The 2013 Boulevard '71 Datsun 510 Wagon, the godfather of the Hot Wheels JDM craze...


If you are an avid Hot Wheels collector, step back for a minute.

Look at the state of Hot Wheels collecting.  We are in the midst of a JDM tidal wave.  Two years ago, most collectors didn't know what JDM meant (and they still don't, but we are as guilty as any for erroneously using the term for any Japanese car - kind of like "Kleenex" for tissue, but that is an article for another time), and most likely weren't even familiar with the term at all.

But JDM is EVERYWHERE in our hobby.  New Japanese car models are a constant now.  Every year, one iconic vintage Japanese car after another hits the pegs, and promptly gets scooped up.  For those that have been collecting for awhile, did you ever envision a day when collectors would bypass a Camaro SS on the pegs to get to a Corolla?  Or that the most expensive RLC model on the secondary market is a Datsun?  And that the most buzzed-about new models in 2015 are not a Charger or Mustang, but instead two 1990's-era Japanese cars, an Acura and a Nissan?  There is no way you would have.  It seems to have come out of left field.

And it kind of did.  We are dedicating today's post entirely to the most unlikely model to ever become a Hot Wheels icon.  Think '67 Camaro.  Think VW Drag Bus.  Now think of a 1970's grocery-getter with no power that your grandma drove.  It doesn't seem to fit, but there is no doubt that the '71 Datsun Bluebird 510 Wagon is a Hot Wheels icon, and it essentially ushered in an entire scene.

This Hot Wheels JDM craze owes a lot to the Datsun Wagon, and one model in particular, the 2013 Boulevard issue in mint green.


The story of how this came to be is as interesting as any in our hobby, a perfect storm of circumstances that turned the Wagon into such a highly sought-after model.  It is a story I have told to a few people, and they have all told me to tell it here.  So that is what I am doing.

And yes, claiming that one model created a scene sounds like a bit of a stretch, but it played an integral role, and that is what I will document.  Of course there are a lot of other major factors.  The JDM scene has been growing rapidly all over the world, and here in the US especially.  Serious car collectors have all of a sudden noticed classic Japanese cars, and young car enthusiasts will always relate to the cars they grew up with, and Japanese cars are a huge part of that now.

And of course the emergence of JDM at Hot Wheels doesn't happen without designers who are passionate about j-tin.  Jun Imai has taken the place of retired Larry Wood as Hot Wheels' superstar designer.  Releases of his Japanese models are events, and he was in the game early, having designed the AE86 in 2006 and Datsun 510 Sedan in 2009.  He was then behind the two classic Skylines in 2011, and of course designed the 510 Wagon after his own car in 2013.  (We hear rumors of another Imai-1:1-inspired coming down the pipe as well.)  And there are quite a few other Japanese car lovers in the Design Center, most notably Osaka native Ryu Asada, who cut his teeth at Matchbox before designing HW collector faves like the Honda S2000, Civic EF, and the just-released Acura NSX.

Even with all that, and those are obviously the two most important factors, JDM isn't at the fever pitch it is with collectors without what happened with the Wagon.  Let's set the scene:

Before 2011, JDM didn't have much of a presence at Hot Wheels.  There had been some Japanese releases in the years leading up, like the R32 Skyline, 240Z, and Nissan Silvia, and of course Jun was doing his thing with the AE86 and 510 Sedan, but for the most part those models were known more for being pegwarmers than anything else.  I remember telling a collector friend back in 2009 that the 510 was really the only model I wanted to collect, and he laughed, telling me I would have no problem collecting it, as they were hanging everywhere.

The 1:1 JDM scene continued to grow, documented as always by publications like Japanese Nostalgic Car, and Jun kept rolling out his creations.  2011 saw two major additions, the Hakosuka and Kenmeri Skylines.  Again, I remember a subgroup of collectors going nuts, while others were hitting Wikipedia to find out what Skylines were.  In places like Southern California, the Skylines were gobbled up, but elsewhere they hung and hung.  I was able to find them easily in stores around here until as recently as 2013.

But because the Skylines were purely Japanese, and there was no US reference like the 510 and 240Z, collectors were now being introduced to a new car scene.

