Hauler: Difference between revisions

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====''Wings Universe''====
====''Wings Universe''====
{{Wingsnote}}
{{Wingsnote}}
[[File:BattleLines5-Hauler.jpg|left|thumb|upright=1.1|I'm in robot mode and in my toy's colors? Oh my lord!]]
[[File:BattleLines5-Hauler.jpg|left|thumb|upright=1.1|I'm in robot mode and in my toy's colors? Oh my lord!]]
Nine million years ago, Hauler was a member of the construction team that built [[Crystal City]]. It was during this project that he introduced [[Hook (G1)|Hook]], [[Scavenger (G1)|Scavenger]], [[Scrapper (G1)|Scrapper]], [[Bonecrusher (G1)|Bonecrusher]], [[Mixmaster (G1)|Mixmaster]], and [[Long Haul (G1)|Long Haul]] to [[Omega Supreme (G1)|Omega Supreme]]. Hauler grew suspicious of his colleagues when they returned to the construction site one day with seemingly drastic personality changes. Following the destruction of Crystal City, Hauler felt the six Constructicons were to blame, which led him to join the Autobots. {{storylink|Hasbro Transformers Collectors' Club issue 42|Hauler's profile in Club magazine #42}}
Nine million years ago, Hauler was a member of the construction team that built [[Crystal City]]. It was during this project that he introduced [[Hook (G1)|Hook]], [[Scavenger (G1)|Scavenger]], [[Scrapper (G1)|Scrapper]], [[Bonecrusher (G1)|Bonecrusher]], [[Mixmaster (G1)|Mixmaster]], and [[Long Haul (G1)|Long Haul]] to [[Omega Supreme (G1)|Omega Supreme]]. Hauler grew suspicious of his colleagues when they returned to the construction site one day with seemingly drastic personality changes. Following the destruction of Crystal City, Hauler felt the six Constructicons were to blame, which led him to join the Autobots. {{storylink|Hasbro Transformers Collectors' Club issue 42|Hauler's profile in Club magazine #42}}


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===2019 IDW continuity===
===2019 IDW continuity===
[[File:TreadandCircuits3-Roadhauler.jpg|thumb|300px|]]
[[File:TreadandCircuits3-Roadhauler.jpg|thumb|upright=1.6]]
 
