

HABA Kullerbu Momentum Motor Ambulance
Give it a push and this sturdy little ambulance races ahead, sparking early physics exploration, whole-body movement, and lively rescue storytelling. Toddler-powered, no batteries required.
$9.99
Quantity:
HABA's Kullerbu Momentum Motor Ambulance may be small, but once it hits the track—or the living‑room floor—it acts like the pint‑sized responder every toddler wants in their squad. With a bright white body, bold rescue markings, and a blue "lightbar" on top, this vehicle is ready to roll. A single push powers its momentum motor, sending it racing forward on its own—no batteries, no fuss. Kids instantly see that a stronger push sends it farther, turning each launch into a quick, self‑run physics experiment.
Made from tough ABS plastic with smooth edges and secure wheels, the ambulance measures about three and a half inches long and just over two inches wide—ideal for little hands. On hard surfaces, it becomes a roaming responder, darting across hardwood, tile, or low‑pile carpet to handle whatever emergencies a child dreams up.
Every run is packed with early STEM. Children discover how different surfaces change its speed, how slopes boost momentum, and how carpet slows things down. They adjust their push, test new routes, and predict outcomes, building real intuition about force, friction, and gravity. And because the ambulance keeps rolling on its own, kids naturally follow—chasing, retrieving, and resetting—giving toddlers steady whole‑body movement without any prompting.
Fine‑motor skills grow with every launch. Kids learn to grip, aim, and push with control, strengthening the muscles that later support writing and other daily skills. And once the ambulance arrives at its imagined scene, storytelling takes over—rescue, siren, emergency, all woven into lively play that expands vocabulary.
With nothing to charge, nothing to assemble, and no downtime, the ambulance is always ready to roll again. It brings motion, early physics, fine-motor practice, problem-solving, resilience, storytelling, vocabulary building, and non-stop movement.