It was also at about this time that Hot Wheels had released its new premium series, Boulevard.  A follow-up to the HW Garage series, the goal was to release a variety of licensed and unlicensed models in realistic and familiar liveries and decos.  But as the line was released throughout 2012, it became clear that it was too big, had too many unlicensed models, and had no real focus.  Models started piling up on the pegs.

It seems that in 2013, however, that Hot Wheels figured it out.  The plan was to release far fewer models, in more spread-out batches, and to focus on realism and more interesting cars.  There were all kinds of cool models slated to be a part, including an amazing array of new tools, from the 510 Wagon to a Renault to a Jeep Wagoneer, Drag Astro Van, and Porsche 993.  Collectors started licking their chops.

Mattel released the first batch of 2013 Boulevard to hobby dealers in the first week of January 2013.  A Fiero, the new Renault, the Hakosuka Skyline, and the '71 Datsun Wagon.  Among the JDM set there was a lot of excitement about Jun's wagon, which he previewed at JCCS a few months before.  I was very excited about it as well, and was thrilled to showcase it along with the Skyline after receiving my order from Wheel Collectors.

It was clear that the Datsun Wagon got the attention of collectors.  To the JDM set, it's coolness was never in doubt, but it was an intriguing release to many others.  And that is probably where it would have stood, had things played out like they normally do.

Typically, hobby dealers would get their orders, and 2-3 weeks afterwards the models would hit big box stores.  People interested in the Datsun would have picked up one or two, and appreciation for Jun's masterpiece would have definitely increased.  There is no doubt it would have been a popular model.

But that is not how it happened.  We figured it would hit stores in late January, but it never did.  Two months passed.  Three months.  Finally, in April, a small handful of collectors reported finding the batch at Walmart.  A few others found them at Toys R Us.  I was able to find one at a Walmart, and I didn't see it anywhere else.

Only a small number of Walmarts and TRU's got the batch, and it became apparent why.  2012 Boulevards were STILL hanging, and it was clear that the big stores weren't interested in adding more.  And what a shame too, because Mattel had finally figured out the line, and there was no doubt those models would have sold well.

So after that small appearance in April, Boulevard vanished again.  Hobby dealers continued to get new batches, but they were not showing up anywhere else.  Spring came and went.  So did summer.  Still no sign of 2013 Boulevard Batch A.

What should have been a 2-3 week gap between a hobby and big box release had now stretched to 9 months.  Collectors began to wonder if they would ever see these models.  And as the Datsun became more and more elusive, desire among collectors to have one started to grow.  In January 2013 through April you could have bought one for $3-$5 on eBay, but afterwards prices started to increase.  As summer rolled around and the Datsun was still nowhere to be found, that price crept up into the teens and then the twenties.  The cool car now had that elusive aura, and collectors started salivating.

Fast forward to September 2013.  I was on a business trip in St George, Utah, about 90 minutes north of Las Vegas, and would be leaving for the Japanese Classic Car Show in LA the next day.  While texting a friend about meeting at the show, he passed along some interesting news.  I actually found the texts, and I will let them tell the rest of the story:





Darned if it wasn't the elusive Wagon.  It snuck up on us!  There is one TJ Maxx in St George, and as you can tell by the time that elapsed between texts, I essentially dropped what I was doing and headed over.  I was glad I did:


The next day I was off to SoCal for JCCS, and you had better believe I hit every TJ Maxx I passed.  It was a true treasure hunt.  They were strewn about everywhere in some stores.  Hanging on some pegs, thrown on other shelves, even some that dropped off one shelf and fell into open playsets.  Ultimately I did pretty well:


When I got back I reported the news here on Lamley, and the hunt was on.  The Wagon was finally available.  Only it kind of wasn't.  Only west-coast TJ Maxx stores got the Datsun batch, while Midwest and Eastern stores got a different batch.  This only added to the elusive reputation of the Datsun.  Once again, it bobbed its head above water for a second, only to vanish again.

It would pop up quickly again here and there.  Collectors reported finding the 510 Wagon at random places, including at some Shopko stores, but the model was anything but widely available:


Even with these little bubble ups, the Wagon never got a full mainstream release.  And when a model becomes elusive, everyone wants it.  And a full year after its initial release, as it became clear that the Boulevard Wagon would never be easy to find, it had achieved that highly-desired status.  Prices were high, and they have never really gone down since.