A native of [[Velocitron]], Roadhauler participated in the [[Speedia|Speedia 500]]! {{storylink|Tread & Circuits Part 2}} When [[Mayhem Attack Squad|Mayhem]] tried to sabotage the race, [[Thunder Clash]] temporarily used him as a stepping stone as the [[Wreckers]] leader hopped from racer to racer in his pursuit of [[Axer (G1)|Axer]] and [[Submarauder (G1)|Submarauder]]. Despite this interference, Roadhauler seemed to be one of the participants who finished the race. {{storylink|Tread & Circuits Part 3}} Subsequently, Roadhauler was present at the inauguration of Velocitron's next First Senator, the winner of the Speedia 500, the [[Decepticon|Ascenticon]] [[Knock Out (G1)|Knock Out]]. He also raced towards the stage immediately following the attempted assassination of Knock Out and Mayhem's attack thereafter. {{storylink|Tread & Circuits Part 4}}
A native of [[Velocitron]], Roadhauler participated in the [[Speedia|Speedia 500]]! {{storylink|Tread & Circuits Part 2}} When [[Mayhem Attack Squad|Mayhem]] tried to sabotage the race, [[Thunder Clash]] temporarily used him as a stepping stone as the [[Wreckers]] leader hopped from racer to racer in his pursuit of [[Axer (G1)|Axer]] and [[Submarauder (G1)|Submarauder]]. Despite this interference, Roadhauler seemed to be one of the participants who finished the race. {{storylink|Tread & Circuits Part 3}} Subsequently, Roadhauler was present at the inauguration of Velocitron's next First Senator, the winner of the Speedia 500, the [[Decepticon|Ascenticon]] [[Knock Out (G1)|Knock Out]]. He also raced towards the stage immediately following the attempted assassination of Knock Out and Mayhem's attack thereafter. {{storylink|Tread & Circuits Part 4}}
{{--}}
{{--}}
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==Origins==
==Origins==
[[File:G1-Hauler-character-model.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4]]
[[File:G1-Hauler-character-model.jpg|thumb|upright=1.4]]
In [[1984]], it appears that [[Hasbro]] intended to release the ''[[Diaclone]]'' "Crane" figure as part of the first year of the ''Transformers'' toyline as a character named "Hauler". Packing cases for the 1984 [[Autobot Cars]] contained twelve figures, but only eleven toys were released (with an extra [[Mirage (G1)|Mirage]] filling the empty slot, later replaced by [[Skids (G1)#Toys|Skids]]), suggesting that Hauler was to be the twelfth. For unknown reasons, these plans were halted, and the figure was held back and eventually released in [[1985]] as [[Grapple (G1)#Toys|Grapple]]. However, this change came too late to remove Hauler's solitary cartoon appearance, in "[[More than Meets the Eye, Part 1]]". Following this episode, the character (who never spoke, and never transformed) promptly disappeared from the cartoon, and was never seen or referred to again. When Grapple eventually appeared in the second season of the cartoon, he received an entirely new and more refined animation model than the one given to Hauler (see right), though both of these were clearly based on the same toy. When the episode was dubbed for release in Japan, Hauler was not even referred to by name, and most fans assumed him to be Grapple. To add a little more confusion into the mix, the 1985 [[Action Cards|Action Card]] depicting the scene also referred to Hauler as Grapple.
In [[1984]], it appears that [[Hasbro]] intended to release the ''[[Diaclone]]'' "Crane" figure as part of the first year of the ''Transformers'' toyline as a character named "Hauler". Packing cases for the 1984 [[Autobot Cars]] contained twelve figures, but only eleven toys were released (with an extra [[Mirage (G1)/toys#Generation 1|Mirage]] filling the empty slot, later replaced by [[Skids (G1)#Toys|Skids]]), suggesting that Hauler was to be the twelfth. For unknown reasons, these plans were halted, and the figure was held back and eventually released in [[1985]] as [[Grapple (G1)#Toys|Grapple]]. However, this change came too late to remove Hauler's solitary cartoon appearance, in "[[More than Meets the Eye, Part 1]]". Following this episode, the character (who never spoke, and never transformed) promptly disappeared from the cartoon, and was never seen or referred to again. When Grapple eventually appeared in the second season of the cartoon, he received an entirely new and more refined animation model than the one given to Hauler (see right), though both of these were clearly based on the same toy. When the episode was dubbed for release in Japan, Hauler was not even referred to by name, and most fans assumed him to be Grapple. To add a little more confusion into the mix, the 1985 [[Action Cards|Action Card]] depicting the scene also referred to Hauler as Grapple.


