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Diecast Stories: “Little Orphan Diecast”

I love Hot Wheels! I am a 45 year old man that loves Hot Wheels cars!  It’s not that it’s been eating me up inside because I haven’t ever been able to say it out loud, I just like saying it.  I love the fact that I collect something many people find unique or quite frankly…odd!  But what’s even more odd is the fact that as much as I love Hot Wheels, I am equally passionate about collecting “different” or “orphan” makes of diecast just as much as Hot Wheels. When I say “different” or “orphan” makes I mean makes that no longer exist or have lower visibility in the diecast world.  Discontinued makes I like include [but aren’t limited to in the least] Playart, Corgi Junior/Husky, Kidco, Zylmex, and Impy/Lone Star. Some current, lower visibility makes I like to collect are Tomica, Siku, and Majorette. 

I have been fascinated by cars since I was very young. I loved to look at them, memorize them, and read and study about them. I also loved to play with little ones!  In the late Sixties, when I was only 2 years old, my Dad bought me over 200 Matchboxes from a much older kid in the neighborhood who needed Christmas money that year.  There were so many cool cars in that box and I played with those cars until they were completely destroyed; which is very hard to do to old Matchboxes. Back in the day, kids played with toy cars much longer than today where there are so many more toy choices at an earlier age.  I was also fortunate enough to have relatives in Germany and visit them quite often as a child.  They would have dozens of cars waiting for me before I arrived including Siku, Majorette, and euro Matchboxes plus would buy me more while I was there which was usually the whole summer off from school.  I would then be able to bring all these unique cars back and impress my friends with them which were much different than your “garden variety” U.S. Matchbox and Hot Wheels of the day.

Furthermore, near my hometown were Woolworth’s, local independent toy stores and regional department stores [anyone remembers Two Guys stores?] not to mention a big hometown 5 &10 [who remembers those?] all stocked with Matchboxes, Hot Wheels, Playart [aka Roadmates or Peelers], Zylmex, and Corgi Juniors. But being a kid I played with these cars like a typical kid would.  I raced them down orange tracks, plowed them through the dirt, played smash up derby, flung them across the sidewalk/driveway, and put them behind the back wheels of my Dad’s Impala. Pre-1969 Matchbox Mercedes Buses with the bubble tops and MG 1100s were especially fun to crush! [Sorry Matchbox fans!] 

toranadoHaving all these different cars made a lasting impression on me; so when I began to truly become exposed to the world of toy shows and later the internet I saw the same cars I had as a kid and began to snap them up.  I also collected the newer versions of these makes when I could find them.  To me, the thrill of finding a Playart 1968 Plymouth Barracuda or a Siku 1966 Oldsmobile Toronado that still has its jeweled headlights in decently mint shape at a flea market or toy show rivals the joy of finding a great Hot Wheels Redline.  I am still looking for an affordable Impy Flyers Vauxhall Firenza that’s also in clean shape.

I am usually very, Very, VERY, picky about what kind of discontinued orphan cars I collect or any older diecast in general for that matter.  My friend Jeff Koch once jokingly called me a “prissy little B*%@H” [at least I think he was joking] when it came to the condition and what type of car I collected. He probably was justified about that title and I probably am a tad particular about what I buy; but Jeff if you’re out there; please clear that up!

thunderbird A few years ago I found two Zylmex 1971 Ford Thunderbirds, one mud brown and one sky blue, in dead mint condition for $1.00 a piece in a box at a toy show!  I thought I had died and gone to heaven!  I had these exact two cars as a kid and I used them as my special F.B.I. guy cars! I used to watch the old ABC TV show, The F.B.I., with my Dad every Sunday night and either Efrem Zimbalist Jr. or someone on the show was always driving a Thunderbird.  As a kid, those were my “special” cars, the ones I only gently played with and wouldn’t let anyone else touch! 

