Vintage set of the week: Rescue Helicopter

Posted by ,
Rescue Helicopter

Rescue Helicopter

©1974 LEGO Group

This week's vintage set is 691 Rescue Helicopter, released during 1974. It's one of 13 LEGOLAND sets produced that year. It contains 62 pieces.

It's owned by 598 Brickset members. If you want to add it to your collection you might find it for sale at BrickLink or eBay.


26 comments on this article

Gravatar
By in United States,

Not much to work with here on this one.
I guess it's just a rescue HELI-KHOPTER HELI-KHOPTER!

Gravatar
By in United States,

Looks kinda shy, hiding its cockpit like that.

Gravatar
By in United States,

Interesting that the main rotor is built off of the same piece used for the tail rotor.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@MCLegoboy said:
"Not much to work with here on this one."

A man has fallen into the river in LEGOLAND!

Start the OLD rescue helicopter!

Hey!

Gravatar
By in United States,

Can’t even fit the whole set on the box, or the main image. That was left to the US to clean up. It actually kind of looks like it’s in the sky, so that’s neat. Also, great source of Light Grey parts pre-classic space!

Gravatar
By in United States,

@PurpleDave said:
"Looks kinda shy, hiding its cockpit like that."

That's actually really funny!

Gravatar
By in United States,

Very nice shaping for the year!

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

A quarter of the number of parts in the December GWP shows how meaningless is the price per piece metric so beloved of fans. I think taking into account the number of studs on the footprint of each part would give a clearer indication of scale and perceived value. Really good to see sets like this make an appearance in the VSotW. Some of us are just old enough to remember them in the shops!

Gravatar
By in Netherlands,

@TheOtherMike said:
"Interesting that the main rotor is built off of the same piece used for the tail rotor."

Imagine if they accidentally switched the two.......you'd be in for a ride! A short one probably, but still....

I assume this rescue helicopter wasn't based on some military design? Never to late to cancel a good thing...

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

Given they only had blocks to work with, not any of the modern curved pieces Lego likes using in helicopters these days, that’s not bad

Gravatar
By in Jersey,

Considering Lego's policy of not depicting modern military vehicles, this looks suspiciously like a Wessex ;)

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@WizardOfOss said:
" @TheOtherMike said:
"Interesting that the main rotor is built off of the same piece used for the tail rotor."

Imagine if they accidentally switched the two.......you'd be in for a ride! A short one probably, but still....

I assume this rescue helicopter wasn't based on some military design? Never to late to cancel a good thing..."


I don't think designs back then were based on a specific real world design, but more just a generic mishmash of design elements.

Gravatar
By in Turkey,

Looks like a nicely detailed vintage Creator set. I'll check if I can clone a modern version of it. I did it to 1549-2 and looks nice.

Gravatar
By in Ireland,

The curved windscreen part was only used in one other set.
Two if you count the US renumbered version of this one as a separate set.

Gravatar
By in Germany,

I remember Bricks n Pieces (and later a few other club magazines) published this set's instructions around the early till late 90s - still showing a couple of pieces long out of production. The page stated that you should be creative in replacing those, if you don't have them.

A bit reminiscent of the spirit of the ideas books :D

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@Atuin said:
"I remember Bricks n Pieces (and later a few other club magazines) published this set's instructions around the early till late 90s - still showing a couple of pieces long out of production. The page stated that you should be creative in replacing those, if you don't have them.

A bit reminiscent of the spirit of the ideas books :D"


I remember building it myself back in 2001! I used the wheels from the shuttle in 6456 for the landing gear.

Gravatar
By in Netherlands,

@CCC said:
" @WizardOfOss said:
" @TheOtherMike said:
"Interesting that the main rotor is built off of the same piece used for the tail rotor."

Imagine if they accidentally switched the two.......you'd be in for a ride! A short one probably, but still....

I assume this rescue helicopter wasn't based on some military design? Never to late to cancel a good thing..."


I don't think designs back then were based on a specific real world design, but more just a generic mishmash of design elements. "


Yeah, they sure took design clues from actual designs, but gave it their own twist. If only they did the same with the Osprey....

Gravatar
By in Germany,

@Atuin said:
"I remember Bricks n Pieces (and later a few other club magazines) published this set's instructions around the early till late 90s - still showing a couple of pieces long out of production. The page stated that you should be creative in replacing those, if you don't have them.

A bit reminiscent of the spirit of the ideas books :D"


That’s what LEGO is about in my opinion. Creativity!

I built this set with my younger brother, fond memories.

Gravatar
By in United States,

When I was a kid, I saved up my lawn mowing money over the summer and bought this set at Kmart. Lost it over when I went in the Air Force but finally found one in a bulk lot and added it back into my collection. Great memories.

Gravatar
By in United States,

@bigfanofnu said:
"When I was a kid, I saved up my lawn mowing money over the summer and bought this set at Kmart. Lost it over when I went in the Air Force but finally found one in a bulk lot and added it back into my collection. Great memories."

Did they make you sell it to someone from the US Army?

Gravatar
By in Germany,

Great set, great memories. Turned out that when they finally invented the modern minifig - the double doors were big enough that they could fit inside.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

@WizardOfOss said:
" @CCC said:
" @WizardOfOss said:
" @TheOtherMike said:
"Interesting that the main rotor is built off of the same piece used for the tail rotor."

Imagine if they accidentally switched the two.......you'd be in for a ride! A short one probably, but still....

I assume this rescue helicopter wasn't based on some military design? Never to late to cancel a good thing..."


I don't think designs back then were based on a specific real world design, but more just a generic mishmash of design elements. "


Yeah, they sure took design clues from actual designs, but gave it their own twist. If only they did the same with the Osprey...."


Sikorsky S-61 SeaKing. Definitely.

Gravatar
By in Netherlands,

For being over 50 years old, still quite good imo, and pieces are easily reuseable.

Gravatar
By in United Kingdom,

Nicely fits back in the box just by removing the main rotor!

Gravatar
By in United States,

@Duq said:
"The curved windscreen part was only used in one other set.
Two if you count the US renumbered version of this one as a separate set."


I got this new as a young child, and I still have it (box is long gone, though). I always liked it for that rare 2x4 windscreen piece, which I thought looked a lot nicer than the standard 2x4 trans-clear slope. I also think it's a very nice looking model, even today.

Gravatar
By in Netherlands,

@Duq said:
"The curved windscreen part was only used in one other set.
Two if you count the US renumbered version of this one as a separate set."


Interesting.....I do have a couple of those windscreens, though looking at some other specific pieces we didn't have either of those sets. I wonder where those came from...

Return to home page »