[[File:Megatronffod.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.4|Hauler quit building Megatron!]]
[[File:Megatronffod.jpg|thumb|left|upright=1.4|Hauler quit building Megatron!]]
Nearly twenty years later, when Grapple's mold-partner [[Inferno (G1)#Toys|Inferno]] was reissued as part of ''[[The Transformers Collection]]'' series, [[e-HOBBY]] decided to release an exclusive [[redeco]] of the Grapple figure. Someone at e-HOBBY, looking for a character that this toy could represent, found out about Hauler in [[Hirofumi Ichikawa]]'s glossary info in the ''[[Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers 2010 (franchise)|Transformers 2010]]'' DVD box set and decided to turn the Grapple redeco into this Hauler character, now dubbed "RoadHauler".<ref name="ichikawaasm">[http://www.alteredstatesmag.com/features/articles/hi_dai-oh.php Interview with Hirofumi Ichikawa at Altered States Magazine]</ref> Ichikawa himself was then asked to write a [[bio]] for "RoadHauler", in which he explained the character's perpetual absence. Since Hauler as he appeared in the cartoon would not have actually been a ''redeco'' of Grapple (as they were both orange), it was decided to render RoadHauler in the classic purple-and-green of the [[Constructicon (G1)|Constructicons]]. The character's bio then established that he was a former member of that team (which at the time was presumed to be in reference to the scene in "[[Five Faces of Darkness, Part 4]]" that erroneously depicted the Constructicons with two extra members), and justified his different coloration in the cartoon by explaining that he often changed his color scheme. Eventually in [[2015]], [[Legends Comic: Bonus Edition Vol. 13|a chapter]] of the [[Transformers Legends (comic)|''Legends'' comic]] would confirm him to be one of the Constructicons present during the creation of Megatron, while the second "mysterious" member was established as [[Gravedigger]] in the ''[[Transformers United EX|United EX]]'' toyline [[2012|three years prior]].
Nearly twenty years later, when Grapple's mold-partner [[Inferno (G1)/toys#Generation 1|Inferno]] was reissued as part of ''[[The Transformers Collection]]'' series, [[e-HOBBY]] decided to release an exclusive [[redeco]] of the Grapple figure. Someone at e-HOBBY, looking for a character that this toy could represent, found out about Hauler in [[Hirofumi Ichikawa]]'s glossary info in the ''[[Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers (franchise)#Fight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers 2010|Transformers 2010]]'' DVD box set and decided to turn the Grapple redeco into this Hauler character, now dubbed "RoadHauler".<ref name="ichikawaasm">[http://www.alteredstatesmag.com/features/articles/hi_dai-oh.php Interview with Hirofumi Ichikawa at Altered States Magazine]</ref> Ichikawa himself was then asked to write a [[bio]] for "RoadHauler", in which he explained the character's perpetual absence. Since Hauler as he appeared in the cartoon would not have actually been a ''redeco'' of Grapple (as they were both orange), it was decided to render RoadHauler in the classic purple-and-green of the [[Constructicon (G1)|Constructicons]]. The character's bio then established that he was a former member of that team (which at the time was presumed to be in reference to the scene in "[[Five Faces of Darkness, Part 4]]" that erroneously depicted the Constructicons with two extra members), and justified his different coloration in the cartoon by explaining that he often changed his color scheme. Eventually in [[2015]], [[Legends Comic: Bonus Edition Vol. 13|a chapter]] of the [[Transformers Legends (comic)|''Legends'' comic]] would confirm him to be one of the Constructicons present during the creation of Megatron, while the second "mysterious" member was established as [[Gravedigger]] in the ''[[Transformers United EX|United EX]]'' toyline [[2012|three years prior]].


Not as complicated a history as [[Prowl II|some characters]], but there you go.
Not as complicated a history as [[Prowl (TM2)#The Prowl II conundrum|some characters]], but there you go.
{{--}}
{{--}}


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*'''RoadHauler''' (July [[2003]])
*'''RoadHauler''' (July [[2003]])
**''ID number'': '''88'''
**''ID number'': '''88'''
**''Accessories'': Left & right fists, 3 missiles, "Beam Gun"
**''Accessories'': left & right fists, three [[Earth-auger missile]]s, [[vibro-force gun]]
 
:One of the first original-deco toys released as part of the [[e-HOBBY]] [[exclusive]] part of the ''[[The Transformers: Collector's Edition|Collector's Edition]]'' series, RoadHauler is a [[redeco]] of the Autobot [[Grapple (G1)#Toys|Grapple]], transforming into a Mitsubishi Fuso hook-crane truck. Both of his forearms contain a spring-loaded missile launcher so he can fire his own fists, or the included silver missiles. (As a Japanese release, this feature is fully functional, as they have different [[for safety reasons|safety standards for projectiles]] in Japan.) Notably, the Autobot symbol on his cab/chest is a [[tampograph]] rather than an added sticker detail.
:One of the first original-deco toys released as part of the [[e-HOBBY]] [[exclusive]] part of the ''[[The Transformers: Collector's Edition|Collector's Edition]]'' series, RoadHauler is a [[redeco]] of the Autobot [[Grapple (G1)#Toys|Grapple]], transforming into a Mitsubishi Fuso hook-crane truck. Both of his forearms contain a spring-loaded missile launcher so he can fire his own fists, or the included silver missiles. (As a Japanese release, this feature is fully functional, as they have different [[for safety reasons|safety standards for projectiles]] in Japan.) Notably, the Autobot symbol on his cab/chest is a [[tampograph]] rather than an added sticker detail.


