Christmas visit, walked in the front door and before she could put her luggage down, she walked right into the path of my vertibird at near full throttle and got nicked in the shin. That was the end of the vertibird for the duration of her visit. Amazing what the human brain can recall with a video prompt. Awesome childhood memories.
In Brazil there was a copy of this toy made by a company called Estrela (I don't know if it was licensed but I think it was), the toy was Vertiplano and is was almost identical but its objective was to rescue a Mercury type capsule from the ocean. The nice thing is that it really flies despite of the motor being on the base of the toy and the movement being transferred by a rotating cable (just like a car velocimeter cable). I loved you really controlled it, it was the most similar thing to a video game you could get on the 70s in fact it was better.
I'm in the UK but I also had a space-themed version with a capsule to pick up - orange if I remember correctly. I've no idea what it was called over here but I'm hopeful a llittle while on google will find me the answer!
Not this one. My drive wire snapped at the base unit within 3 months. I had a blast with it until then. I had seen plenty of toys in the 1970s break. My little brother's Evel Kneviel stunt motorcycle broke the first day jumping small ramps as they show in the commercials.
. Great toy but the same happened to mine, we had a next door neighbour who used to repair it for me. Kids would love this today, we would spend hours having fun with it. Good old days....
Born same yeah. I broke plenty of toys in childhood, so I wouldn't necessarily say that in case. I even broke the Throttle on my Vertibird, that was end of, since I had no clue how to fix it the way I would have nowadays, which wouldn't have been too hard.
I'm 51 in a couple of days, I got this toy when I was a nipper from my dad. I loved it. But it went faulty, the drive wire from the motor to the chopper snapped. I was gutted. But strangely I was thinking of this toy just the other day. That and my Big Trak.
Zooumberg The same thing happened to mine. My mom took me to the local hobby shop to see if the guy could fix it. He got it working again, but not for long. A few years later I went back to that hobby shop, and even started hanging out there. That lead to years of fun with RC airplanes. I eventually even built an actual airplane. Thank you, Vertibird!
@@RV6Pilot I wish I still had mine. Although I would probably go for an RC plane now. But that's a great story and thanks for sharing. I'm considering going for my AFF (accelerated Free Fall) soon, it isn't cheap, but nothing is here in the UK any more
There was a more modern vertibird clone (Chopper Command I think) only about 10-15 years ago. I bought it from my local Toys R Us store. In the UK ,as a kid the Vertibird was too expensive for my parents, so of course I had to have a go with the Chopper Command one as an adult! Of course due to health and safety nanny state, the 3-bladed main rotor had a plastic ring around it thus adding weight and sapping performance. The ring was promptly removed :). I used to fly RC helis until very recently. I'm not kowtowing to the CAA and registering my Raptor 30, nor my 450 size heli. I'll just try and locate some private farmland, pay the farmer a bit of rent and then fly in the middle of a private field. No need for public liability insurance, nor registration.Besides, where I live, if any full size plane is going to have a problem with my helicopter, then that plane is already crashing anyway. ;)
Awww, righto! I had one of those sets, and I had hours upon countless hours of having a great time playing with it. I also had the Airfix 'Flight Deck' set, which was just as fun as the chopper set. I'm 56 now, but I'm so grateful for having had a cool free range childhood!
Holy cow does this bring back memories, I got mine in 1975 @ 1st or 2nd grade. One of the best Christmas presents I can remember, wore it out. I since much older and retired with money and have always wanted another one. Now, thanks to this video I know what to look for. Thank You for this video and the explanation. I probably know now why I wore mine out, I was trying to lift all types of things with it. Yep, I was one of those kids.
I was nine years old. We were so poor, a single mom and 4 kids. My oldest sister had just gotten a job. I wanted a vertibird so bad! My sister got her first paycheck and used part of it to buy one for me! It was the best toy ever! And best sister ever! Now I’m 59 years old and a pilot for 29 years.
🙂👍
I’m happy you got one. Nothing worse than kids sad or hurting and missing out. I’m 59 now too and your sister is gold!
That's a great story. Your sister made a good investment.
Thank God for a sister who loves you.
I am sixty and am a pilot for many years now have an elder sister who really cared for me when I was a kid like a guardian 😊
The most memorable Christmas present that I ever received as a kid. Hours and hours of play time.
Me too!!!
Out of all I ever received as a child, the Vertibird was the BEST, with the Tyco Pro Spirit of 76 train [1974] a few years later a close 2nd. I was fascinated with the auto log dump car on that train for some reason. 😊
🇺🇸
I was 7 years old in 74 and got one for Christmas. It was so cool never thought I would see one 50 years later. Thanks for the flashback.
