Yellow Sideswipe Part 1 - Diaclone
By Maz

This piece. This damn piece. I first became aware of it and other
Diaclones when I saw a picture of Fumihiko Akiyama’s Diaclone
collection which was being displayed at a Japanese BotCon event.
Not ever throughout all the years that I collected toys has a
Transformer or pre-transformer captured my imagination the way
this piece did, and it was at the absolute top of my wants list
for close to two years, I talked about it endlessly and my drive
to find and get one even got me booted off a UK TF online group
once…During the time that I was looking for one, there was one
available MIB for over $1000, one turned up on eBay and was bought
immediately MIB for $450 (which I later discovered turned out
to be something of a good deal) and then it was over a year and
a half until another surfaced, and that sold on Yahoo Japan for
approximately $960. You get the idea, and I wasn’t about to pay
close to $1000 for this thing. During that same time, many many
more Blue Bluestreaks, Marlboor Wheeljacks, Red Tracks etc surfaced
but no Yellow Sideswipe. I came to realise exactly how much the
rarity of a Japanese Diaclone No.15 Yellow New Countach LP500S
had been underrated. No word of a lie, it is tremendously difficult
to find a good specimen…or ANY specimen of this particular Diaclone,
Japanese or Italian.
The No.15 New Countach LP500S (Diaclone Sideswipe) was first
released in Japan by Takara around August 1983 as a red Lamborghini
Countach with product number 461320-0-1500 (significance to be
discussed a little later) and a yellow-limbed Diaclone driver/pilot.
Having then been retooled as a Police car and released as No.
19 New Countach LP500S Police, the original mould was then re-released
in yellow in Japan by Takara around November/December 1983.

It just appears to be exactly the same as the red release, except
in yellow (even the driver/pilot was yellow like for the red release,
but at least was now colour-coded with the car and so made more
sense!). And that’s almost accurate, except for the fact that
the toy’s missile launcher now had a yellow tab and more importantly,
the product number on the toy’s box had changed from 461320-0-1500
to 159705-0-1500. I will just touch on the significance of this
change; it implies that the yellow release came later (probably
already obvious since the box has the art for the red one on it)
but thanks to the radical change in numbering system, also shows
a 200 yen price hike (last four digits of the product number represent
the original price in Japanese yen) and places it after the release
of the two No.18 Diaclone Wheeljacks No.19 Diaclone Police Sideswipe
despite having “No.15” written on the box. The product number
difference on the Japanese boxes between the red and yellow release
also lets you know when a loose yellow Diaclone Sideswipe has
been slipped into a red Diaclone Sideswipe’s box. Some will care,
some won’t.

Just beautiful, a fantastic contrast to the common red Sideswipe
we grew up with. The missiles and handgun are the same as they
were for the earlier red release. The launcher, as with most Japanese
TFs/PreTFs, is very potent and fires the missiles a fair distance.
You might notice that the black triangular stickers on the doors
are a little lopsided. Almost all the Diaclone yellow Sideswipes
I’ve seen have sported misaligned factory door labels, some even
had misapplied roof stickers. The driver/pilot has excellent magnetic
feet and can be attached to things at funny angles, plus he fits
nicely into the driver’s seat of the vehicle.

In this pic you can see the stickersheet, instructions and catalog.
The stickersheet and instructions are exactly the same as the
ones that came with the earlier red release. The catalog has some
lovely art inside and even some prototype-style representations
of things such as Diaclone Insecticons. Also visible on the box
flap should be the little card that could be filled out in order
to enter a prize draw for a campaign car, exclusive Diaclone board
game or the like.

This is the money shot really; this mould just looks excellent
in yellow. Even real life Countaches look good in yellow whereas
most cars besides Ferraris usually don’t. The Sideswipe mould
we’ve all been familiar with thanks to Transformers is going to
look good in any colour, but the yellow on this piece contrasts
beautifully with the black and white and sets it apart totally
from its red counterpart, creating its own special mystique. It
really is gorgeous. With this mould you might sometimes find that
the door tops and roof do not align perfectly and one door top
may slip underneath the roof. This is not exclusively an issue
with the Diaclone version however, even TFs share this issue.


This figure’s transformation is not too simple either. The whole
chest and head section requires a cool rotational transformation
(similar to that of Hot Rod’s) and it’s satisfying both ways,
the transformation also doesn’t seem to be designed in a way that
affects stickers by rubbing plastic or diecast sections against
where they are placed. The feet however are quite susceptible
to chrome wear due to the nature of their required transformation.
I think this figure looks great when decked out with all his weaponry,
and also the matching colours of the figure and the driver make
it tremendously displayable in either mode, or even packaged.
One problem however is that if you are not careful, the pegs on
the launcher can snap when it is being attached to the figure’s
shoulder.


