
Casting #: 6461
Grass Hopper
Designer: Larry Wood
Production Run: 1971 only
Note: Produced only in the U.S. Model has a removable white top (which must be present in order to be considered complete), front and rear engines and a black interior.
Picture and description thanx to NCHWA.comOpenAI/ChatGPT Collector Guide
1971 Hot Wheels Redline Grass Hopper Collector Guide
Quick Value Snapshot
| Example Type |
Collector Interpretation |
Value Confidence |
| Original, complete loose car with white removable top |
Best normal comparison point for loose Grass Hopper values. |
Moderate only when supported by verified sold prices. |
| Original car missing the white top |
Incomplete. Should not be priced against complete examples. |
Lower confidence; discount depends on color and condition. |
| Restored, repainted, customized, or with reproduction parts |
Collectible to some buyers, but not comparable to original examples. |
Separate category; do not use as normal market value. |
| Carded or blister-packaged example |
Potentially much stronger than loose examples if authentic and undamaged. |
Outlier category; evaluate separately. |
| Active asking prices |
Seller expectations only. They may be too high, stale, or based on incomplete comparisons. |
Do not treat as market value. |
| Verified sold prices |
Best evidence for current value when the car is original, complete, correctly identified, and condition is clear. |
Best available indicator, but still not a guarantee. |
Collector Summary
The 1971 Hot Wheels Redline Grass Hopper is a Larry Wood design produced for one year only, in 1971. The supplied production notes identify it as a U.S.-only model. It has a black interior, front and rear engines, four large Redline wheels, and a removable white top.
For collector purposes, the removable white top is a major completeness issue. A Grass Hopper without the top may still be desirable, especially in a strong color or high-grade condition, but it should be described and valued as incomplete. A complete, original example should include the correct white top, black interior, visible engine details, proper Redline wheels, and an untampered base.
Known Variations and Details
- Designer: Larry Wood.
- Production run: 1971 only.
- Production location: U.S. only, according to the supplied database notes.
- Interior: Black.
- Top: Removable white top. It must be present for the car to be considered complete.
- Engines: Front and rear engine details.
- Wheel setup: Four large Redline wheels.
- Collector category: Original Redline-era Hot Wheels casting from the 1971 lineup.
Color and Desirability Notes
The Grass Hopper is collected in original Redline-era finishes, and color can affect desirability. As with many Redline models, stronger value usually attaches to original paint with good gloss, clean toning, and minimal edge wear. Bright, clean examples are generally preferred over heavily toned, oxidized, or chipped examples.
Color identification should be handled carefully. Redline paint can appear different under varying light, and age-related toning can make one color resemble another. Buyers and sellers should compare the car under neutral lighting and avoid assigning a rare or premium color unless the identification is well supported.
Because no verified current sold-price dataset was supplied with this request, confidence in specific color premiums is limited. Active asking prices may suggest which colors sellers believe are stronger, but asking prices alone should not be treated as market value.
Condition Factors That Affect Value
- Presence of the white top: The top is required for a complete example. Missing-top cars should be discounted and clearly described.
- Originality: Original paint, original top, original wheels, and an untouched base are important to Redline collectors.
- Paint condition: Edge chips, high-point wear, scratches, oxidation, fading, and toning all affect value.
- Top condition: The removable white top should be checked for cracks, warping, discoloration, stress marks, and poor fit.
- Wheel condition: The model should have four large Redline wheels. Look for axle bend, wheel melt, missing chrome, heavy tire wear, or replacement wheels.
- Engine detail: Front and rear engine areas should be intact and not painted over, broken, or altered.
- Interior condition: The black interior should be present and original.
- Base condition: Look for corrosion, scratches, drilling, rivet tampering, or evidence of disassembly.
- Display quality: A clean, complete car with good stance and straight axles is more desirable than a car with bent wheels or poor fitment.
Restorer Notes
The Grass Hopper is a candidate that restorers may encounter because missing tops, chipped paint, and wheel wear are common issues across Redline-era toys. Restoration can make a car display better, but it changes the collector category. A restored or repainted Grass Hopper should not be represented as an original survivor.
- Replacement or reproduction white tops should be disclosed clearly.
- Repainted bodies should be described as restored or custom, not original.
- Wheel swaps and axle repairs should be disclosed.
- Base drilling, rivet replacement, or interior replacement should be noted in the description.
- Restored examples should be valued separately from original loose examples.
Buyer Cautions
- Confirm the top: A Grass Hopper without the white removable top is incomplete.
- Ask whether the top is original: Replacement tops may improve display but are not the same as original parts.
- Separate asking from selling: Active listings show what sellers want, not necessarily what buyers are paying.
- Check the wheels: The correct setup is four large Redline wheels.
- Look for repaint signs: Overly fresh paint, paint inside seams, covered rivets, painted engine detail, or inconsistent wear can indicate restoration.
- Watch for incomplete lots: Mixed lots often contain missing-top or damaged cars that are hard to evaluate from one photo.
- Do not compare customs to originals: Customs, restorations, and repaints are separate value categories.