❤
One of the greatest toys ever created IMO. Loved this thing as a kid. It would be a huge seller today. Don't know why Mattel would stop making it.
Agreed 🙂
Hurt fingers.. ouch.. lol
Loved it of course we tried picking stuff up it could barely carry lol
I believe the family cocker spaniel wrecked it lol
I had one. It was great but it ate batteries like nobody's business.
i am a former US Army helicopter pilot. I served from 1973 to 1980. Rated in UH-1H and OH-58. I did my overseas service in ROK and was the Airfield Operation Officer at Desiderio Army Airfield at Camp Humphreys. I had one of these with me in Korea. I was THE most popular guy in the unit. Every pilot in the unit wanted to try his hand on the Verti-Bird. Thanks for posting your video. It brought back many fond memories. Gets you a "LIKE" and a subscribe.
Thanks for the story. Have you used the DCS World simulator for PC? The UH-1H module in it is very nice. And OH-58D is coming at some point...
@hhc19avn - Excellent stuff! Thanks for sharing your awesome Verti story.
Thank you for protecting my homeland!
I knew why they stopped making the toy, when he did very quick circuits. Cool toy for adult toy collectors. It is even radar controlled. 😊
@@Zingo-sq4vq I started thinking about a toy I had that was a helicopter with a hook on it and would pick things up. Couldn't remember the name but I sure spent hours and hours on it. Then, I saw one on TH-cam. Couldn't believe it. Of course from there I went to eBay! Lol. I, at 60yrs old am a proud owner of the coolest toy of the 70's and top 25 of all time !!! A VERTIBIRD !!! I must renew my pilot's license so the city will be safe !!
Officer John.
I got this helicopter as a gift in 1976 or 1977. For me, It was the coolest thing in the world . I never forgot it and was very happy about this video.
Wow thought I would never see one again...thanks for the memories.
Glad you enjoyed it
My favorite toy as kid until my dad brought home pong
Not even kidding I'm looking for one for my 5 (turning 6 years old in a couple days) I'm 27 years old and had this when I was a kid!
I had one and loved it. Toys from this period were amazing.
Hi. I can't believe I found this video. I had this toy as a kid. Over 50 years ago. Always remembered enjoying it. Couldn't remember the name of it to find one as an adult. Finally watched this great clip and all the wonderful memories came back. Now can try to find one.... A million THANKS!!!
Thanks for watching 👍🙂
Wow, had one of these also as a kid but had forgotten all about it. I fly RC planes but not helis. One year, I got some kind of lunar lander that was a balloon tied to a base and controlled with some kind of moveable fan. Do you remember those?
I had one back in the 70's. One of the best toys I ever had. Nothing can compare to it since. Thank you for a memory almost forgotten.
During my childhood I had the verti bird , the Jackie Stewart AFX racing set, A tyco train set, and a big wheel! ....aaahhhh the good life!!
Thank you Mom and Dad!
May God bless you all and Merry Christmas
The Classics! 🙂
I had the Cheetah! heaven!
One of the great toys of the 70s. We didn't know how good we had it.
You got that right. 🙂
@@RchelicopterfunSpent hour after hour operating my VERTIBIRD. I had imaginary handcuffs to arrest the bank robbers after blockading and disarming them. Just bought myself the coolest toy of the 70's. Probably 100x what the cost was when I was 9 and I don't care.
This toy was magical for me back in the day. 😊
🙂👍
I got one of these for Christmas in I think 1972 - just showing this to my daughter when she asked me what the best Christmas present I ever got was,...
i got mine Christmas 1972 as well !! One of my all greats for sure .
Amazing. I haven’t thought about this toy for decades. Bought back memories. Had one as a kid. And you’re right - the best toy ever.
Had this one as a Christmas gift around 1975. For a 7 years old boy, there was no better gift than this. I will also never forget the great "U-Fly-It" made by Schaper. Both are unforgettable toy for me.
This brings back great memories! This was my absolute favorite toys when I was a kid. I wish I would have taken better care of it because I would still love to play with it now that I'm 50 years old!
Hah, same at 50.
They'd do a heck of a dive bomb striking the ground and keep on going.
Moms still got it stashed in the attic, I'm not sure if it still works.
It seems incredible to me that this man kept this toy, in this condition, for a whole lifetime - even while playing with it: and he even still has the box.......😮
A lot more kids than you think took great care of their toys-----and even kept the boxes whenever they could. The Vertibird was great but it was not too durable even for the era it was popular in.
I still have my AFX racing set from 1977......lol
No kidding. I would have trashed the Box 18 minutes after opening the toy
It's ai
@@keven8047 Don't be slow.
I had one of these back in the 1970s. It was my favorite toy. I'm 60 years old now but I can still remember all the countless hours of fun at flying my helicopter. Thank you for posting this. It has brought back many great memories.