There’s something I quite like about these above pictures, especially
the top one. Remember, this is not a Transformer, it is a Diaclone
and the premise behind these Diaclones was that they were non-sentient
robots controlled by human drivers/pilots. The above pics turned
out in such a way that it appears the robot is towering over the
pilot a little more than usual and I like how it taps into the
figure’s true nature and identity.
Of course, the yellow Diaclone Sideswipe was not just released
in Japan; it was also released in Italy by GiG under the TraSformer
Auto Robot line.

Just as in Japan, the Italian yellow release of the Diaclone
Sideswipe is much the rarer of the two colours released. Looking
at the boxes, there are some clear differences between the two.
Instead of the Japanese Diaclone logo in the top left hand corner
of the box, the Italian release says “Trasformer” and seeing as
how a massive proportion of Italian pre-TFs did NOT come with
drivers/pilots, the art that shows the driver is replaced with
the “Auto Robot” lettering. Instead of “New Countach LP500S”,
the GiG release is designated “Super Countach LP 500S” and is
No. 2 in the Italian release order as opposed to No. 15 in the
Japanese line. The GiG version would have seen release in 1984.
The box art used is identical for both, but the GiG releases of
the Diaclone Sideswipe do not have the product number difference
that allows you tell one box from the other. As far as accessories
are concerned, the Italian version may well have a more powerful
launcher but it has the generic orange rubber bombs (boppers)
as opposed to the regular mould-specific missiles. The styrofoam
insert for the Italian release looks as though someone has physically
ripped a section out from just under the car, and that is to accommodate
the much larger rubber bombs.

Now this loose Italian yellow Swipe is the first Yellow Sideswipe
I ever owned, kindly sold to me by a Canadian collector and all-round
great guy. Having looked for almost two years, I finally obtained
the number one thing on my list and even this loose worn specimen
sparkled as far as I was concerned. I was literally jumping about
with joy when it arrived. Having owned it for an extremely short
amount of time, I was offered the MIB Japanese one seen at the
top of this article by an American collector who was downsizing
his stunning Diaclone collection. Then Takara announced the reissue
a short while after that! Just like the London Bus analogy, none
come for ages, and then three come at once. And it’s the bloody
truth!

Going back to the toy, surprisingly, this Italian version was
practically identical to the Japanese version even down to the
copyright! As a general rule, Japanese original Diaclones have
the copyright stamping “TAKARA JAPAN”, no dates, nothing else.
That started to change towards the end of the Japanese line, but
we won’t worry about that for now as the Japanese Diaclone Yellow
Sideswipe is also just stamped “TAKARA JAPAN” on the back of its
waist. And as a general rule, Italian GiG Diaclones are Takara
stamped but also have dates like “1980, 1984” or some such, plus
they are extremely similar if not identical to pre-rub Transformers
moulds seeing as how they were released around the same time as
TFs. Now, the RED Italian GiG Diaclone Sideswipe follows the rule
and has dates on the copyright under the hood, but the Gig yellow
Diaclone has an identical stamping to the Japanese release and
behind the waist too! It could be that they went back to using
the original Japanese mould but more likely in my opinion is the
story that they started putting toys from the Japanese line (or
factory) straight into GiG boxes. Other Diaclone cars show a similar
correlation where the colour variants are concerned, making it
somewhat difficult to pinpoint the exact origin of some Diaclone-exclusive
colour variants if they are unboxed and incomplete.

It is also possible that a yellow Diaclone Sideswipe was released
in Finland, but Finnish Diaclones do not turn up very often and
are a particularly recent discovery, so we’ll just have to wait
and see on that one.
I always knew that when I finally found a Diaclone Yellow Sideswipe,
it would be the pinnacle of my toy collecting, and the MIB Japanese
one certainly was. A beautiful display piece and a terrific colour
variation on a well-loved mould. It took me two years to track
one down and it was truly worth the wait, easily one of the most
beautiful and rarest of pre-Transformers and worthy of a place
in any collection. I cannot recommend it enough! This was easily
the best TF or Pre-TF I ever had the pleasure of coming into contact
with. I have now unfortunately parted company with both Diaclones,
but I do own the reissue Tigertrack released by Takara in 2003
and I am moooooore than happy with that piece, but there will
be much more emphasis on the reissue in part 2 of my Yellow Sideswipe
article.
Many thanks to Winson “Mojo8” Liu, Ben Munn and David Barry.
They know why.
For now, I’ll leave you with some display shots of the Yellow
Diaclone Sideswipes and some of their more recognisable friends….




…and the best for last…

All the best
Maz
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