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Eko are a Spanish manufacturer who made a modest range of figures as well as cars, tanks and other toys.
They were sold as HO scale and were generally factory painted to a very low standard. Many were straight
copies of figures from other manufacturers such as Airfix, but some were genuinely original, so we present
here a rundown of the full military range.
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| 4500 - WWII English Infantry Set 1 |
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Image courtesy of Toy Soldier HQ Inc.
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This set has a very familiar look to it, being one of the many copied from the original Herald set. Some
quality was lost during the copying, and the figures were sold with the faces, hands and boots already
painted. The bag contained one of each of the eight poses shown. See also
examples of packaging.
Today the original of this set is
marketed by A Call To Arms.
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| 4501 - Spanish Foreign Legion |
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Image courtesy of Victor Rudik
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This is one of the original sets this company produced. The eight poses show the Spanish Foreign
Legion in action, presumably for the civil war period. It would seem that these were available both
unpainted and with a very basic factory painted finish.
While we have not seen these figures in the flesh
(hence the composite picture above), they look like they are of a good standard. See also
examples
of packaging.
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| 4502 - WWII German Infantry Set 1 |
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| 4503 - World War II Japanese Infantry |
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| 4504 - WWII German Infantry Set 2 |
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| 4505 - WWII American Infantry |
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| 4506 - WWII English Infantry 8th Army |
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Image courtesy of Toy Soldier HQ Inc.
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Back to familiar territory now as the ever popular Airfix range is raided once again. Here we find
eight poses from the first type Eighth Army set. With this
set you got marginally more paint as there is more exposed flesh, and from the look of this picture you
sometimes got a particularly revolting shade of green, although a sand colour seems to have been more
common. See also
examples
of packaging.
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| 4507 - WWII English Infantry 8th Army (2) |
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| 4508 - Swiss Infantry |
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| 4509 - Seated Soldiers |
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Image courtesy of Gianluca Meluzzi
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This one was clearly meant to populate all those vehicles you can buy with no one inside.
From the looks of the image the quality is really poor, and the poses are limited to one man with his
arm round a colleague's shoulder and another man keeping his hands to himself. We can't see a
stampede to buy this one. See also
examples
of packaging.
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| 4510 - Spanish Infantry |
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| 4511 - WWII Russian Infantry |
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| 4512 - WWII US Paratroopers Set 1 |
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| 4513 - WWII US Paratroopers Set 2 |
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| 4514 - Commandos |
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Image courtesy of Toy Soldier HQ Inc.
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Once again it is apparent that Airfix figures have been pirated, this time from their first type
Commandos set. Well that is not a great set to begin
with, so these can't have much going for them.
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| 4515 - Arab Legion |
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This is definitely in the unusual category. The figures wear a generic battledress much
resembling that of Britain, plus of course the shemagh, although detail on all these items is not good.
The Arab Legion were a small police/military force in Transjordan that supported the Allies in World
War II by fighting the French in Syria, then in 1948 they fought the Jews in Palestine, and afterwards were a
security force in Jordan. This is a subject that has still to be done by anyone else, but while the
sculpting quality is not good a couple of the design decisions are very strange. One man is waving a
small flag, which does not fit comfortably with the period, and another, whom we take to be an officer,
is holding a large bird on his left hand. This is presumably the regimental mascot, a hawk, but is far
too large, and in any event it was not carried into battle like this. Presumably done from the Osprey
book on the subject, this remains the most exotic Eko set. See also
examples
of packaging.
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| 4516 - Campaign Artillery |
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Image courtesy of Victor Rudik
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Now it seems Eko expanded their copying horizons, and introduced this version of the Atlantic
Anti-Tank Troops set. Again, not a great set to copy so
not an impressive result. See also
examples
of packaging.
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| 4517 - Mortars and Machine Guns |
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Eko also made a wide range of tanks, vehicles (both military and civilian), aircraft and other toys.
They made several dioramas such as the one pictured above, which had both figures and vehicles glued to
a plastic base with a clear plastic cover. However it is their unique figure sets that make them of
interest for our site.
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