God Bless
This was by far my most favourite toy!! I had 4 brothers and we were all in line waiting for our turn! I have suggestions for the rotor vibration. Slide the 3 pronged piece of the shaft, reattach it to the blade and then balance it. 2nd suggestion would be to have a local person 3d print another one. Good luck!
This and Evel Knievel.
@@An2oineI had both Evil and this whirly bird, I remember dropping little bombs of rolled up paper towel on the helicopter, trying to make it crash, probably why I don't have it anymore, it's amazing to still have this toy in that kind of condition.
There are resin 3dprint materials that feels like this softish plastic. and the prinnt quality of the resin printers are really good.
Five boys in my family too, all wanting to play with the helicopter.
This was definitely up there with the greatest toys ever created. I did have some James Bond toys like a pocket knife that would turn into a pistol and a radio that would turn into a machine gun.
I had one in the early 70’s .. absolutely loved it . such a lot of fun! Played with so much it wore out, but to this day still sits in the attic . Occasionally I bring it out for nostalgia. Seeing your video was amazing, and your bird is in such incredible condition!
With a 3D printer u could replace parts...
Do a restoration video and fix er up !
I still remember flying that little helicopter for hours and hours. One of my favorite toys ever. The drive spring in the base broke and it was done but it had hundreds of hours on it. Seeing yours flying now broke back lots of fond memories, I might have to look for one now. Thanks for sharing.
Yes indeed. The drive springs (both base and heli) were the weakest link on these fun little machines. Thanks for watching and commenting 👍🙂
This was my NUMBER 1 toy as kid. It broke and got patched up many times before it eventually bit the dust. The spring in the control tower went I seem to remember. I would love to have one of these again.
That spring was a weak point.
I've damaged few in my day and one of the scariest was the ends of the prop had been shortened due to an accident and the helicopter still flew but only at full throttle with the blades spinning much too quickly with quite sharp edges.😂 I fixed it after the next accident
Mine used to disconnect at the spring at the chopper, my grandad used to solder it back for me quite regularly.
I had to be about 7 or 8 when the spoiled kid down the block got one of these. I was Soooo jealous! - Gave my parents royal hell for weeks until they finally got one for me, but only after I had done 10 times more chores than the thing was worth. Yeah it was worth it, IMHO.
Good story
I've often said this was the greatest toy ever made. I was in awe of it as a child.
Thanks for posting. I'm 55 years old now but I had one of these when I was a kid. It has always been my favorite toy by far. Today I fly a DJI Mavic air drone. For me its very easy to fly because the vertibird or wherley bird taught me the basic skills. I have friends who are afraid of their drones. Not me. I was pre-programmed by this toy at an early age to fly. Back then, I flew mine so much that I wore out the springs and motor. I cried for weeks when the piano wire detached from the spring and the plastic part at the base broke. Now that I have a drone, my faith in this world has been restored. Hahahaha. Great video.
Awesome!!!! I was born in 1966. Had two of these during my preteen years and these were by far one of my most favorite and cherish toys during my childhood. You are so fortunate you kept yours. I’d do anything to have mine back again. I don’t know what happened to them. This might’ve been the inspiration for me as later in life I ended up getting my private pilots license (1989). I want to give you a special thanks for taking your time to publish this video and show us your childhood toy. This brought back some wonderful memories! Please continue to cherish and guard your VerdiBird. Stay safe!!!!
They were so silly though. At least for the time didn't have much better. But all you would do is just fly it around in a loop.
Although seems like was a challenge to control the hovering as I recall.
This is the toy that made my childhood great. It opened the door for rc aircraft later in life but I will always remember the Vertibird.
I won one in a competition - I absolutely loved it. It chewed batteries so I eventually connected the transformer from my model railyway - it worked a treat although for some reason bypassed the 'throttle' on the vertibird so you had to use the rotary power control on the train controller. The model was very well engineered and surprisingly robust! Happy memories!
This is how we learned about electric power! AC/DC ect....trial, fire and error!
I won 1st prize in my counties ( UK Home Counties ) drawing competition for a wild west themed picture aged 8 in 1976,.
After a posh reception, and photos for the press, I got a £ 5 voucher and went to Debenhams toy section to buy one of these , BUT they had sold out. Instead I bough an action man hang glider and it was total shit. Flew it straight into the barbed wire at our local park and that was the end of that. Never did get the chopper, although I have made up for that many times over with big boys toys.
Wow, my Dad did the same thing with the transformer… hours and hours of nonstop playing!
Thank you for this! My son (and I) played with this in the 70's. He was much better at it than I was. Your video brought back such wonderful memories. It's possible this may have influenced him, since after he grew up, he became a commercial airline captain, and after he retired started a successful drone business!
