Monday, January 11, 2021

Was that actually a Reventon?

 There are moments in automotive history that change everything. Singularities of their own sort. This is one of them. The Lamborghini Reventon. Only 21 Reventons were produced and only 20 were offered for sale, the other one was built for the Lamborghini Museum. The Reventon had many achievements to its name, the limited production run when the company was starting to enter the big production market, a million-dollar price tag that appreciates everytime one of these rarities goes up for sale and finally, not one of them was produced with a gloss finish. All 20 were either light grey or charcoal – matte finish. The Reventon took aim at the speed record boasting a 200 mph plus range. Reintroduction of the V12 and a host of stealth fighter like angles that made both car and aircraft enthusiasts drool at the sight of one. The had to be mostly internet sightings because there is only 20 and they are tucked away in secret garages around the globe.

HW Lamborghini Reventon

There are two versions of the Reventon, the hard top and the roadster. The roadster is my least favorite, but the roadster does have better lines body lines. The original Reventon came out in 2009 and is still around at times although, just as rare as the car itself. The wild fighter jet lines of the real Reventon are clearly cast well and the new big rear light pods that brought back the look of the Countach are very well done. The most impressive part of this casting (and the reason I prefer it over the spyder) is the back-window treatment. The real car featured a wild layered looking window with several angles and Hot Wheels captured this look with perfection.  

Again, Hot Wheels has taken a more real-world approach with the paint schemes which I also appreciate. In my own opinion, the 2014 mulitpack release in white and the 2014 release in the mystery models in gloss grey are the nicest versions available (both I am on the hunt for). The 2009 first edition in flat grey does capture the real essence of the real car though. Since the Reventon is not cast in the mainline very often, some of them can carry premium pricing but the Reventon casting is a must have for any collection and even more importantly for a Lamborghini collector.

Let me not skip over the roadster version. The roadster appeared in 2010 and is a current model. The latest release was 2019 in an Italian flag racing stripe scheme which is very nice. There have been several releases of the Roadster but has not caught collectors attention so they are easy to find and do not carry a premium. The 2017 Lamborghini subset features a light grey with black stripe and is also one of the nicer versions to date.

From the Gallardo on, take notice of the complexity of the bodywork on these cars and understand that all this is being represented on a 1:43 scale diecast car that is mass produced. It still amazes me that Hot Wheels can capture some of these hyper cars at the level that they do. Some people get upset over scale and I get it but man, to have such complex cars at this scale is a far cry from where the industry was even just 20 years ago. Look at post #2, the Countach and compare it to the Gallardo or the Reventon. I remain very excited as we get ready to explore the next offering, stay tuned.

 

Thank you,

Collector Quentin

I own the actual diecast pictured in this post. However, all packaging artwork, Mattel or Hot Wheels logos, paint descriptions and wheel descriptions in regard to the Hot Wheels versions are copyrights of the Mattel toy company.

 

Lamborghini and model names are property of Audi AG, a subsidiary of the Volkswagen Group.

 

https://hotwheelscollectors.mattel.com/

https://www.lamborghini.com/en-en/models

https://hotwheels.fandom.com/wiki/Hot_Wheels

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