Working on the Hot Wheels movie with the boy this summer has somewhat reignited my love of diecast cars. I've got dozens of 1:18 cars, consisting primarily of 1:18th versions of all the real cars I have owned over the years, 1:18 diecast equivalents of the '84 Autobots, some iconic TV/Movie cars, and various other muscle cars.
For a while about ten years ago, I had grand plans to customize all of the key vehicles from the Dukes of Hazzard in 1:18th scale, but over the last decade, Johnny Lightning, Joyride, & Greenlight have largely beaten me to it. Boss's Cadillac and Cooters tow truck are about the only ones that have yet to get produced. I simply have a box of random disassembled cars that likely will never get repainted and rebuilt.
But now having worked on our little movie project, I wanted to preserve the beat-up and abused 1/64 cars that we used in filming, sort of a little time-capsule keepsake. Those cars have a great story to tell, and I've grown attached to them. So I ordered a display case that holds 56 cars. BUT WE DIDN'T USE THAT MANY. HOW WILL I FILL IT UP?... So I'm currently on a quest to find all of my real cars in 1/64 form, the '84 Autobots in tiny diecast form, and I already own all of the DoH cars in 1/64 scale from Johnny Lightning.
BUT not all of my real cars exist in the right colors, interiors, and wheels from typical manufacturers, so I then began looking into hot wheels customization... which is a massive rabbit hole. I did learn that I already own almost all of the correct tools from customizing action figures and real construction. So that's good, but I feel like I'm slowly turning into a hot wheels person.
No, I'm not going to be a collector that runs into the store to find the rare white-walled, red-lined, shortpacked whatever. I don't care about collecting them. I have too many collections already. But I could see myself customizing a few dozen for grins. It'll give me something to do when I have to work from home after school starts.