RC helis and drones are the next step from this toy. Freedom from the base!
This was the best toy of my childhood! We built a power adapter so we could plug it into the wall and save some batteries, and I flew endless "missions" around the living room floor. Still have one somewhere...
Brings back fond memories. I had the VertiBird Helicopter Coast Guard Rescue Ship. Spent many hours on rescue missions "at sea" in my livingroom. I also had the Schaper U-Fly-It. Like you, John, these toys got me hooked on model planes and much later RC flying planes and helicopters.
We (my brother and I) each had a similar version, no ship, but had to rescue the guy in the lifeboat. It also had a cardboard landing pad for the helicopter. Hours and hours of fun. I’m now 60 years old, wish I had it now. I’d share with the grandkids.
I had the one with the coast guard ship as well. If I remember correctly, it came with a hinged space capsule that allowed you to extract the astronaut.
Wow, the memories that come flooding back. This was by far my favorite toy as a child. It’s also the reason I retired my Ricochet Racer. Thanks for posting this.
Had one… they were great, as were all the toys of the 60’s and 70’s.
👍🙂
One of my absolute favorite toys as a kid. Spent countless hours in the 70s playing with it. Seeing it again makes me want to try and find one.
I remember when I had this the one thing I added was some light. I attached a 1.5volt battery where the radar is with sellotape and ran the wire along the arm which was wired to a little bulb which was fitted inside the helicopter. Lots of night time fun for a young boy back in the seventies.
That's super impressive! I never thought of that and wouldn't have figured out how had I tried!
I used to add little lights to my stuff too. Just had to talk mom into a trip to radio shack! I really loved the little LED bulbs , seems like most were red yellow or green. Oh and white/clear!
I got one for Christmas first year out, favorite toy ever!
I had this as a child in the 70s and loved it. I also have a "Schaper U-Fly-It", which allowed you to land a plane on a runway. The plane ran down a greased fishing line. We made a very long run in our backyard. My older brother had a control line gasoline powered plane. I remember him cutting the line, tying the throttle down and launching it straight up. We never saw it again.
I was just about to reply about having both and I saw your post. Hook on end to a chair or something elevated and the other end was connected to a flight yoke and the plane would slide down along the line towards you and your job was to land on the paper/plastic runway. I played with that thing for hours. You're the first person I've come across that even remembers it most don't.
I had two. The one like you have and the arctic set up in styrofoam to look like snow. Loved them. Looking back, that toy is what started my interest and eventually my career in aviation.
I would have loved that ❤ I don’t remember that in the UK in the 70’s but Mattel weren’t that big here back then
52 now and along with my Big Track they were the best toys ever.. Great memories!!
wow... what in instant, vivid memory! I had one too, my favorite toy. I was obsessed with helicopters and still am. I grew up to become a commercial helicopter pilot. I think this may have had something to do with it. I distinctly remember not thinking of it as a 'toy' and being very serious about operating it and picking things up with it.
This sparked an old memory. Thank you for this. One of the best toys ever made along with the sandbox excavator that you sit in and circles 360 degrees and has manual levers pitch down and scoop.
I love this. I had something similar called Super Copter, I'd guess around mid to late 1970s. The big difference from what you've shown is that it was a twin rotor. The controls only gave you 3 options - Hover in place, go clockwise or anticlockwise. Being a geek and electronics nerd, I hooked up the twin motors to my train set controller and got the thing lifting much heavier loads and spinning around fast! Teehee, great memories.
lol i feel you there. thats the kind of thing I would have done too
I remember having this as a kid, its what made me want to fly! 25 years later I am a commercial fixed wing pilot!
greast, this isn't all about you
@@slowery43 nobody asked for your opinion either… I’m just revisiting my past?
@@slowery43 Man you're a real dickhead aren't ya?
You just restored my memory from when I was a kid in the 90's living in Poland. I had one very similar back then. Thanks for that video
It wasn't as advanced as this one, though. Mine was just spinning around, and it didn't have any controller to operate the helicopter if I remember correctly. It was a Russian toy probably haha
lmao! I cant believe you still have one of those. I used to love playing with that thing. Thanks John, great memories.......
wow! i had that toy in the 70s! I loved it. I was shocked to see they were still out there. Very nostalgic. 🥰
I got one for Christmas and haven't stop thinking about flying since. I was a young adult before I started dabbling into RC airplanes. I never new RC Helicopters were a thing until a few years ago. I found your website when I was researching them and you inspired me to take up the challenge. Now I have too many..... Nah, no such thing!
