I'll start with the one from Vintaxe, I rotated it 90 degrees. I forgot what catalog it's from, I think it was late 1983, and it was next to something similar to Kramer's "Duke" if I remember right. If you look close enough, you can see that they did not photograph an actual HONDO Paul Dean, but an Odyssey Paul Dean II, which is kinda strange, because as I recall reading, the Odyssey Paul Dean, according to one source, did NOT have any Attila Balough/Odyssey writing on the headstock, so it's kind of an interesting picture.
Here's a picture of a Hondo Paul Dean in excellent condition from one of the guitar brag sites. You can really see the grain on the pickguard on this one, I think Hondo used some kind of textured plastic rather than that rubberized material used on flight cases.
Here's the only Paul Dean III I've seen, and it's in Loverboy's "Hot Girls In Love" video. You can just barely see the bridge pickup. This is the guitar that makes me question if Hondo really did put a trem on that model, because in this shot, it's pretty obvious that's a Non-Trem Leo Quan Badass bridge.
Here's a picture I nabbed out of a Loverboy fansite photo collection of Paul with one of the prototypes, this one sporting a MusicMan Style pickguard, and rear mounted controls.
Here's another photo from the same fansite cropped down. This one is the P-90 version. The reason these variants intrigue me, is because I dunno about the Odyssey versions, weather they were all dual DiMarzio Super II, or if they made them with P-90's or other pickups.
One last picture from the fansite, this one is of one of the guitars fitted with Super II pickups. I think most of the production PDII's had the stock Hondo pickups, probably because most kids wanted to get the guitar on the cheap, rather than buy the thing fully fitted with the Super II humbuckers.