2002 Johnny Lightning Scooby-Doo! The Mystery Machine

Scooby-Doo, Where Are You? made its debut in 1969. We had a lot of great Saturday morning cartoons to watch in those days, but Scooby-Doo was one of my favorites. I found this Johnny Lightning Scooby-Doo! The Mystery Machine on one of my visits to J & J’s Treasures last March. There appear to be at least 8 different variations of the JL Mystery Machine, including some with characters printed on the top, a Diecast Model Kit version, and a Raw Set release that is unpainted. I believe this example is the first issue from the Hollywood on Wheels Series, Release 3.

Click here to compare to the Hot Wheels version of The Mystery Machine. And click here to compare to the Jada Toys Hollywood Rides The Mystery Machine.

Similar to the Hot Wheels The Mystery Machine premium release, the Johnny Lightning model features a metal base and has tampo printing on both the front and the back of the vehicle. I’m not sure, though, if I would call these wheels Real Riders.

Johnny Lightning | 2002 Hollywood on Wheels, R3 | Scooby-Doo! The Mystery Machine | turquoise with The Mystery Machine tampo, unpainted metal base | China

Johnny Lightning Muscle Cars

The original Johnny Lightnings from Topper Toys (1969-1971) were a mix of Detroit cars and fantasy castings. When Tom Lowe of Playing Mantis revived the brand in 1994, Detroit muscle cars became a mainstay of the brand.

The 1994 Muscle Cars U.S.A. series included 10 different castings, each available in a variety of 16 different paint colors “mixed from GM, Ford & Chrysler’s original paint formulas.” These models had slightly exaggerated proportions and over-sized wheels. A plastic collector coin was include in each package. I have a couple of examples of the 1972 Nova SS from this series – a Glacier Blue model still in the package and another loose version in Aspen Green.

Johnny Lightning | 1994 | Muscle Cars USA Series 7 | 1972 Chevy Nova SS #210 | glacier blue with coin 11303

Johnny Lightning | 1994 | Muscle Cars USA Series 11 | 1972 Chevy Nova SS | aspen green with coin 14733

It’s interesting to compare this 1972 Nova casting to the Playing Mantis Speed Rebels series from about the same time. The casting is nearly identical, although the Speed Rebels are a slightly smaller scale.

By 1999, the Muscle Cars U.S.A. series included the accurate and detailed castings that the Johnny Lightning brand would become known for. The packaging now featured photos of the real cars and each still included a collector coin (now made out of cardboard instead of plastic and printed on only one side). I have several color variations of the 1965 Chevy II Nova from this period.

Johnny Lightning | 1999 | Muscle Cars USA 3 R4 | 1965 Chevy Nova | mist blue, opening hood, with #4 coin

Johnny Lightning | 1999 | Muscle Cars USA 3 R4 | 1965 Chevy Nova | mist blue, opening hood, with #4 coin

Johnny Lightning | 1999 | Muscle Cars 3 R5 | 1965 Chevy Nova | black, opening hood, with #50 coin

Johnny Lightning | 1999 | Muscle Cars 3 R6 | 1965 Chevy Nova | dark blue, opening hood, with #54 coin

The 2000s brought a cleaner look for Johnny Lightning packaging, with a mostly red card used for many series, including the Muscle Cars U.S.A. line. The bonus in this 1966 Chevy Nova package from 2005 is a Johnny Lightning window cling.

Johnny Lightning | 2005 | Musclecars USA R9 #53 | 1966 Chevy Nova | dark red with window cling

In 2004, Playing Mantis was bought by RC2 Corporation (mainly known for their Racing Champions brand stock car diecast models). By 2006, the Johnny Lightning logo was updated and the packaging became an impenetrable plastic clambshell. “U.S.A.” was dropped from the series name and “Musclecars” was now one word. The extra included in the package became a trading card which featured photos and information about the featured vehicle. This ’65 Chevy Impala SS convertible is from the Musclecars Release 12.

Johnny Lightning | 2006 | 53905C | Musclecars R12 | 1965 Chevy Impala SS convertible | white with brown top, collector card

This 2007 ’65 Chevy Impala SS from Musclecars Release 14 included an extra set of wheels along with the trading card.

Johnny Lightning | 2007 | 53905H | Musclecars R14 | 1965 Chevy Impala SS | pale yellow with black top with wheels and card

Although I bought it mainly for the 1965 Chevy Impala SS, this Toys ‘R Us exclusive Musclecars 10-car box set from 2007 – which includes a 1987 Buick Regal and a 2005 Ford Mustang GT – gives a nice sampling of the range of castings available in the Johnny Lightning Musclecars series.

Johnny Lightning | 2007 | TRU Exclusive Musclecars 10-car box set | 1965 Chevy Impala SS | red with black top

And finally, the Johnny Lightning 2008 Musclecars series introduced a new tool, the ’61 Chevy Impala SS.