👍🙂
Brings back great memories! The Vertibird and the Dareplane Stunter biplane (also by Mattel) were awesome cable-powered flying toys.. The Vertibird was more reliable and durable as it had a more rigid drive cable than the Dareplane, which would kink during maneuvers.
This was absolutely my favorite toy from childhood. I remember the feeling of sadness at the realization that the batteries were getting too low after playing with it for hours.
I only got one set of batteries but i hooked up my train power supply to it and could play with it as long as i wanted.
Aye, that was a bummer! Fortunately, Dad had spare batteries... A neighborhood friend had one, and his father, being an electrical engineer, had wired up a six volt power supply with sufficient amperage to keep it flying indefinitely, or at least until his son had reached the limit of his attention span, or dinner, whichever came first. His also ran much smoother than mine, as his father knew just the right lubrication to use on all moving parts. He even dynamically balanced the rotor blades by adding a single wrap of black electrical tape at just the right point. Smooooth...
@@jamesboyd5511 Ingenious!
This is great . My son who is turning 60 soon often talks about his favourite Christmas gift he received as a child . The Vertibird . Thanks for posting he'll get a kick out of this .
How could all of us late boomer techies forget this one!! This toy plus the Jaycopter ride at the '64 World's Fair got me totally hooked on helicopters. When the Internet boom happened I was finally able to fund the training for a rotor craft PPL. Thanks for these great time travel moments.
It is not forgotten, there even exists a simulator for PC - I flew it last week.
I can’t tell you how many hours I spent flying mine back in the ‘70’s!
I had the Astronaut Rescue Ship Version! Thanks for sharing!!
So cool! I thought I was the only one who loved this toy as a kid. My favorite of all time also. Thanks for the memories!
zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz
Oh God. This was my absolute favorite. As I remember it actually took a good bit of skill (through practice) to fly it smoothly. You can tell THIS guy is a veteran.👌
I stumbled across this video and it's exactly what I had back in the seventies received it as a Christmas gift and would not let it out of my sight was playing with this thing made paper objects so the helicopter could pick it up this gift is one of the all-time classics and guaranteed a big seller during the Christmas season!!!
I'm sure if they ever brought it back with a modified version it would be a big hit instead of today he's sitting in front of the iPads and don't move,,,
Sooo much fun, that toy. I had one in the 70's or 80's (don't recall exactly). One of my favorite toys along with the Big Trak. Thank you for resurrecting those VERY old and fond memories.
Ah the Big Trak - yep I remember those. Never had one and I can't remember if any of my friends had one, but it's funny how just seeing the name of it, I can recall exactly what it was - the beginning of programable toys. Thanks for sharing another fun 70/80's memory.
@@Rchelicopterfun i had a big trak with the optional trailer. i must have used up hundreds of batteries in that rig....
Took me straight back to my days as a kid! I got mine around age 10 and I love love loved it! When I got mine out an flew it, I would be alone in my own world free from the "pressures" of being a little boy of that age. I played with mine until I was old enough to start riding dirt bikes and that was pretty much it for the Vertibird, Years later I retrieved it from my childhood closet but sadly one of the piano wires was either warped or broken. Sometime later I guess my Mom put it in the trash to make room for something else. Watching this video was a blast to the past, thank you so much for keeping yours so that you could share it with the World!
Absolutely loved my Vertibird as a kid. The Tv commercials blew me away and got one for Christmas. So much fun. All time favorite toy.
This was one of my favorite toys when growing up. The Armatron from Tandy, Radio Shack was another favorite of mine. It was a great time back then from the 70's to the 80's from mechanical to electronical. Electromechanical to digital. I have one of the first digital pinball machines that uses digital readout instead of electromechanical reels from 1977. Genie pinball machine. Great game.
Both the VertiBird and the Armitron were my favorites! Though by the time the latter was available I wasn’t a kid anymore.
When I was 7, my father worked for TRW across the street from Mattel HQ in Redondo Beach CA. They has a program where the Engineers at TRW could have their kids be toy testers for Mattel and submit reports as to what broke or worked on their toys. I had 3 of these helicopters back then, none lasted more than a week before the gears failed. The first one was probably my fault, but I really loved the toy, so I was extra careful with the next 2, but they broke fast. I hope the production units were improved by my broken hearted kid testing. I did get into RC airplanes and helicopters as an adult, when it became affordable to me to do so. Not that the hobby was affordable, just I made enough to afford it. I always wanted another one of these until I bought a RC kit helicopter and built it myself.
I had one and still miss it.
My father died just before Xmas 24, this popped up randomly. To me it was him reminding me of our fun with this toy a long time back. RIP Dad have a good sleep xx
@@neilawuk So sorry to hear of your father's recent passing; especially difficult around the holidays. Warmest wishes to you and your family.
