9 of the Most Exciting Customs at the 2024 Hot Wheels Legends Tour’s Michigan Stop

Last weekend, the 2024 Hot Wheels Legends Tour stopped in Dearborn, Michigan, the birthplace of Ford Motor Company and just a stone’s throw from the stomping grounds of Stellantis (née Chrysler) and General Motors. While the tour is an international competition, where the winning car is immortalized as a Hot Wheels diecast, each stop is a must-see car show in its own right. This weekend, the Legends tour gave Metro Detroit the chance to show off its best and brightest custom builds, from a street-rod truck to an ’80s gasser to the wildest Austin Healey we’ve ever seen.

Let’s take a look at some of the best, most exciting custom cars that came to Dearborn to strut their stuff.

1962 Austin Healey Sprite

“The Healey” is an utterly absurd “golf cart for the drag strip,” in the words of its owner. It’s the rear two-thirds of a 1962 Austin Healey Sprite sitting atop the frame of a Ford Ranger, with the rear end from an S10 pickup and a Chevy small-block, stroked to 383 cubic inches, sitting up front, exposed. This Healey is about as period- and brand-correct as an LS-swapped E-Type, and that’s what makes it great.

1989 Dodge D50 “Timecapsule”

Bearing a striking resemblance to a cafeteria soda cup from the early ’90s, the “Timecapsule” is a thing of retro beauty. Rocking a custom grille, wing mirrors placed high on the A-pillars, and a cyber-psychedelic paint job, this 1989 Dodge D50 sits just above the pavement on lowering springs and a set of appropriately stylish Weld wheels. Is it funky? You bet, and we dig it.

Dodge Charger LX “Prospector” Ute

Just when you think you’ve seen every conceivable flavor of 2000s Dodge Charger, you spot something like this: a decommissioned police car that’s been turned into a ute, its bed topped with the spoiler from a Ram Daytona. The owner, who hails from Ohio, said he had to cut about nine inches out of the center of the spoiler to fit the car, but the effect was well worth the effort.

1970s Vanguard-Sebring Comuta-Car

Definitively deserving of an award for “most least,” the Vanguard Comuta-Car is a quirky little three-wheeled machine from a short-lived auto manufacturer based in Florida. Fun fact: The battery-electric Comuta-Car was the best-selling EV in the United States for decades until the Nissan Leaf launched for 2011. This Vanguard has been converted to combustion power and sports a single-cylinder snowmobile engine that grants a top speed of—get ready for this—45 miles per hour.

1966 Chevrolet Nova

The backstory of this Nova is just as impressive as its handsome green-and-white paint job and massive supercharger. The current owner purchased the car in 1979, meaning it’s spent more than 44 years in his care. In that time, he’s fitted it with a monstrous 871 blower, taking the output of the Chevy 355 up to 800 crank horsepower. There is still no power steering, traction control, or ABS. It’s a perfect bit of riotous Americana.

2024 Hot Wheels Dirtmeister 944

I have always had a schoolboy crush on the Porsche 944, so Hot Wheels’ new life-size “Dirtmeister” 944 was impossible for me to resist. Based on a 1987 model with a Turbo-style front fascia, this rally-ready coupe was styled by Bryan Benedict, design director of Hot Wheels Matchbox, and the Hot Wheels Design Team. Their 944 features shooting brake bodywork designed by Kudensport, Triple R LED lights, a rooftop carrier, and some delicious gold-painted Porsche “phone dial” wheels. It’s an absolute dream.

1956 Chevrolet 3100 Rat Rod

There’s something about a heavily patinated, derelict-looking vintage machine with a flawless powertrain underneath it. This handsome and well-worn 1956 Chevy 3100 sits so low that it practically phases through the pavement, riding on slinky gold-painted wheels and boasting a turbocharged LS6 with a Holley High Ram EFI manifold. The cockpit is stripped and thoroughly race-ready, with a full cage and a Holley digital display.

