DIACLONE POLICE SIDESWIPE
By Maz

The Japanese Takara Diaclone No.19 New Countach
LP500S Police Car was released in Japan around October 1983 and
was a re-mould and re-colour of the red No.15 New Countach LP500S
(what was later to become the TF Sideswipe). This police car version
was released after the red Diaclone Sideswipe but before the yellow
Diaclone Sideswipe. It is sometimes referred to as "Diaclone
Police Sideswipe" or even " Diaclone Red Alert"
as it is considered by some to be the main template on which the
Transformers Red Alert was based. The main difference of course
being that Red Alert was a red/white Fire Chief but this Diaclone
toy is a black/white police car. This toy was also released in
Italy by GiG.

This release came at a time in Japan when Takara
had briefly reverted back to using a photograph of the toy on
the Diaclone Car Robot box fronts as opposed to using an artistic
representation of the figure. The layout of the box is very similar
to the box layout for the regular Diaclone Sideswipe (which also
used a photograph instead of art). Also, instead of having another
small window for the Diaclone driver, there is just a picture
of the driver on the box front to show which one comes in the
package. This was of course the third police car to be released
in the Japanese Diaclone line, the first being the No.3 Countach
LP500S Super Tuning Police Type (Police Sunstreaker) and the second
being the No.13 Fairlady Z Police (Prowl). The box for the Police
Sideswipe has a similar colour scheme to the car itself, so the
whole package looks very attractive and well-presented from the
front. Here are pics of the box back, top and technical details
on the box bottom:


Looking at the box back picture, the representations
of the Diaclone Jazz and Diaclone Wheeljack are not identical
to the toys themselves, especially the Wheeljack, but this is
not something that's unique to this particular Diaclone release.
Takara tended to use whatever stock pictures they had lying about
at the time on many occasions. The technical picture on the bottom
of the box uses actual toy photographs whereas the first Diaclone
Car Robots had less detailed pictures. The product number for
this piece can be seen in the top right corner of the box top
and box bottom. "461321-1-1500" indicates
a sale price of 1500 yen originally. The Police Sideswipe was
one of the very last Diaclones to use the "4613**-*-****"
format of product number as it was soon changed to a "1597**-*-****"
format.

A look at the contents shows an identical styrofoam
layout for Japanese Police Sideswipe as regular Japanese Diaclone
Sideswipe. Also present are the instructions, excellent catalog
with some prototype pictures, stickersheet and the competition
entry mini-form on the box flap. Let's have a closer look at the
flap and stickersheet:

That inner flap is a "Licence". There
is space for the owner to attach their photograph and write on
their name and date of birth etc as well in the bottom right corner.
This particular licence is "Class A". It also includes
the three rules of Diaclone (something like "Stand up for
what is true and right", "Do it with a peaceful heart
and never forget our love for peace" and "Defend the
world from the evil Waruder corps"). The idea was that you
could either keep the licence or send it off and enter the current
campaign prize which would probably be for one of the gold cars
like Diaclone gold Jazz or Diaclone gold Bluestreak. Here is the
ad for the gold Jazz campaign car (wasn't included with this particular
toy but I thought it would make a nice aside) taken from a magazine
that shows how to make use of the inner flap licence thing.

It says there were FIFTY gold Diaclone Porsches
(the Diaclone predecessor to the reissue Electrum Jazz) to be
given away and 200 pass cases to put your licences in as a second
prize. Many kind thanks to Himawari for the above scan and the
translation/details of such a rare piece of paperwork! He also
pointed out that it doesn't mention the offer on the actual licence/flap.

The stickersheet for the Police Countach is very
different to that of the regular Diaclone Countach. The shin stickers
are a different colour (as with most of the stickers) and they
say "D.P" instead of "LP500S". That probably
stands for "Diaclone Police". There are also a couple
of police badges with "Diaclone" lettering on them to
match the factory stickers on the toy.