@ thank you, so odd this popped up randomly on my TH-cam feed, makes you wonder!
I had one. It was awesome. I loved that thing. Yep, had no problem picking stuff up. Things were simpler back then, this was out of the ordinary. There was a pretty cool Evel Knievel motorcycle that would run on it's own for a bit. It also came with a little ramp and did jumps pretty good. Super cool toy also.
I miss mine. Got it around the same time you did. Loads of fun. Mine had a carboard insert for the canopy/cockpit.
We also had a Starship Enterprise with similar mechanics. Not as much fun.
I found a remake of the Vertibird on the local Target Store shelves years ago. I bought it as a present for someone. Should have picked one up for myself.
My little brother had the yellow air rescue version and I think I played with it as much as he did if not more. We built obstacle courses and other things with Lego for the chopper to navigate through. Such a brilliant toy.
This was one of my favorite toys as a kid and I actually miss it.
Definitely brought back a lot of memories. My parents always bought me cool toys and this was one of them. Thank you for this video and it bringing me fond memories of Mom & Dad!
Nice 🙂 Thanks for watching.
So glad this came into my YT feed. This may have been the best Christmas gift I ever received as a kid. Hours and hours of fun and skill.
The greatest toy of my childhood, right next to my HO slot car set from then.
I spent hours playing with that little chopper, no idea how many batteries I went through. I eventually wore it out, probably from load testing to carry way more weight.
I seem to recall the spring ends letting go and my dad soldered them back, and eventually the control handles got weak and broke and I ended up jamming some sticks or ball point pen tubes in the control box so I could keep going.
I would still play with one if I had one, and I am 60.
Oh man you brought back memories. I got one of those in 1976 and it was the greatest toy I had ever gotten. I went through many batteries flying that around and had numerous sore fingers from catching them in the blades. The fun unfortunately ended when the shag carpet got all tangled in the chopper internals. Always wanted to be a helicopter pilot because of that toy.
I had one of these as a child and I was actually thinking about it recently ! What are the odds of this video randomly appearing on my recommendations?! It's brought back so many memories.
I had the Mattel Vertibird with the Apollo capsule. Then I was flying line control in my late teens (yes, Cox planes). Then finally in 2013 I got my first RC plane. I am currently flying the E-Flight Twin Otter. I'm surprised yours is still working all these years later.
Absolutely my all time favorite toy when I was a kid. Hours & hours of fun. Unfortunately, having 3 brothers meant it got a LOT of use and didn’t survive as well as yours. Thanks much for sharing.
Thanks!
Thanks very much back - much appreciated! 🙂
Had this as a hand-me-down when I was a kid. Later in life, I became a product developer and worked for a biiiig toy company (not Mattel) and this toy was my benchmark in play value, story, skill-building and fun (flow experience to use the psychological term). *Unmatched to this day* - especially when you consider the price point!
Lego?
@@starshiphopper7044 Yes, but in a different domain: LEGO is optimized around what psychologists are calling "flow" and "need states". Lego is a great concept in many areas but agility and hand-eye-coordination are not their strong points. That's the price you have to pay when building a system from universal/multi-purpose elements. I see Lego as a great design prototyping system and the VertiBird as a type of stationary sportive play experience. In an ideal world, you would have BOTH, the Mattel toy AND the old Technic 852 from 1977 (which I did as a kid...). Side note - Iater in life I became the head of the Technic design team (and turned down the Mattel offer) but that was 20 years later...
I had the orange one as a kid. I always wondered if it was really "flying" or if the rotating blades were just cosmetic, so good info here. I later had an airplane version with a yellow foam F4U Corsair. It most definitely was not flying, or even powered, since it didn't have a working prop.
I am in Scotland and I got one of these around those days as I am 57 now.
I fly drones now, and thanks for the memories.
Scotland Uk
Such a great toy at the time. I was fortunate to get one at Christmas, the Virtibird attached to a long styrofoam boat with marked landing pad. When I got bored with it, I detached it from the foam boat and it was game on again. Cheers!
Nice 👍
I cover the Vertibird in much more detail on my website: www.rchelicopterfun.com/mattel-vertibird.html
I also want to thank several viewers/subscribers for reaching out and sending me their original Verti rotor blades. Vibration free flying once again - thanks so much folks!
It's also very interesting that so many people also kindly offering a fix, suggest 3D printing a new rotor as an easy solution. I thank them too for their thoughtful feedback, but I would like to take the time to point out what that actually involves for those with no 3D printing experience.
As an FDM 3D printing hobbyist myself (as I demonstrated in the R2-D2 building series: th-cam.com/play/PLZV8xZm3OCXz8I0FoPzIeU--13oWWJfZv.html ), printing a rotor for this Vertibird is far from easy or practical, especially when you don't have an STL/OBJ 3D print file and there are none available.