1965 Chrysler Three Hundred Convertible

Around Detroit, all manner of Big Three cars get put up on big, flashy wheels. This ’65 Chrysler Three Hundred hits a sweet spot, whether because of the just-showy-enough body style and exterior coat, or because of the builder’s commitment to that unique gold wheel design. (Seriously, look at the steering wheel.) It’s not the most in-depth build we saw at this stop of the Hot Wheels Legends Tour, but we can definitely picture it on the shelf of a toy store.

The Winner: 1985 Chevrolet Monte Carlo SS Gasser

Dimon Diesel saw what no one else could in the 1985 Chevy Monte Carlo, and his vision and creativity spawned the winning 2024 Hot Wheels Legends submission at the Dearborn tour stop. The car sat for years, untouched and undriven, outside a local landscape shop, before Diesel finally took the plunge and bought it some months ago. Built as a drag car with a 509 Chevy big-block and nitrous injection, the Monte Carlo SS was a nine-second car even before Dimon got ahold of it. He decided to transform it into a straight-axle gasser with a paint job inspired by the Hot Wheels Color Shifters he played with as a kid.

“Everyone was like, ‘Oh, that’s going to be so ugly,’” Diesel says. “That’s just crazy. Why would you do that to a G-body?”

1985-Chevrolet-Monte-Carlo-SS-Gasser rear
Aaron Brzozowski

Dimon decided to build it anyway. He spent roughly 10 months wrenching in a friend’s barn to get the straight axle to work before fiddling with the nine-inch rear to get it fitted, fitting a six-speed manual, and tearing the whole motor apart something like four times. He also had the interior redone in ostrich.

1985-Chevrolet-Monte-Carlo-SS-Gasser front
Aaron Brzozowski

The car wears six pounds of metal flake and five gallons of clear coat, the latter to make the car more “kid friendly,” Diesel says; you don’t have to worry so much about scratches when there’s essentially no risk of getting through to the bare metal. And then, of course, there’s the entirely unique, funky window tint, the distinct pink and blue powder-coated intake plumbing, and the wheelie bars and parachutes, both of which were late additions made by Diesel.

“It’s a fun moment,” Dimon said of his win in Dearborn. “I’m still speechless.”

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Comments

    Thank you for featuring my little Healey! It’s truly an honor! I have one correction… It’s actually a 385 stroker. 🙂

    Cool car is there a place on the web I can find more pictures of it? I feel like the one in the article doesn’t fully capture all of its charms.

    I do find it an interesting choice of strapping a SBC and S-10 axle to a Ranger frame instead of just going with an S-10 frame.

    You can find pictures on fb. Cullen’s Customs. The reason it has a ranger frame is because I originally was going to make a mobile bar with it. I found the rotted out Sprite body, so I decided to go a different route. I put the S10 rear end in because the center section is in the center. The ranger rear end was offset.

    In 1980 a friend of mine and I (he was driving) pulled up alongside a CitiCar at a stop light. Out of pure evil my friend starting reviving his engine and gesturing to the guy that we wanted to drag. And because we were 18 it was hilarious and we were both laughing too hard to breathe. The light turned green and the CitiCar took off so fast it defied explanation. We just sat there for a second laughing. It’s as if it went from 0 to 5mph in one millisecond. It was unbeatable. After that we caught up but he got ahead by half a car length in a split second. I will never forget that.

    That Monte is definitely interesting because yesterday I was heading to the store and coming the other direction was its cousin, a Malibu from the same era, with a hole in the hood for what I assume was plumbing from a turbo feeding up and then down into a custom intake.

    You can find pictures on fb. Cullen’s Customs. The reason it has a ranger frame is because I originally was going to make a mobile bar with it. I found the rotted out Sprite body, so I decided to go a different route. I put the S10 rear end in because the center section is in the center. The ranger rear end was offset.

    You are correct! We had a ’70 300 coupe. the 65’s had the boxy look versus the “Fuselage Styling” starting in 1969

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