: He was sold only as part of a set with his fellow "[[More than Meets the Eye, Part 1]]" cameo-character [[Sunstorm (G1)#Toys|Sunstorm]]. Pre-orders for the set closed on [[May 15]], 2003. The toys shipped out in July.
:He was sold only as part of a set with his fellow "[[More than Meets the Eye, Part 1]]" cameo-character [[Sunstorm (G1)#Toys|Sunstorm]]. Pre-orders for the set closed on [[May 15]], 2003. The toys shipped out in July.


:A [[retool]]ing of this mold was used to make Generation 1 [[Inferno (G1)/toys#Toys|Inferno]] and [[Artfire#Toys|Artfire]].
:A [[retool]]ing of this mold was used to make Generation 1 [[Inferno (G1)/toys#Toys|Inferno]] and [[Artfire#Toys|Artfire]].
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==References==
==References==
{{reflist}}
{{reflist}}


[[Category:Beast Wars: Uprising Autobots]]
[[Category:Beast Wars: Uprising Autobots]]

Revision as of 17:46, 22 May 2022

This article is about the Generation 1 Autobot. For the Go-Bot, see Hauler-Bot.
Hauler is an Autobot Constructicon from the Generation 1 continuity family.
ALL CONSTRUCTION VEHICLES MUST BE BRIGHT GREEN FOREVER AND EVER.

Back on Cybertron, Hauler (aka Road Hauler and Load Hauler) was a Constructicon involved in the building of the Crystal City. When his teammates were reprogrammed as Decepticons, Hauler turned to the Autobots, joining their ranks. This choice would eventually put him on board the Ark for its doomed voyage that ended on Earth. When he awoke with the rest of the crew in 1984, he resumed his primary function: the discovery and procurement of energy sources. This task sends him far and wide across the planet, and his tendency towards capricious self-expression often results in him coming back with different colors and parts.

His crane mode can lift 60 tons, and in robot mode, he can launch his hands from their wrist-sockets. The hands can fly through the air under his remote-control guidance, allowing him to perform tasks normally beyond his reach.[1]

Fiction

Generation 1 cartoon continuity

The Transformers cartoon

Shut up and lift the guy with the toy.

Soon after the Autobots awakened in 1984, Hauler and Ratchet were brought by Cliffjumper to aid the fallen Hound, who had been sent tumbling into a ravine following a battle with Laserbeak. While Ratchet and Cliffjumper jumped down to check their buddy out, Hauler remained up top and used his winch to lift Hound to safety. More than Meets the Eye, Part 1

Japanese Generation 1 cartoon continuity

Why am I here?

Hauler was among the Constructicons who built Megatron. This was later recounted by the Legends World's Waspinator to his own Megatron. Bonus Edition Vol. 13

Hauler also constructed Crystal City with the other Constructicons and joined the Autobots after the rest of his teammates were lost in an attack by Megatron. He was part of Optimus Prime's crew that crashed on Earth and lay dormant for four million years. He woke up with the others. After aiding in recovering Hound, Hauler then set out on his full-time mission to scour the Earth for new sources of energy, frequently changing his color scheme and optional equipment. Toy bio

In the late 1980s, Hauler was part of a team that attempted to protect the Transform Super Cog from being stolen by the Decepticons, but the Battlechargers were able to rev past Hauler and a few others into the Ark. Slugslinger's Ambition

In the 21st century, when the Constructicons tricked Grapple into rebuilding the Crystal City on Earth, Hauler participated as well. Crystal City Reconstruction Project

Wings Universe

Wings Universe is based on the Generation 1 cartoon, but deviates from it in cosmetic ways and continuity points.
I'm in robot mode and in my toy's colors? Oh my lord!