So you either need very good propeller CAD design skills to make up an exact working replica of the original in Fusion 360/similar, or have a good quality high resolution 3D scanner to accurately scan a good known rotor.
Then there's the question of what thermoplastic material to use to print the new rotor with; most being too brittle to work in this application. Nylon is the obvious choice but very difficult for the average FDM printing hobbyist. We won't even get into removing the layer lines in Nylon as this rotor like all, has to be be more or less glass smooth to create lift without too much drag. Resin printing would be the better option to eliminate the layer lines that all FDM 3D printing produces, but I've read most resins are even more brittle than most thermoplastics? Thoughts?
John Salt
Good morning
Just a thought how about contacting 3D printing nerd and see if he can print you a new set of blades
Your dad must have been a great father!
I love the fact your set is complete with the parts it came with!! I had to scrounge for mine and it took 3 years of patient waiting and eBay to finally get all the parts to finish my set. These toys were from the time before everything had to be super safe and educational.
I also collect Cox control line airplanes and I wish they would bring the Cox and Testors gas line of cars and airplanes back. The younger set misses so many good toys from the 60s to the early 90s.,
Awesome, just dug mine out. Got it in '74/'75. Needs one wire soldering, the cardboard runway is missing and the hook under the chopper is snapped ( pretty sure i can make another). Apart from that it's all there, the box is a bit knocked about.
I had hours of fun with this toy.
👍
I went to the website to try and understand the way it works, but was still left with one question: How do the wires that go from the controller to the base not get twisted/tangeled up when the base is spinning? I had this question for the revolving Christmas tree too, but found out how the power was transferred. It's not like that with this thing. Any help?
Wow brings back memories,I think I had mine before 1974 though
They should make this toy again I had much, much fun when I was a kid and a adult!!
This was my favorite toy too. The Apollo program was in full bloom. It was my reminiscing of this toy about 4 years ago that got me into the hobby. Your rc helicopter site was the first thing I found too. I read every post and learned so much! I can’t thank you enough!
On my version you picked up the command module re-entry capsule after splashdown.
Also played with this at a wealthy neighbor's house when I was a kid in the 70s... I had almost forgotten about it. It brings real joy to be reminded by your video. Thank you 😊
Ha!ha! Brilliant toy John!I loved playing with these too.I also had a Star Trek version of this.It was counter balanced instead but worked pretty much the same.It also had little objects to snag with a hook from the "modified Enterprise".Great stuff man.🛸🚁😎
I loved that thing! I had the Coast Guard version with the big styrofoam ship. I think it came with a space capsule to lift up and put back on the deck.
That's the one! I was trying to remember which one I had. If I recall, there was a little dude in a basket like a USCG A/C Swimmer. I think it was the very first version, and the one in this video was a later iteration because I wanted this one, too! I equate that to a TV show called Chopper One that was sort of a knock off of Adam 12 with a helicopter.
This was the best toy!
Thanks for the trip down memory lane. My buddy had one but didn't take proper care of it and it stopped working. I still have the little helicopter. I used to play with it with my Matchbox city and/or 1.72 army men.
Good day John,
What a delightful presentation of a well designed toy! I love the radar dish following the helicopter making complete illustrative and practical attached sense. Your demonstration & explanation of the Mattel Vertibird Toy Helicopter was truly inspiring, not only for children but also for adults like myself. I did time travel back to 70's as a result. I empathized with you when it came to the unfortunate damage to the propeller blade. However, I believe that such experiences are part of the learning process, and your conservative approach in repairing it with heat was excellent.
Considering that the blades are detachable and the other blade is in good condition, I personally might let my OCD get the best of me. I would guess you have thought of doing all sorts of things and probably have drawn a conservative line to how far you'd preserve or restore things before feeling satisfied. I would consider making a mold of the intact blade or even 3D scanning it. The other blade acts as a perfect mirror, and with clever positioning on the 3D printer bed, you could potentially recreate it using resin printing. Alternatively, you could also experiment with other 3D printing types or techniques, ensuring proper blade placement, and then shape it with heat using a copper dowel or angle. I imagine that the plastic used in the toy is similar to that of zip tie material.
Of course, there are likely various other solutions to this issue, and these are just a few ideas that came to mind off the cuff. I simply felt inspired to engage with your excellent video presentation and wanted to express my best wishes, encouragement, and gratitude.
Thank you for sharing your experience with the Mattel Vertibird Toy Helicopter, and I hope you continue to inspire others with your imaginative and creative endeavors from toys designed to stimulate just that.
Best regards and wishes from the Cape of Good Hope peninsula SA.