- Be cautious with rare-color claims: Color names can be misused, and lighting can make color identification difficult.
Seller Notes
A good Grass Hopper listing should clearly state whether the car is original, restored, incomplete, or fitted with reproduction parts. Since the white top is essential for completeness, the listing title and description should mention whether the top is present and whether it is believed to be original.
- Photograph the car with the top installed and removed.
- Show both sides, front, rear, top, base, engines, and wheels.
- Include close-ups of the top, especially if there are cracks, stress marks, or discoloration.
- State whether the wheels roll freely and whether axles are straight.
- Disclose repainting, polishing, wheel replacement, base drilling, or other repairs.
- Use verified sold comparisons when possible, not only active asking prices.
Pricing Analysis
No specific verified sold-price dataset was supplied for this page, so exact price guidance should be treated with limited confidence. The most reliable pricing evidence comes from completed sales of original, correctly identified, complete Grass Hopper examples in comparable condition.
Active asking prices should be reviewed separately. A high asking price does not prove market value, and a low asking price may reflect missing parts, damage, poor photos, a wrong description, or a non-original example. Completed sales are more useful, but even sold prices need context: condition, originality, color, completeness, and seller reputation all matter.
Strong outliers should be separated from normal loose-car pricing. Examples include authenticated carded cars, unusually high-grade loose examples, cars in especially desirable colors, or listings with exceptional provenance. At the other end, missing-top cars, damaged cars, repaints, customs, and parts cars should not be used as normal value comparisons for complete original examples.
Listings to Exclude or Treat Carefully
- Cars missing the removable white top.
- Cars with reproduction or replacement tops unless disclosed and priced accordingly.
- Restored, repainted, polished, or customized examples.
- Cars with swapped wheels or incorrect wheel sizes.
- Listings with unclear photos of the top, base, wheels, or rivets.
- Mixed lots where the Grass Hopper condition cannot be evaluated.
- Wrong-casting listings or listings using incorrect model names.
- Damaged examples with broken engines, cracked tops, bent axles, or heavy corrosion.
- Carded examples when trying to estimate normal loose-car value.
- Active asking prices that have not resulted in a sale.
New Collector Advice
If you are buying your first 1971 Grass Hopper, focus on completeness and originality before chasing color. Make sure the white removable top is present, the interior is black, the front and rear engine details are intact, and the car has four large Redline wheels. A clean, complete, honest example is usually a better first purchase than a questionable car advertised as rare.
When comparing prices, look for completed sales of similar cars. Do not compare a missing-top car to a complete one, and do not compare a restored car to an original survivor. If the photos do not show the top, base, wheels, and rivets clearly, ask for more photos before buying.
Advanced Collector Notes
Advanced collectors should pay close attention to originality, color accuracy, and part integrity. The Grass Hopper’s removable top creates a common substitution issue, so top originality and fit should be evaluated carefully. The four large Redline wheels should match the expected configuration, and the base should be inspected for signs of disassembly or restoration.
For higher-grade examples, small differences in paint gloss, toning, wheel chrome, and top condition can create meaningful value differences. Color premiums should be supported by reliable comparisons, not just seller claims. Carded examples, exceptional loose examples, and unusual color claims should be documented with clear photos and treated separately from ordinary loose pricing.
Short Page Blurb
The 1971 Hot Wheels Redline Grass Hopper is a Larry Wood-designed, U.S.-only Redline model produced for one year. It features a black interior, front and rear engines, four large Redline wheels, and a removable white top that must be present for the car to be considered complete.
Disclaimer
Values for vintage Hot Wheels Redlines change over time and depend heavily on condition, originality, completeness, color, and buyer demand. This guide separates active asking prices from verified sold prices and does not guarantee exact values. Repaints, restorations, customs, reproduction parts, damaged cars, incomplete examples, lots, and wrong-casting listings should not be treated as normal price comparisons for original complete examples.
Gemini/Google AI Collector Guide
1971 Hot Wheels Redline Grass Hopper Collector Guide
Quick Value Snapshot
Values for the 1971 Grass Hopper vary significantly based on the presence of the original white top and the rarity of the Spectraflame color. Note: Prices below are estimated market ranges for authentic, original examples.
| Condition |
Estimated Value Range |
| Poor (Missing Top, Heavy Wear) |
$15 - $35 |
| Good (With Top, Visible Play Wear) |
$60 - $110 |
| Excellent (Original Top, Bright Paint) |
$150 - $275 |
| Near Mint/Mint (Rare Color, High Gloss) |
$400 - $850+ |
Collector Summary
Designed by the legendary Larry Wood, the Grass Hopper was released only in 1971. It is a "Show Rod" styled dragster featuring a distinctive dual-engine setup (front and rear). This model was produced exclusively in the United States. Its most defining characteristic—and its greatest weakness for collectors—is the removable white plastic top. Because this part was easily lost during play, finding a truly "complete" example is the primary challenge for enthusiasts.
Known Variations and Details
- Production Year: 1971 only.
- Origin: United States.
- Interior: Black.
- Wheels: Four large Redline wheels.