Moving into 2014, the Datsun grocery-getter was on everyone's want list.  And what did Hot Wheels do?  They made the next release the final Super Treasure Hunt of 2014, and a beautiful TH at that.  Fighting fire with fire.  Any chance that things would settle with the Wagon were quickly killed off.

And all this while the JDM scene explodes, and collectors are running back to snag the models they ignored only a couple of years before.  All of a sudden, the pegwarming 510 Sedan was fetching crazy money on eBay, and the Skylines weren't far behind.  It is fun to tell certain stories to collectors now, like how the Vintage Racing BRE 510, which fetches $150 now, actually warmed the pegs for a long time.  I knew of five (5!) that hung in a nearby Kmart for over a year.  Or that the RLC BRE 510, which is approaching $200 on eBay, took several hours to sell out, instead of the two minutes it would take today.

There is no doubt JDM would be huge among the Hot Wheels set today no matter what.  It is too big of a scene now, and the designers at Mattel would have made sure of it.  But I am not sure that the frenzy would be what it is today without the Wagon and its disappearing act throughout 2013.  If it was released in stores, and was readily available, do we still see the same intensity in trying to acquire one?  Without all that hype and attention the first two versions of the Wagon got, does Mattel notice as much?  Do we get the green light on so many other JDM models?  Does the Nissan 180SX create the buzz it has created before even being released?  Do we see the Wagon become the first JDM Hot Wheels Convention exclusive?  Would Jun's Wagon be sitting in the Design Center right now among the Twin Mills, Deoreas, and other Hot Wheels icons?

Maybe not.  If hype were a college class, the circumstances surrounding Jun's 510 could occupy a chapter in the textbook.  You need a great product, but you also need some circumstances outside of your control.  That is what happened here, and that is how a mint green, small 70's wagon that my mom's friend Joanne drove became a Hot Wheels legend.

















The largest Lamley Sale ever is now on at Wheel Collectors...


We always enjoy announcing these.

Wheel Collectors has been working the last couple of days on the latest Lamley Deal Sale, and this one is the biggest yet.  Over 80 listings, many highly desirable items like the Hot Wheels Boulevard Datsun Wagon and Porsche 993, all at the cheapest prices on eBay.

We highly encourage to check it out here:

Wheel Collectors Lamley Deal Sale

We even asked them to do a special listing of three of our favorites, the Boulevard Datsun Wagon, Nissan Skyline, and Porsche 993:

Wheel Collectors Lamley Grouping

You are bound to find some stuff you want, whether they are models you need, or have wheels you want for a custom, or just to bolster the collection for you and some friends.  And after working with Wheel Collectors for so long, we can honestly say that no one works harder to keep their customers happy.

Enjoy the sale, and keep watching the Lamley Facebook page for links to more deals...

Some that are bound to go quickly:









Hako! Kenmeri! 510! 2002! 2015 Hot Wheels Heritage lineup announced...



Ever since the demise of the Boulevard line, we have been waiting for the next great Hot Wheels premium series.  It may have finally arrived.

We have talked extensively about the Boulevard series from 2012 and 2013.  It seemed that by the time Mattel had figured out how to make it successful, it was already considered a failure by the big box stores.  The 2012 lineup was way too large, way too varied, and not collector-oriented enough.

Then came the 2013 lineup, with was much smaller and full of fantastic new castings or real cars.  Models like the Jeep Wagoneer, Datsun Wagon, and Porsche 993 were huge hits.  But by the time that line had arrived, most stores had cancelled their orders, and these fantastic models were relegated to stores like Tuesday Morning and TJ Maxx.

Soon after Mattel cancelled the Boulevard line, and turned their attention to Retro Entertainment and Cool Classics, to mixed results.  Retro Entertainment continues, Cool Classics is done, and now we have the Heritage line.

It looks like Mattel has learned some lessons.  The Heritage line will come in 6 batches of 6 models, alternating between Real Riders and Redlines.  And they will be released every two months starting in May.  This appears to be the right move.  Not too many models to clog the pegs, and released far enough apart for each batch to sell.

And most importantly, the models included are collector faves.  Whether they be muscle, classic, Euro, or JDM, there will be a lot of collectors that will want them.  We at Lamley included.