mb_super_grifo I also had a “special” case for my “special” cars and it was chock full of things like a red Playart ’69 Mustang, a rainbow of Hot Wheels Sugar Caddys, a Matchbox Superfast Iso Grifo, and a Corgi Juniors Ogle, plus a smattering of everything else.  But eventually as I got older, I gave my cars away to either my younger cousins or friends of my parents who had younger kids. This is why today I cherish finding cars from my childhood and treat them with great care once I get them home.  I remember studying the Sears Roebuck Christmas catalogs then asking for [and getting] the Hot Wheels Redline sets. I remember getting Woolworth’s Peelers in my Christmas stocking and buying Corgi Juniors with my pocket money when I went to Two Guys.  I can even remember first finding Majorettes in the U.S. around 1973 in a Shop-Rite supermarket and my father refusing to buy them because they were $1.29 each; so my uncle who visiting from South Jersey and shopping with us wound up buying them for me. I also recall the fun of matching my toy cars to cars I saw on the street or TV! 

I now love to read about the history of diecast cars and how they came about. Stories about how Elliot Handler didn’t want his grandkids to play with a competitor’s car or the steep decline of Corgi Juniors not because the cars didn’t sell but because of the terrible economic climate facing Britain and the fatal business decisions of the parent company; like our own history, toys have interesting ones also.

freshcherries Today, nothing appeals to me more than when a company comes out with an oddball car in its line like the recently cancelled Motormax Fresh Cherries line [R.I.P.!], Hot Wheels Australian Ford XB Falcon and Brazilian VW SP2, Matchbox’s ‘69 Cadillac Sedan De Ville or new Volvo 1800, Greenlight’s ‘71 Javelin Alabama State trooper car [a real life car if you didn’t know], or Tomica’s Mitsuoka Viewt [look that one up]!  I really don’t meet too many diecast collectors who collect quite the same combination of cars I do.  I love Superbirds and ’57 Chevys in diecast and real life but after a while of seeing row after row of them at car shows or on the peg, I kind of like seeing the odd Pinto or De Soto.  Some cars I would love to see done in 1:64 scale are a ’76 Chrysler Cordoba [and pronounce it “cor-DO-ba” as Mr. Montalban so eloquently did in his commercials], or a ’78 Chevy Caprice coupe [I had one; great car!] or maybe something really off the wall like a Borgward Isabella  or ’57 Nash Ambassador hardtop coupe!  Like I said, I like’em odd!

What unique diecast cars do you collect and why do you collect them? I love talking to other collectors about why they collect the cars they do.  I love to hear about someone’s oddball “FIND” and why they love that oddball car.   You should be proud of your oddball collection and tell everyone about it who wants to hear. I definitely have an open ear; let me know!

Don’t be afraid to go to your window right now; open it wide up, and yell as loud as you can:

“I AM A @@-YEAR OLD MAN/WOMAN AND I LOVE TO COLLECT TOY CARS”

 

It’s really very liberating!

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6 Responses to “ Diecast Stories: “Little Orphan Diecast” ”

  1. Infamous yet accurate.

  2. Great story Joe.

  3. Joe great read as always. Your not alone i’m an odd collector as well. I have the Siku 66 Toronado mentioned above as well, and a bunch of other odd balls. I think having a variety just adds depth to your collection along with great stories to share with friends. Keep these stories coming.

  4. Great article. You really are a good writer. I can feel your excitement. Also, you allowed me to recall specific memories of my “special cars” and the different things my brother and I did with our cars. If you don’t mind, I may use the article with my students to show them how specific details play an important role with good writing.

  5. Thanks everyone for your supportive comments. This was a very special article for me. Keep yoour comments coming!

  6. I can remeber my younger days of having my special cars and trucks playing with them on my bed with my pretend roads and buildings.Fourty years later i wish i still had them but like everyone else gave them away . Today i wander walmart ,k mart and the grocery stores for new stuff to buy.So now i have boxes of assorted vehicles packed away in the attic reliving my childhood days.And i can remember TwoGuys stores in New Jersey ,visiting relatives in Plainfield N .J. as a kid with my family . so i have to wait for grandkids to pass them on to . So to everyone have fun collecting .

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