There was a question raised in an EMCE thread that I think should be
viewed by the whole community.
Megocrazy posted:
"Just a thought but what happens if you dye a grey/zombie mego head tan? Does the grey head absorb the dye? Would it fade in the same way it did originally? I'm guessing if you dyed it while grey it would obviously be darker than desired, but if you degrey it, using the methods we know of, and then dye it tan would it counter/stop the zombie process? Does anyone know the scientific reason why the head greys. Is it simply a reaction between the rubber and the coloring source? It affects Torch figures so it's evidently not the specific color. Could you dye a greyed Torch head red and solve the issue? I have dyed greyed heads darker colors so I know it does take dye just wondering if anyone has tried to nullify the zombie effect on a tan head."
I replied with the following:
I believe our resident plastics engineer AAAAA said that the gray effect was due to a mold or bacteria in the original vinyl used for 1979 production.
The tire wet/plastidip cure was temporary because the mold inside the vinyl
re-grayed over time. Dave Mc posted that all the heads he de-grayed went
gray again.
Dyeing the vintage head might minimize the gray look but it will not cure it.
viewed by the whole community.
Megocrazy posted:
"Just a thought but what happens if you dye a grey/zombie mego head tan? Does the grey head absorb the dye? Would it fade in the same way it did originally? I'm guessing if you dyed it while grey it would obviously be darker than desired, but if you degrey it, using the methods we know of, and then dye it tan would it counter/stop the zombie process? Does anyone know the scientific reason why the head greys. Is it simply a reaction between the rubber and the coloring source? It affects Torch figures so it's evidently not the specific color. Could you dye a greyed Torch head red and solve the issue? I have dyed greyed heads darker colors so I know it does take dye just wondering if anyone has tried to nullify the zombie effect on a tan head."
I replied with the following:
I believe our resident plastics engineer AAAAA said that the gray effect was due to a mold or bacteria in the original vinyl used for 1979 production.
The tire wet/plastidip cure was temporary because the mold inside the vinyl
re-grayed over time. Dave Mc posted that all the heads he de-grayed went
gray again.
Dyeing the vintage head might minimize the gray look but it will not cure it.
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