Nine million years ago, Hauler was a member of the construction team that built Crystal City. It was during this project that he introduced Hook, Scavenger, Scrapper, Bonecrusher, Mixmaster, and Long Haul to Omega Supreme. Hauler grew suspicious of his colleagues when they returned to the construction site one day with seemingly drastic personality changes. Following the destruction of Crystal City, Hauler felt the six Constructicons were to blame, which led him to join the Autobots. Hauler's profile in Club magazine #42

Hauler was present alongside several other Autobots within Iacon when Megatron and his Decepticons smashed through the walls. The wall-smashing was made possible by his Robo-Smashed former friends, who had combined for the first time into Devastator. Battle Lines, Part 5 At Dion's suggestion, Hauler joined his fellow Autobots in shooting at Devastator's knees. This successfully disassembled the combiner, facilitating the Autobots' victory. Battle Lines, Part 6

During the third Cybertronian wars, Hauler and Erector were among the Autobots who ambushed the Constructicons at Elevation Recostalus, neutralizing the Decepticon team. Transformers I.Q. last issue review Five million years later, as he helped equip the Ark for its voyage, Hauler convinced Wheeljack to bring the Sky Spy on board. Battle Lines, Part 6

Many millions of years later, Hauler was one of the sparse defenders of Cybertron available to serve during the Machine Wars. Obsidian had Hauler and a motley collection of Autobots and Decepticons assembled to serve as guerrilla soldiers under his command. Termination

Of Masters and Mayhem

Following a battle on Cybertron that left the entire area in ruins, Hauler surveyed the remaining buildings and concluded that none were salvageable. The Toxic Transformer

Beast Wars: Uprising

Road Hauler was a Micromaster Builder who joined Buckethead's Constructicons in the wake of the Grand Uprising, forming the left arm of the newest incarnation of Devastator. Wideload, a Decepticon member of the team, worried about tension between the two, but found that their old factions didn't seem to matter anymore in the post-war era. The Inexorable March

2019 IDW continuity

A native of Velocitron, Roadhauler participated in the Speedia 500! Tread & Circuits Part 2 When Mayhem tried to sabotage the race, Thunder Clash temporarily used him as a stepping stone as the Wreckers leader hopped from racer to racer in his pursuit of Axer and Submarauder. Despite this interference, Roadhauler seemed to be one of the participants who finished the race. Tread & Circuits Part 3 Subsequently, Roadhauler was present at the inauguration of Velocitron's next First Senator, the winner of the Speedia 500, the Ascenticon Knock Out. He also raced towards the stage immediately following the attempted assassination of Knock Out and Mayhem's attack thereafter. Tread & Circuits Part 4

Origins

In 1984, it appears that Hasbro intended to release the Diaclone "Crane" figure as part of the first year of the Transformers toyline as a character named "Hauler". Packing cases for the 1984 Autobot Cars contained twelve figures, but only eleven toys were released (with an extra Mirage filling the empty slot, later replaced by Skids), suggesting that Hauler was to be the twelfth. For unknown reasons, these plans were halted, and the figure was held back and eventually released in 1985 as Grapple. However, this change came too late to remove Hauler's solitary cartoon appearance, in "More than Meets the Eye, Part 1". Following this episode, the character (who never spoke, and never transformed) promptly disappeared from the cartoon, and was never seen or referred to again. When Grapple eventually appeared in the second season of the cartoon, he received an entirely new and more refined animation model than the one given to Hauler (see right), though both of these were clearly based on the same toy. When the episode was dubbed for release in Japan, Hauler was not even referred to by name, and most fans assumed him to be Grapple. To add a little more confusion into the mix, the 1985 Action Card depicting the scene also referred to Hauler as Grapple.

Hauler quit building Megatron!