The sharp and striking look of this figure starts
to become evident in this main insert picture. When clean and
un-yellowed, this piece has a very crisp and mint look to it.
Conversely, when it is slightly worn, this piece can look pretty
badly weathered. As you can see, only half the car has the black
section running along the bottom because the rest of the black
sections are on the stickersheet. The launcher has a white tab
(seeing as how the body of the figure is white), the weapons are
red and the driver has black limbs whereas the regular Diaclone
Sideswipes have yellow-limbed drivers. This is one of the few
Diaclone cars whose driver has a matching colour scheme, and thankfully
so! One other interesting thing to point out, you may have noticed
that there is space in the styro for the sirens on this police
car. This feature was NOT added for this release. Even the original
non-sirened regular red Diaclone Sideswipe which was released
a month or so earlier had space for sirens. That implies that
Takara planned to do a police version at about the same time the
very first New Countach LP500S mould was being designed, hence
the generic styro with siren space for all Diaclone Sideswipe
releases.

Now the main event, the toy itself. It is absolutely
gorgeous in this condition as are most toys of the Sideswipe mould.
Black and white will always contrast beautifully and the police
car colour schemes have always been eye-catching and desireable.
This is no exception as the mould looks excellent in police colours
just as Sunstreaker did. I had first seen this Diaclone in a picture
of Fumihiko Akiyama's Japanese BotCon Diaclone display and was
sold on it immediately. The sirens are attached to the roof through
two circular pegs. If you didn't know about this Diaclone release
and always wondered why Sideswipe had two holes in his roof covered
up by a black sticker, now you know!


Some may say that this release is not particularly
imaginative and that it can look rather plain even with the stickers
applied. Another issue is how much displayability is reduced if
there is colour, paint or stickerwear. As with some other Diaclones,
there can be factory sticker issues with this piece as well, especially
corner peeling. Despite these issues, I pursued this piece relentlessly
and was delighted with my purchase when it arrived. I found it
to be stunning and tremendously displayable in either mode or
packaged. Speaking of the other mode...



Having transformed the toy into robot mode, there
is a sudden emergence of red all over the figure and that's where
all the similarities with Transformers Red Alert really become
apparent. He still has a very striking appearance and good colour
contrast although posabilty is limited to the arms and the missile
launcher angle. Seeing as how it is a Japanese toy, the launcher
is potent and rather fun. The diecast rear section adds some nice
heft to the figure and gives it a slightly chunky feel. As I said
in my earlier Yellow Sideswipe article, the chrome feet are quite
susceptible to wear due to the nature of their required transformation.
Many thanks to Ben Munn for the third robot pic. Now for a look
at the Italian GiG release of this toy:


The GiG version of the Diaclone Police Sideswipe
probably saw release in Italy around late 1984 or early 1985.
This is one of those strange occasions where the packaged Italian
version of a Diaclone is somewhat more difficult to locate than
its Japanese counterpart, however as usual, it is not as desirable
or sought-after amongst a majority of collectors. However, I was
one of those collectors who tried hard to locate a GiG Police
Sideswipe and did find it desirable. In fact, the first Police
Sideswipe I owned was a loose GiG piece (strange, that's almost
exactly how my Yellow Sideswipe story went...). I also had some
slight difficulty proving that it WAS Italian, but more on that
a little later. From the above pictures you might be able to see
a number of differences between the format of the GiG toy's packaging
and inserts compared to the Japanese release.

First the obvious differences, the Japanese Diaclone
(top) has the Diaclone logo and the Japanese Car Robot logo in
the top left hand corner of the box front whereas the Italian
Diaclone (bottom) has the red and yellow "Trasformer"
and "Auto Robot" logos there instead. As a result, I
think the Italian box and package as a whole is a little less
attractive since the yellow and red logos clash a bit with the
general black/white/grey colour scheme of the figure and its box.
Another difference is that the Japanese Diaclone has a pic of
the Diaclone driver, but the Italian Diaclone has the GiG logo
in that same place instead. The reasons for that are a) the Italian
release of Police Sideswipe did not come with a driver and b)
they had to put the GiG logo somewhere! Yet another difference
is that the Japanese Diaclone is "No.19", but the Police
Sideswipe is "N.14" in the Italian ordering system.
The Japanese Diaclone says "New Countach LP500S Police Car"
in a variety of colours, fonts and sizes. The Italian Diaclone
says all that in the same font, same size and all in green. I
wouldn't say it looks worse, just a little simpler. Since the
Italian box has some of the green lettering on the grey background,
it's not as clear as the Japanese box which only uses green lettering
where there is a white background. Both releases use a photograph
of the toy as opposed to art. It looks like exactly the same photograph,
right? Well it's actually not the same...