Johnny Lightning | 2008 | 53958A | Musclecars R17 | 1961 Chevy Impala SS | chrome silver with card

New Year’s Inventory

Someone asked me recently how many cars I had in my collection. The best guess I could come up with was “in the hundreds” but I wasn’t really sure. So I decided to spend part of New Year’s Day counting everything up. I keep updated lists, so it was mostly just a matter of counting and totaling the numbers. Or so I thought, until I realized how many items were not on my supposedly updated lists. After a few more days of inventorying, I came up with a total of 951 items.

I generally think of my collection as having three categories: Vintage, Novas and Impalas. But occasionally I can’t resist something that doesn’t really fit into any of these. I counted multi-car packs as single items and I did not include several buckets of cars that I have acquired over the years that I have deemed not worthy of my collection. These are the cars that my son and I use whenever we break out the Hot Wheels tracks.

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397 Vintage
In my collection, “vintage” is very loosely defined. These 395 items include my childhood collection and a bunch of almost entirely loose cars with a focus on blackwall-era Hot Wheels. The oldest items would be a few late-1950s Lesney-era Matchbox cars, and I cheat the “blackwall era” with a few cars into the early 1990s.

I have 45 cars that I’ve managed to hold onto from my childhood. They include 18 Matchbox, 9 Hot Wheels, 7 Tomica Pocket Cars, 6 Husky, 4 Playart and a single Majorette.

The remaining 350 Vintage cars break down as follows:

Hot Wheels – 219
Matchbox – 53
Corgi – 14
Zylmex – 11
Yatming – 9
Racing Champions – 8
Majorette – 7
Road Champs – 4
Ertl – 4
Tomica – 4
Siku – 2
Summer – 2
Barclay – 1
Husky – 1
Kidco – 1
Playart – 1
Pit Row – 1
Tin Toys – 1
Unknown – 9

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262 Impalas
When I first started picking up Impalas, I would take them out of the package and display them on a bookcase I had in my bachelor pad. Series like Jada’s Homie Rollerz and the Revell Lowrider Magazine cars encouraged me to start keeping them in the packages. Since Hot Wheels rolled out the ’59 Chevy Impala in 1997, there has been a steady stream of new Impala castings and variations, which puts the brand at the top of this list with 85 items.

Hot Wheels – 85
Johnny Lightning – 59
Revell – 22
Jada – 21
M2 Machines – 15
Greenlight – 14
Maisto – 11
Ertl – 6
Racing Champions – 6
Malibu International – 5
Motor Max – 4
Muscle Machines – 3
Auto World – 3
Disney – 3
Classic Metal Works – 1
Craft House – 1
Geospace – 1
Route 66 – 1
Unknown – 1

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188 Novas
The 2004 release of the Hot Wheels 1968 Nova was an exciting moment for me as a collector. Hot Wheels now has a variety of Nova castings going back to the first-generation body style, so the brand is at the top of my Nova list with 85 items.

Hot Wheels – 85
Johnny Lightning – 38
M2 Machines – 27
Maisto – 10
Muscle Machines – 9
Jada – 7
Ertl – 5
Racing Champions – 3
Playing Mantis – 2
GMP – 1
Universal Hobbies – 1

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104 Miscellaneous
The 90 items here include 10 Hot Wheels 30th Anniversary models from 1998, lots of Batmobiles, NASA-themed items including 3 Hot Wheels Action Packs, some 2005-2006 Hot Wheels Classics and a bunch of other odds and ends.

Hot Wheels – 78
Johnny Lightning – 5
Jada – 4
Matchbox – 4
Lledo – 2
Quartzo – 2
Revell – 2
Bauer – 1
Hormel Promo – 1
Maisto – 1
Upper Deck Collectibles – 1
Unknown – 2

My Collection by Brand
My collection is made up of at least 41 different brands. Being well-represented in all of my categories, the Hot Wheels brand dominates with 476 items. Johnny Lightning comes in second with 102, mostly due to the many Nova and Impala releases during the RC2 era. It’s interesting to note that Matchbox has never made a Nova and the only Impalas made in recent years are the eight-generation version which I have no interest in, yet the brand takes third place with 75 items in my vintage collection.

Hot Wheels – 476
Johnny Lightning – 102
Matchbox – 75
M2 Machines – 42
Jada – 31
Revell – 24
Maisto – 22
Quartzo – 2
Racing Champions – 18
Greenlight – 14
Corgi – 13
Tomica – 11
Zylmex – 11
Yatming – 9
Husky – 7
Majorette – 7
Ertl – 6
Malibu International – 5
Motor Max – 5
Playart – 5
Road Champs – 4
Disney – 3
Auto World – 3
Lledo – 2
Playing Mantis – 2
Siku – 2
Summer – 2
Barclay – 1
Bauer – 1
Classic Metal Works – 1
Craft House – 1
Geospace – 1
GMP – 1
Hormel Promo – 1
Kidco – 1
Pit Row – 1
Route 66 – 1
Tin Toys – 1
Upper Deck Collectibles – 1
Universal Hobbies – 1
Unknown – 12