Thanks so much for your explanation of the differences in these. I am new to Hot Wheels collecting, and was COMPLETELY confused. I guess one thing that was confusing me was because of the wording. I have always considered wheels to be the metal circles that fit inside a tire, and the rubber part I considered a tire. I guess I need to change my nomenclature when talking about Hot Wheels. So, earlier today, I received a couple of cars that supposedly had deep dish wheels. I looked at them using a 10X magnifying glass, but was only looking at the “metal” part. They looked the exact same as my cars with regular wheels. Now, I need to go back and look at what I have always called the tires (wheels for Hot Wheels) to see the differences. Thanks for sharing. I am here to learn.
I was just given a 67 Custom Camaro ( Hong Kong ) antifreeze with the rear panel painted black with red taillights and the front grille shows signs of black paint
So do the earlier redlines with deep dish and bubble gum wheels make them more rare or are they worth the same as a regular redline? I got a couple of these different wheel variants and never knew they had particular names.
Yes, more rare. Early in production, Mattel was refining what works and what was least costly. If you have deep dish and/or bubble gum they are both early and much more valuable (depending on condition). Thank you for watching our Redline content.
I had never actually SEEN bubblegum wheels. Awesome info ! Thanks Jim.
TY, our pleasure
Thanks so much for your explanation of the differences in these. I am new to Hot Wheels collecting, and was COMPLETELY confused. I guess one thing that was confusing me was because of the wording. I have always considered wheels to be the metal circles that fit inside a tire, and the rubber part I considered a tire. I guess I need to change my nomenclature when talking about Hot Wheels. So, earlier today, I received a couple of cars that supposedly had deep dish wheels. I looked at them using a 10X magnifying glass, but was only looking at the “metal” part. They looked the exact same as my cars with regular wheels. Now, I need to go back and look at what I have always called the tires (wheels for Hot Wheels) to see the differences. Thanks for sharing. I am here to learn.
Welcome!
Nice advice, Jim 🙏
TY
I was just given a 67 Custom Camaro ( Hong Kong ) antifreeze with the rear panel painted black with red taillights and the front grille shows signs of black paint
So do the earlier redlines with deep dish and bubble gum wheels make them more rare or are they worth the same as a regular redline? I got a couple of these different wheel variants and never knew they had particular names.
Yes, more rare. Early in production, Mattel was refining what works and what was least costly. If you have deep dish and/or bubble gum they are both early and much more valuable (depending on condition). Thank you for watching our Redline content.
Always be careful buying hot wheels, people love to rob you 😢
Thanks for the video, does this apply to both the U.S. and Hong Kong cars or is it just for the Hong Kong?
Bubblegum and Deep Dish are Hong Kong only
@@redlinecollectibles ok thanks
Nice video Sir😊😊👍👍🧡🧡
TY
"promo sm"