The top picture gives a closer look at the two
Police Sideswipe box front photographs. The Italian photo (bottom)
appears to be holding the handgun at a slightly higher angle and
on that same handgun arm, if you look at the side window, it has
some glare/reflection on it where the Japanese photo (top) does
not. Also, if you look at the figure's LEFT arm on the Italian
photo, the window section is facing straight down and the chrome
arm section is almost facing forwards. The Japanese photo's left
chrome arm is parallel to the window section and is at a different
angle to the Italian photo. The red Diaclone Sideswipe art has
been included to show you that the Italian photo is not just a
repaint of the regular Sideswipe photo but in fact a new photograph
altogether, or at least a previously unused one. Something both
photographs have in common though is that they show the toy with
a white missile and red-tabbed launcher when in reality the toy
had red missiles and a white-tabbed launcher. I guess when they
took the photographs they only had regular red Diaclone Sideswipe
missiles and launchers lying around (after all, they got the handgun
colour right). Or maybe they originally planned to use the same
launcher and missiles, who can say. It could also be some sort
of proof that both photographs were taken at almost the same time.
Either that or when the second photo was taken, the same mistake
was made despite the fact that the toy had already seen release
with red missiles etc! The side flaps on the Diaclone Police Sideswipes
show the same photographic (and text) differences discussed above:

Speaking of the side flaps, the inner flaps on
the two boxes also show differences:

The Japanese inner flap (top) has the competition
entry licence whereas the Italian inner flap (bottom) only has
the details of the toy line and the distributing company. Now
for a look at the inner packaging:

First of all, you can see the space in the Italian
styrofoam (bottom) for a driver, but it wasn't included with the
GiG release. The other major difference is that while the Japanese
release came with a set of sprued red missiles, the Italian release
came with those big orange/black rubber bopper missiles for safety
reasons. As a result, a section of the Italian styrofoam just
below the car's front wheels has been ripped and broken away to
accomodate the larger accessories, just like with the regular
Diaclone Sideswipes. It gives a really untidy look to the whole
thing in my opinion. The ironic thing is that the Italian launcher
was much stronger anyway! You might begin to see what I mean about
the smallest amount of wear really affecting the look of the figure.
The Italian Diaclone pictured above has some sticker wear which
really gives it a used look even though the toy was mint and tight.
The launchers are practically the same mould, meaning that if
you have an incomplete Diaclone Police Sideswipe (whether Italian
or Japanese) you cannot use a Red Alert launcher as a substitute.
A Red Alert launcher does not have the two curved lines in the
circular chrome section at the head of the missile launcher like
the Diaclones do.


There are some small differences between the
moulding on the two Police Sideswipes as well, the biggest of
which can be seen on the central chrome section of the sirens.
In the above two pictures, the Japanese Diaclone is on the left
with the Italian Diaclone on the right. On the central silver
chrome section between the red lights, there are four indented
vertical slits in a row. Red Alert and the GiG Italian Police
Sideswipe (right) have those slits too, but on the Italian Diaclone
and the later TFs, those slits are shorter and don't stretch up
to the top of the chrome section, they are much more vertically
central. Yet another way of telling the two toys apart lies in
the copyright stampings. The Japanese Diaclone says "TAKARA
JAPAN" on the back of the waist and has nothing under the
hood section:

The Italian Diaclone, however, has two raised
plastic blocks on the back of the waist to cover up where it once
said "TAKARA JAPAN" on the Japanese mould, and instead
the full stamping can be found under the hood:


