At this point the line is limited to the 'Sweet 16' - a range of established designs and some exotics as designed by the Mattel maestro and real world car designer, Harry Bentley Bradley. The cover of the catalogue shows a car which would not be part of the line until many decades later, when it was added to the line as the 'Custom Otto', designed by Larry Wood, based on the artwork by Otto Kuhni.
This is my benchmark and the point at which my redline collection starts and ends. Thus far I have managed to find 19 of these wonderful models. I have so far avoided collecting the Can-Am and Hot rod style cars and concentrated on the exotics.
Besides the standard redline range and the Sizzler, motorised range, Mattel introduced a line of larger workhorse type vehicles, called 'Heavyweights'. These ranged from small utility vehicles, to lorries and articulated transports.
A difficult line to collect, as the open cabin is very often damaged or scuffed and a lot of the rear bodies are plastic.
On now to another benchmark era - 1971 and Mattel really go to town with the ranges, moving from the road to rail and air!
Once more. Mattel contrived to get its toy hooks firmly embedded in my psyche, as splash pages in a lot of seventies Marvel and DC comics, carried the above advertisement for the elusive Hot Birds line.
Hot Birds were fully diecast airplanes, with moveable undercarriage, aerolons and engine covers. The idea was to place the plane on a special hook, run it on a length of nylon filament and land it on a plastic runaway, much like the Airfix Flight Deck toy.
Six radical swept wing designs were made and various sets with towers and runways. Unfortunately for Mattel, Hot Wings crashed and burned sectacularly as a concept and never made it out of 1971.
Another innovative idea which did not get far was the 'Hot Line' train set - using a similar engine to the Sizzers cars, super streamlined locomotives blasted around a trackway, powered up from Sizzlers Juice Machines. Once more, the design looked great, but failed to capture the childhood imagination for some reason.
Clearly understanding where their market lay, Mattel continued with the diecast motorbike range of RRumblers, with great looking bikes and choppers, mounted on a special rig with tiny wheels to stabilise the bike on the track.
The Heavyweights and the standard lines were naturally included, but the marketing for the standard Hot Wheels cars, seems a little restrained.
More real world designs were included and less emphasis was placed on the more exotic and sensational designs. Raile dragsters and hot rods made more of an appearance too.
Fast forward once more, to another watershed moment in 1973, when the European catalogue appears and looks like it has been put together in a rush. Production values for the advertising are much lower, the paper is flimsy and the catalogue sparse, despite introducing new lines. Many of the earlier ranges, such as Hot Birds, Hot Lines and Sizzers are not present.
In a promotional exercise, when I bought the Whip Creamer, it was also 10p, reduced from the list price of 19p! Eight models were available on release, with the US seeing a second wave of rare designs in another series of 8 further models.
Finally, Mattel diversify once again, with another toy line, the Hot Shots. Four plastic pull back motor dragsters. Once more, these were short lived and disappeared from shelves quite quickly.
Some of those Heavyweights and Hot Wings are very 'late Andersonesque', as in Joe 90 or UFO.
ReplyDeleteI wonder if one influenced the other and vice versa
DeleteI loved the planes. And while I had the trains, I have to admit that they weren't too exciting. Maybe because riding in a train was pretty rare by that point in time. At least, in the US.
ReplyDeleteWow! What a great run down! This brings back a lot of memories and things I'd never seen before! It seems that toy making like movies, is going to a lot of trouble making things, throwing them at the wall and seeing if anything sticks!
ReplyDeleteI have two of the heavyweights. The Ambulance which sits on the wheels so it rolls like junk. The Fire Engine is my other which survived a crash off my bike and skittering down the road. While I still have the folding ladder, I am missing a tiny chunk of plastic on one side by the rear wheels.
ReplyDeleteThe motorcycles often had different riders than the catalog showed. I have 2 Rip Snorters, a 3 Squealer with missing handlebars, a red High-Tailer and a black Romanin' Candle.
My Hot Birds are a complete set but my Ski Gull is missing the landing skis as seems to be a common issue.
The last one that I found was Ski Gull, which was missing the skis, but there's a dude on YouTube who was restoring one and 3d printed a set. He kindly gave me the file for them, so I got a set run out. If you want the file, lmk! Bill
DeleteThat'd be great Bill. Far cheaper than buying a complete Ski Gull. I've managed to find a file for the tiny gun for the Starbird toy's rear turret ball.
Delete