Ran into this and it seemed like it might be lots of fun for someone https://www.ebay.com/itm/235176966782?hash=item36c1a3ba7e:gc8AAOSwQxRk9OH8&amdata=enc:AQAIAAAAwCQmAJNZvjvgUhoKOamD6f38tQ+jiXPqegid8AzTaT03jnz0jx952dFMxaapoDngJXGxalP1SziDs71fYnqh88L5cxXvEUwA+wIEbxacDkLJRuFSLIcsN1ARDxKYPBoemsLAw284rakjw77iX5KV7oeIdzY579nzwtbeyJBrIWmGlYPcVEPpLgIE0rt4NybtsJbSNrFnrDJr9NAHdDGOfvaVvRlvFTveKPptSlLg0AuE2e85JoQwYn5AwFk3BJjXHQ==|tkp:Bk9SR6y64_zjYg
Don't think we have many members less than 3-years old, except as sons and daughters (grandsons and granddaughters...)
Adjust the angles, and you've got a molecular modeling set that hints at orbital shapes. Especially if you've got some elongated cents...
Hold up. I actually had this when I was like 8-9 years old which would have been 2000-2001. I had just started collecting coins at about 7 and I had a few thousand Lincolns sitting around at the time and my oldest brother got me this coinstruction thing for a birthday or something. I have no clue what ever happened to the pieces. They were small plastic and my mom had Yorkshire Terriers so probably a lot of pieces ended up chewed and well, in the back yard. I haven't thought about these in forever.
Kind of a neat way to do more recent birth year sets...if anyone wants to give me one with 1945 coins, please go ahead...