The lineups:


Mix 1 (Real Riders - released May 2015):
  • Hare Splitter
  • Datsun Bluebird 510
  • Datsun 240Z
  • Custom Chevy Greenbrier Sports Wagon (New tool!)
  • Altered Ego
  • 1980 Dodge Macho Power Wagon 

Mix 2 (Redlines - released July 2015):

  • ’49 Ford F1
  • ’55 Chevy Bel Air Gasser
  • ’68 Dodge Dart
  • ’70 Chevelle SS Wagon
  • Copper Stopper
  • Nissan Skyline HT 2000GT-X 

Mix 3 (Real Riders - released September 2015):
  • ’56 Flashsider
  • ’71 Plymouth Satellite
  • ’07 Chevy Silverado Off-Road
  • BMW 2002
  • Ford Transit MK1 Supervan (New tool!)
  • Porsche 917-K

Mix 4 (Redlines - released November 2015):
  • ’56 Custom Ford Pickup
  • ’69 Mercury Cyclone
  • ’70 Camaro Z28
  • ’84 Mustang SVO
  • Bone Shaker
  • Nissan Skyline 2000GT-R

Mix 5 (Real Riders - released January 2016):
  • ’68 Olds Cutlass Convertible
  • ’69 Chevy Camaro Coupe
  • Aston Martin 1963 DB5
  • Backwoods Bomb
  • Neet Streeter
  • Texas Drive ’Em

Mix 6 (Redlines - released March 2016):
  • ’64 Chevy Nova Wagon
  • Chevy Blazer 4×4
  • Corvette C6R
  • Custom ’66 GTO Wagon
  • Long Gone
  • Mig Rig

Not a bad lineup eh?  JDM nuts like us have two redline Skylines, a 240Z, and the Datsun 510.  Euro geeks (also like us) have the BMW 2002, the Hare Splitter, and the Porsche 917.  Wagon nerds (like us) have the Plymouth Satellite, Nova, Chevelle, and GTO Wagons.  Truck heads (like us too) have the Macho Power Wagon, Texas Drive 'Em, and Silverado 4x4, and it goes on and on.

It seems to us Mattel has planned this line to succeed.  We really hope we don't have to look at those last two batches and wonder if they will see the light of day.  Fingers crossed that this series does well.  We know we will be buying a few...



Matchbox Supreme Heroes: HW Boulevard's true successor?


We know we are not alone when we say we miss Hot Wheels Boulevard.  It was just hitting its stride when Mattel cancelled it.  Of course if the 2012 Boulevard line was just a little smaller, and a little better, the 2013 line would have surely produced the numbers to convince Mattel to keep it going.  Instead we have seen the rather bland Cool Classics, and great-but-not-enough Retro Entertainment line.

Many of us who relish our Datsun Wagons and Jeep Wagoneers and Porsche 993's will always hope to see a similar line return.  Maybe it will be the Heritage Line that Mattel has been hinting at for 2015.  Or maybe it will be something entirely new a year or two from now.

Or maybe it is the Matchbox Supreme Heroes.

Matchbox announced the Supreme Heroes line at the Matchbox Gathering back in July, and yesterday unveiled the first images of a model (the Ford Explorer) and wheels.




We know that the line will be focused on emergency vehicles, will all have licensed liveries, and with one exception all be licensed models.  Even the one unlicensed model, the Hazard Squad, is one of Matchbox's most realistic.

One thing we do know: Matchbox can do emergency vehicles.  And many we will see in the line.  And if we can base anything on the Ford Explorer, they are going to look fantastic.  We will know more when the line in released in the coming weeks.

But we do think, with realistic models and liveries, plus very cool two-piece rubber wheels, this line could be very Boulevard-esque.  And for that reason let's make sure it doesn't meet the same fate.

Of course Lamley readers can't single handedly make a line successful, but if we do our part, and Mattel deems the Supreme Heroes a success, we could see another year of fantastic real rider Matchbox.  Models like the Mitsubishi Evo, or Foxbody Mustang, or maybe even models like the Audi R8 in police livery.  We want to see this happen, so let's make sure this line is a success.

Who's in?

Some models we will see in premium form in the coming months: