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Tuesday, October 12, 2021

Best Vintage Opel Diplomat (KAD cars)... ("What other Diplomat's ARE there?!?")

When you think of a vintage diecast Opel Diplomat, exactly 1 car typically comes to mind...  Lesney's excellent Matchbox Opel Diplomat, shown here in the rare and preferred Superfast form.  

This has always been a favorite car of mine.  Not scaled too large (it is based on a contemporary Chevy II chassis after all, so it definitely should be smaller than an Impala or the full size Mercurys or Lincoln Continental), nice detail, nice suspension, etc.   A very nice car!

But this blog title implies that there are competitors...   ...So...   ...ARE there any competitors?  

Yes!  

Yatming, for one, made an Opel Admiral (same car, just different trim level).  And while many vintage Yatmings are cheapo-feeling car, without detail or heft, there are a few Yatmings that have high levels of quality (almost approaching Tomica-levels).  Unfortunately, this Admiral is NOT one of those few high-quality Yatmings.  Instead, this IS a cheapo-feeling car.  While it is an interesting curiosity, this car has no chance of upstaging the Lesney Matchbox!  




























But there is another vintage competitor, and unlike the Yatming, this competitor is in fact a worthy competitor.  The car is a very rare car - a Siku Opel Kapitan.  Yes, its a different name, but like the Admiral - the Kapitan name just signified a different trim level on the same basic car (hence the acronym - "KAD" cars - Kapitan, Admiral, Diplomat).  



The first thing you notice about the SIKU is how large it is...  ...this Kapitan DOES in fact feel like an Impala.  In the photos at the end of the blog you can see how much larger it is than the more correctly scaled Matchbox.  Unlike the Matchbox, which has an opening hood, the SIKU has opening doors.  In typical Siku fashion, the headlights are actual glass/plastic.  The trim and detail are fantastic, easily eclipsing the nicely detailed Matchbox.  Siku really shows off the curve of the trunk (which is there, but much less evident, in the Matchbox).  And the baseplate actually has detail, unlike the Matchbox.  

So, what's the verdict?  Can the Siku compete with the Lesney?  Yes!  While I'm slightly bothered by its large size, I just find the Siku to be a more worthy model than the excellent and far-better-known Matchbox...  









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