- Top: Removable white plastic roof/canopy.
- Engines: Exposed chrome-plated engines at both the front and the rear.
Color and Desirability Notes
The Grass Hopper was produced in various Spectraflame colors. Common colors include Green, Aqua, and Blue. Magenta and Lime are frequently seen but remain popular. Rare colors that command significant premiums include Red, Yellow, Orange, and Purple. Examples with "brilliant" paint (lacking the dark "toning" often seen in 1971 releases) are highly sought after by advanced collectors.
Condition Factors That Affect Value
- The White Top: The absence of the original white top reduces the value by approximately 50% to 70%.
- Engine Chrome: The exposed engines are prone to "chrome wear" or oxidation, turning them a dull grey. Bright, reflective chrome is a major value driver.
- Engine Headers: The thin exhaust pipes (headers) on the engines can be bent or snapped off.
- Toning: 1971 U.S. paint often undergoes an oxidation process called toning, where the paint darkens. Light, vibrant examples are worth more than heavily toned ones.
Restorer Notes
Because original tops are so rare, many Grass Hoppers found in the wild are fitted with reproduction white tops. While these help the car's shelf appeal, they do not carry the same value as an original factory part. Restorers should also be careful when cleaning the engines, as the thin chrome plating can easily be rubbed off, exposing the grey plastic or zinc underneath.
Buyer Cautions
- Reproduction Tops: Buyers should inspect the underside of the white top for mold marks and plastic aging. If the top looks "too white" and brand new while the car is worn, it is likely a reproduction.
- Fake Engines: Ensure the engines are original to the casting and not swapped from lesser-quality donor cars.
- Bent Axles: Like all Redlines with large wheels, the Grass Hopper is prone to bent axles which can affect how the car sits or "rolls."
Seller Notes
When listing a Grass Hopper, you must state explicitly whether the white top is original or a reproduction. If the top is missing, the car is technically "incomplete" by collector standards. High-resolution photos of the front and rear engine chrome are essential for achieving the best market price.
Pricing Analysis
Confidence in the market for the Grass Hopper is high for complete, high-grade examples. However, the market is flooded with "roofless" cars, which sell for significantly lower prices and should not be used as benchmarks for complete models. Outliers include "un-toned" rare colors (like Red or Purple), which can occasionally exceed $1,000 in auctions if they are in true mint condition.
Listings to Exclude or Treat Carefully
- "Casting Only" listings: Cars missing the top are not representative of the "complete" model value.
- Customs/Repaints: Non-original paint schemes significantly deviate from the Redline market.
- Polished Castings: Examples where the paint has been stripped and the metal polished to look like chrome are not original.
New Collector Advice
For a new collector, it is often better to wait for a mid-grade example that includes the original white top than to buy a "naked" car and try to find an original top later. Original tops are rarely sold separately and can be nearly as expensive as a low-grade car when they do appear.
Advanced Collector Notes
Advanced collectors focus on "color runs" and "toning-free" examples. Because 1971 production was lower than the 1968-1970 peak, finding specific colors like Spectraflame Yellow or Red in a "high-shine" state is a significant achievement for a Redline collection. Collectors also look for "transition" wheels or specific base lusters found only on U.S. 1971 models.
Short Page Blurb
The 1971 Grass Hopper is a quintessential Larry Wood "Show Rod" featuring dual engines and a removable white top. Produced only for one year in the U.S., it remains a high-priority target for collectors seeking to complete their 1971 Redline sets.
Disclaimer
Historical pricing and condition descriptions are for educational purposes only. RedlinePriceGuide.com does not guarantee that any specific car will sell for the prices listed. The Hot Wheels market is subject to fluctuations in demand and availability.
Online Redline Guide / Color Reference
Wheels: 4 Lg
US Colors
| Color | Comments |
|---|
| light green | very common |
| magenta | very common |
| purple | common |
| rose | common |
| yellow | common |
| blue | common |
| salmon | common |
| red | common |
| green | common |
| aqua | uncommon |
| hot pink | uncommon |
| light blue | hard to find |
| olive | rare if it exists |
| brown | rare if it exists |
NCHWA.com Ratings
MINT Loose pricing below probably. Check ebay for blister pricing.
Note that these values are very old. Typical selling prices can be significantly higher now. Check the AI summaries for more info or ebay listings here.
Please see NCHWA.com Grading Page to reduce value due to condition.
| Color | US Rating | US Value | HK Rating | HK Value |
|---|
| Light Green | 3- | $51 | -- | . |
| Red | 3 | $63 | -- | . |
| Rose | 3 | $63 | -- | . |
| Magenta | 3 | $63 | -- | . |
| Blue | 3 | $63 | -- | . |
| Green | 3+ | $75 | -- | . |
| Purple | 4 | $88 | -- | . |
| Salmon | 5- | $101 | -- | . |
| Hot Pink | 6 | $138 | -- | . |
| Yellow | 6 | $138 | -- | . |
| Aqua | 7- | $151 | -- | . |
| Light Blue | 7+ | $175 | -- | . |
| | . | | . |
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