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Owners of the original Hot Wheels from the 1960s + 1970s, better known as “REDLINES,” are sitting on a treasure trove of not only nostalgia but also possibly a small fortune. These die-cast cars, especially the early Redlines, have become iconic pieces of toy history.

What treasure is sitting in your attic?

Bob Young, Founder of REDLINE ARCHEOLOGY, is widely recognized among Hot Wheels enthusiasts as a dedicated collector, appraiser, and buyer with a reputation for extremely fair offers and extensive knowledge of the hobby.  Selling your collection to Bob means you’re dealing with someone who genuinely values your collection, understands its rarity, and will handle it with care.  Unlike impersonal auction sites, dealers, and random buyers, Bob is personal and transparent. ensuring you know exactly what your cars are worth and why.
Furthermore, the collector market and hobby can be unpredictable.  Condition, rarity, and market trends all affect value.  By selling to an established buyer like Bob Young, you avoid the hassle of marketing, negotiating, and shipping individual pieces.  Bob has over three decades of experience and the extensive knowledge to properly and accurately evaluate classics like 1968 Custom Camaro or the 1970 Red Baron, giving you piece of mind and immediate compensation.
In short, if you own the original Hot Wheels from the 1960’s and 1970’s and want to pass them on to someone who truly appreciates their history while getting a very fair price, Bob Young is the ideal and only choice!

 

If you have the old REDLINE Hot Wheels and are thinking of selling them, Look No Further!

You now ask yourself the age old question,  “How do I sell my old Hot Wheels?”

Here at REDLINE ARCHEOLOGY, we will appraise your collection, at NO COST and NO OBLIGATION, and make the highest offer in the hobby for your cars, if they are from the years we are looking for, 1967 – 1977.

With almost 30 years of diggin’ up original one owner childhood Hot Wheels collections from the sixties and seventies, REDLINE ARCHEOLOGY is the only place to have your old Hot Wheels appraised by one of the most successful collectors in the hobby, Bob Young.  Bob has now authored two books:

 

REDLINE ARCHEOLOGY: A History of Diggin’ Up Original Hot Wheels Collections and REDLINE ARCHEOLOGY 2: The Dig Continues

 

Available on AMAZON, Barnes & Noble and now WALMART!

Call us anytime @ 856.912.2463 or visit us @ www.RedlineArcheology.com

When I heard that Jon M. Chu had signed on to direct a Hot Wheels® feature film, my first thought wasn’t about special effects or CGI stunts. It was about emotion. For someone like me who loves to find these gems in the wild and bring them to passionate collectors — those of us who grew up gripping the orange track in one hand and a Redline-era Olds 442 in the other — Hot Wheels are more than just toys. They’re emotional time capsules. They remind us of sun-drenched afternoons, department store shelves full of chrome dreams, and the kind of wonder only a 1:64 scale muscle car could deliver.

What I’m really hoping Chu captures is that feeling of discovery. I remember vividly the first time I laid eyes on a Custom Continental Mark III. The elegance, the stance, the weight in your hand — it wasn’t just a toy, it was a piece of design you could own for under a dollar. These weren’t just mini cars; they were symbols of speed, power, coolness. I want the film to show how a kid’s entire universe could expand with the sound of a Super Charger spinning or the sight of a loop-the-loop in the living room.

Sure, I expect some high-octane spectacle. I expect wild chases, gravity-defying tracks, maybe even a few Easter eggs for diehards like us. But what I hope for is something deeper. A story that recognizes how Hot Wheels helped shape the imagination of generations. A film that shows how something so small could carry the weight of dreams, independence, and identity. If Pixar could make us cry over a cowboy doll, then maybe Chu can make us feel something real about a Mongoose (or Snake) that fits in your pocket.

As someone who discovers vintage Hot Wheels from the 1960s and ’70s, I see these cars not just as collectibles, but as stories cast in metal. The Olds 442 wasn’t just a toy — it was a badge of rebellion. The Continental Mark III wasn’t just luxury — it was presence. Each model is a memory, each paint chip a mile marker. If the film can tap into that spirit — honoring both the play and the meaning behind it — then it’ll be more than just entertainment. It’ll be legacy on wheels.

 

If you have the old REDLINE Hot Wheels and are thinking of selling them, Look No Further!

You now ask yourself the age old question,  “How do I sell my old Hot Wheels?”

Here at REDLINE ARCHEOLOGY, we will appraise your collection, at NO COST and NO OBLIGATION, and make the highest offer in the hobby for your cars, if they are from the years we are looking for, 1967 – 1977.

With almost 30 years of diggin’ up original one owner childhood Hot Wheels collections from the sixties and seventies, REDLINE ARCHEOLOGY is the only place to have your old Hot Wheels appraised by one of the most successful collectors in the hobby, Bob Young.  Bob has now authored two books:

 

REDLINE ARCHEOLOGY: A History of Diggin’ Up Original Hot Wheels Collections and REDLINE ARCHEOLOGY 2: The Dig Continues

 

Available on AMAZON, Barnes & Noble and now WALMART!

Call us anytime @ 856.912.2463 or visit us @ www.RedlineArcheology.com