I think I had this toy. It still stands the test of time, from a pure enjoyment perspective too. They couldn’t make a toy like this today though. It would be deemed too dangerous.
OMG I just found this. I also had a vertibird in the early 70s so fun! I forgot all about it until now. I recall playing with it in our living room. My Nana just arrived from the airport for a Christmas visit, walked in the front door and before she could put her luggage down, she walked right into the path of my vertibird at near full throttle and got nicked in the shin. That was the end of the vertibird for the duration of her visit. Amazing what the human brain can recall with a video prompt. Awesome childhood memories.
In Brazil there was a copy of this toy made by a company called Estrela (I don't know if it was licensed but I think it was), the toy was Vertiplano and is was almost identical but its objective was to rescue a Mercury type capsule from the ocean. The nice thing is that it really flies despite of the motor being on the base of the toy and the movement being transferred by a rotating cable (just like a car velocimeter cable). I loved you really controlled it, it was the most similar thing to a video game you could get on the 70s in fact it was better.
I'm in the UK but I also had a space-themed version with a capsule to pick up - orange if I remember correctly. I've no idea what it was called over here but I'm hopeful a llittle while on google will find me the answer!
Toys were made to last in the 1970s. I'm glad I was born in 1971. All the best of the 70s childhood
Not this one. My drive wire snapped at the base unit within 3 months. I had a blast with it until then. I had seen plenty of toys in the 1970s break. My little brother's Evel Kneviel stunt motorcycle broke the first day jumping small ramps as they show in the commercials.
A lot of plastic toys were made in Hong Kong back in those days…
I can assure you that the toys Mattel was manufacturing in the 1970s were not, in any way, made to last.
. Great toy but the same happened to mine, we had a next door neighbour who used to repair it for me. Kids would love this today, we would spend hours having fun with it. Good old days....
Born same yeah. I broke plenty of toys in childhood, so I wouldn't necessarily say that in case. I even broke the Throttle on my Vertibird, that was end of, since I had no clue how to fix it the way I would have nowadays, which wouldn't have been too hard.
The vertibird is also what got me into a 25 yr career as a Naval Aviator, RC geek, and current commercial helo and Air Tractor pilot!
The perfect STEM toy too 🙂👍
I'm 51 in a couple of days, I got this toy when I was a nipper from my dad. I loved it. But it went faulty, the drive wire from the motor to the chopper snapped. I was gutted. But strangely I was thinking of this toy just the other day. That and my Big Trak.
Zooumberg The same thing happened to mine. My mom took me to the local hobby shop to see if the guy could fix it. He got it working again, but not for long. A few years later I went back to that hobby shop, and even started hanging out there. That lead to years of fun with RC airplanes. I eventually even built an actual airplane. Thank you, Vertibird!
@@RV6Pilot I wish I still had mine. Although I would probably go for an RC plane now.
But that's a great story and thanks for sharing. I'm considering going for my AFF (accelerated Free Fall) soon, it isn't cheap, but nothing is here in the UK any more
It broke on you? Why, that DirtiVertibird piece o' junk!!!!
There was a more modern vertibird clone (Chopper Command I think) only about 10-15 years ago. I bought it from my local Toys R Us store. In the UK ,as a kid the Vertibird was too expensive for my parents, so of course I had to have a go with the Chopper Command one as an adult! Of course due to health and safety nanny state, the 3-bladed main rotor had a plastic ring around it thus adding weight and sapping performance. The ring was promptly removed :). I used to fly RC helis until very recently. I'm not kowtowing to the CAA and registering my Raptor 30, nor my 450 size heli. I'll just try and locate some private farmland, pay the farmer a bit of rent and then fly in the middle of a private field. No need for public liability insurance, nor registration.Besides, where I live, if any full size plane is going to have a problem with my helicopter, then that plane is already crashing anyway. ;)
I have no idea why they don't still make these, they are incredibly fun, simple and durable. It's a terrific toy.
Indeed!
You could use this to pass the salt in these social Distancing times ! 😀
Awww, righto! I had one of those sets, and I had hours upon countless hours of having a great time playing with it. I also had the Airfix 'Flight Deck' set, which was just as fun as the chopper set. I'm 56 now, but I'm so grateful for having had a cool free range childhood!
Holy cow does this bring back memories, I got mine in 1975 @ 1st or 2nd grade. One of the best Christmas presents I can remember, wore it out. I since much older and retired with money and have always wanted another one. Now, thanks to this video I know what to look for. Thank You for this video and the explanation. I probably know now why I wore mine out, I was trying to lift all types of things with it. Yep, I was one of those kids.
Had one, loved it. Given to me by my brother who had become a pilot, he always had the coolest toys.