Your mower was sold here between about mid-1970s and mid-1980s. I'm trying to work out the exact connection with Vulcan, but I think it goes like this.
Vulcan was/is a heater and hot water manufacturer. They wanted to get into lawnmowers and they sold Masports and Supa-Swifts using the Vulcan name: Vulcan-Supa-Swift and Vulcan- Masport.
Vulcan is not mentioned in the definitive Jim Allnatt book on Masport; suggesting no close connection between the firms, but a commercial deal between Masport Australia and Vulcan at that time.
All it needed was a brass band and some dancing girls from the Don Lane show. I love these old mower commercials. They made lawnmowers look ... exciting!
Reason being, that Masport bought out Whirlwind in Melbourne in the mid-1970's, and started selling Masport mowers under their own name here, from then on. Vulcan continued to sell rebranded Supa Swifts until the early 1980's IIRC.
From an earlier post of mine: [quote] Timeframe would have been 1974-75 for the takeover, IIRC.
What makes it stick in my mind, is that Masport then commenced marketing bar blade mowers in Oz, and introduced the 'new model' Iron Horse 2-stroke engine option.
They also required their dealers [we were one] to purchase a new 'special tool' - a crankshaft straightening setup [basically a bench mounted screw press with a runout indicator] at that time. They had it manufactured locally, and the price was pretty reasonable. This was to straighten bent crankshaft PTO ends, after object strikes with the rigid bar blade, which no other local manufacturer used at that time.
Masport made the product launch for the new Iron Horse a major shivoo for the Vic dealers, at least. It was held at the Southern Cross Hotel in Melbourne, and the dealers and their families were put up there at company expense for the show night! This was a first in the garden machinery game, for those days.[/quote]
Cheers, Gadge
"ODK Mods can explain it to you, but they can't understand it for you..."
"Crazy can be medicated, ignorance can be educated - but there is no cure for stupid..."
I loved the sepia-tone, nostalgic look and the whimsical soundtrack. Creative & Clever. Enjoyable.
The titles were ... ... ... ambitious! I predict a telly movie, then a mini-series ('Meet the Masports'). This will be followed by a blockbuster movie: George Lucas' 'Masportation: Return of the Vulcans'.
Merchandising will be huge: SuperDooper brand ice-creams, T-shirts, SuperDooper Man action figures in McHappy meals ... BIG!
This will be followed by personal audiences with Obama, the Deli Lama, and a snake charmer - who once met the Pope (and I don't mean the mower...)
All the way with ODK ------------------------------ JACK