Nearly twenty years later, when Grapple's mold-partner Inferno was reissued as part of The Transformers Collection series, e-HOBBY decided to release an exclusive redeco of the Grapple figure. Someone at e-HOBBY, looking for a character that this toy could represent, found out about Hauler in Hirofumi Ichikawa's glossary info in the Transformers 2010 DVD box set and decided to turn the Grapple redeco into this Hauler character, now dubbed "RoadHauler".[2] Ichikawa himself was then asked to write a bio for "RoadHauler", in which he explained the character's perpetual absence. Since Hauler as he appeared in the cartoon would not have actually been a redeco of Grapple (as they were both orange), it was decided to render RoadHauler in the classic purple-and-green of the Constructicons. The character's bio then established that he was a former member of that team (which at the time was presumed to be in reference to the scene in "Five Faces of Darkness, Part 4" that erroneously depicted the Constructicons with two extra members), and justified his different coloration in the cartoon by explaining that he often changed his color scheme. Eventually in 2015, a chapter of the Legends comic would confirm him to be one of the Constructicons present during the creation of Megatron, while the second "mysterious" member was established as Gravedigger in the United EX toyline three years prior.

Not as complicated a history as some characters, but there you go.

Toys

Collector's Edition

It's not easy being green. Especially when you're supposed to be orange.
One of the first original-deco toys released as part of the e-HOBBY exclusive part of the Collector's Edition series, RoadHauler is a redeco of the Autobot Grapple, transforming into a Mitsubishi Fuso hook-crane truck. Both of his forearms contain a spring-loaded missile launcher so he can fire his own fists, or the included silver missiles. (As a Japanese release, this feature is fully functional, as they have different safety standards for projectiles in Japan.) Notably, the Autobot symbol on his cab/chest is a tampograph rather than an added sticker detail.
He was sold only as part of a set with his fellow "More than Meets the Eye, Part 1" cameo-character Sunstorm. Pre-orders for the set closed on May 15, 2003. The toys shipped out in July.
A retooling of this mold was used to make Generation 1 Inferno and Artfire.
The Transformers mold: Inferno/Grapple

Version 1 (Inferno):

  • TakaraFight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers
    10 Inferno
  • C-108 Artfire
  • The Transformers Collection 8 Inferno

Version 2 (Grapple):

  • HasbroThe Transformers Grapple
  • TakaraFight! Super Robot Lifeform Transformers 47 Grapple

Kōjin Ōno

Notes

This isn't what it looks like!
  • There is some conjecture over the Romanization of his toy's name, as many fans call him "Load Hauler". However, when the e-Hobby website featured the toy, it spelled the name "RoadHauler".[3] The The Transformers: Binaltech & TF Collection Complete Guide reinforces this spelling, calling him "ROADHAULER" in all caps, as it does with all names.[4]
  • Hauler's profile in Club magazine #42 says he's called "Load Hauler" by some. It also calls his Cybertronian alternate mode a "binary load lifter", a reference to the droids of the same name from the Star Wars franchise.
  • The Wings Universe profile for Devastator, published alongside Hauler's, eschewed the Japanese "Five Faces of Darkness" retcon by establishing that Megatron was created by an entirely-distinct splinter group of a much larger Constructicon faction. So no, despite appearances, that bit of artwork from issue #45 of the magazine isn't implying that Hauler and Erector were amongst the creators of Megatron.
  • Speaking of Wings continuity, Hauler appears in Timelines #8 as a "virtual redeco" of Reveal the Shield Voyager Class Grapple.
  • The 2008 Italian re-dub of The Transformers retroactively "fixed" the Hauler "error" by changing his name to Grapple.
  • In the 2019 Transformers Hall of Fame poll, hilariously, Hauler was included alongside the other characters from the first season of the Sunbow cartoon. But in the end, he lost to Skywarp (you had ONE job!).

Foreign names

  • Japanese: Roadhauler (ロードホーラー Rōdohōrā)
  • Russian: Bol'shegruz (Большегруз, "Heavy Trucks")

References