That about covers the noticeable differences
between the two Diaclone releases of the Police Sideswipe. For
a while some collectors didn't even accept the possibility that
there WAS an Italian release of this toy, despite the fact that
it was pictured in a number of GiG catalogs, but then again some
other pictured items never saw release. The real proof came when
I compared the copyright on my Italian loose Police Sideswipe
to someone else's boxed Japanese specimen. See how useful copyrights
can be? Then of course a couple boxed GiG Italian ones showed
up on eBay and that was that. Of course, Italian collectors will
tell you that they knew it all along because they had seen them
in their youth.
What follows are some fun pictures of a Transformers
Red Alert placed in the Diaclone packaging and a pictoral comparison
of the (Mexican) TF Red Alert and the Japanese Diaclone Police
Sideswipe:




They are, admittedly, not all that different
and different collectors will have their own views on which is
the better looking of the two. I think they look quite good next
to each other and I think they both deserve a place in the TF/pre-TF
universe, neither of them being any less relevant or interesting
than the other. Hasbro may have thought differently though because
when they came to release a TF version of the Police Sideswipe,
they made him a Fire Chief. Possibly because with the existence
of Prowl, they didn't want to rinse the police car theme too much.
In the end, BOTH have found their way into the Transformers universe
because in 2003, Takara and E-Hobby continued their series of
Diaclone-themed reissue exclusives by reissuing the Police Sideswipe
as the 2003 New Year Special "91 Clampdown" alongside
a Black Sideswipe reissue.


You can see that for the collector's card art,
Takara have repainted the original Transformers Red Alert box
art into the Police Sideswipe colours, so it's come full circle
in a way. There are some moulding differences between the original
and the reissue (see Yellow Sideswipe articles for details) and
instead of "Diaclone", Clampdown's police badge stickers
say "Cybertron". Having owned all the above toys, I
felt there was something missing as far as Clampdown was concerned.
It was still a very pretty, striking and eye-catching toy but
I think this figure works much better as a Diaclone than an Autobot
Transformer. Saying that though, a nice un-yellowed un-worn Diaclone
Police Sideswipe is very difficult to find, especially with good
stickers, so Clampdown is a good alternative for most collectors.
T here is a certain prestige and history attached to Diaclones
though that can never really be replicated through reissues, but
not everyone cares about that.
Here are some pictures showing the Diaclone Police
Sideswipe with the Diaclone Police Sunstreaker. Notice the police
stickers on the much earlier Sunstreaker have Japanese lettering
as opposed to "Police". And yes, the Police Sunstreaker's
box front is heavily sunfaded! It should be red, not gold, but
I think gold works better than red would have done for the following
pics. Honest!






Two absolutely gorgeous toys which are a real
pain to find in excellent condition, but EASILY worth the search
and the money they will cost you...most of the time. These are
definitely among the absolute favourites of all the toys I used
to own. The moulds are some of the best and most loved throughout
the fandom, and they both look killer in both modes, especially
as vehicles.
For the longest time, the Police Sideswipe was
a Diaclone-exclusive colour scheme and was one of the least known
about of the Diaclone specials by the fandom as a whole. Despite
the reissue, I don't think its value has been much affected. It's
still rare and it's still Red Alert's big brother. It is no less
special than it ever was, least of all to me. One of the pieces
I truly miss from my collecting days. Presentation and accessory-wise,
I would recommend the Japanese Diaclone Police Sideswipe release
over the Italian one due to the slightly nicer packaging, the
original missiles and the funky-magnetic-attach-me-horizontally-to-your-refrigerator
Diaclone driver. The Italian release will cost you less but it
is tremendously hard to find in excellent shape, harder than the
Japanese release.
The police cars will always be popular and are
an excellent subgroup of TFs, although completing such a collection
could be very tricky indeed as the Diaclone Prowl is probably
tougher to find than either of the Police Countaches! Here are
pictures of all the G1 TF/pre-TF police cars I managed to find
during my collecting. Left to right in the first 2 pics we have:
Italian GiG Diaclone Police Sideswipe, kitbashed Police Jazz,
TF Prowl, Mexican black TF Prowl, Japanese Diaclone Police Sunstreaker
and of course, the Japanese Diaclone Police Sideswipe. Enjoy!




All the best
Maz
You can pick up your own Clampdown (reissue Police Sideswipe)
here: Reissue
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