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Mego Melts ???? green marks :(

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  • jemboy2004
    replied
    Hi Karen, Ray and other's it's great to see some other fans who like the 12" celeb dolls!

    I'm gonna have to try that trick of your's Ray. I once suggested using something to put in betweent the sockets and another member said but what if the plastic reacts to that too? So I never tried but seems like you have done this and had some success so I'm hopeful as I've been trying to stop this from happening.

    Karen I love your pics of your dolls!

    Ric

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  • captact
    replied
    Originally posted by kryptosmaster
    I've often wondered what causes those ankle bruises. There must be a small piece of metal right there on the skeleton that corrodes and bleeds through the skin for some reason?
    Rich
    ...this is caused by a similar type o reaction,..this time a blue metal used in later issue of dolls,...(early doll versions do not bleed like 1st Farrah, Cher and early WW)....the blue metal tends to "sweat" in certain points, causing the greenish/blue corrosion on ankles and inside of elbows/arms.

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  • captact
    replied
    Originally posted by cjefferys
    Wow, you are just full of good advice. I'll try the acetone trick on my Moonraker Holly that got a bit of melt on her dress.
    Thanks,..it will work on all outfits that haven melted and have rubber stuck on their clothes from the hip joints syndrome.

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  • kryptosmaster
    replied
    I've often wondered what causes those ankle bruises. There must be a small piece of metal right there on the skeleton that corrodes and bleeds through the skin for some reason?
    Rich

    Leave a comment:


  • Karen-bionic-fan
    replied
    Thanks great help and tips , iv got a new boxed Mego Doll arriving tomorrow hope its all well and no major melts will post the pics tomorrow

    Leave a comment:


  • cjefferys
    replied
    Wow, you are just full of good advice. I'll try the acetone trick on my Moonraker Holly that got a bit of melt on her dress.

    Leave a comment:


  • captact
    replied
    Once this is done,..it wont happen again as there will be no reason for melting again as the cello keeps the plastic and rubber apart. If melted Rubber did get on the outfit,..use Nail Acetone to remove the rubber, applying it with Q-tip from the outside of outfit (do not apply directly to the melted rubber , as it will melt into the cloth, while applied from the outside, will make the rubber peal off instead.
    The Melting is worse on Tennille dolls (only known Celebrity doll in the Mego World WITHOUT EARS), due to the material of dress, which helps in the melting process much faster (there are two versions of her dress,..one melts more while the other (red satin type), not that fast. Hope this helps!
    Ray
    Last edited by captact; May 17, '10, 11:13 PM.

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  • cjefferys
    replied
    That's an interesting trick, I'll have to try it. Thanks for the advice Ray.
    One thing that really sucks is when the "melting" rubber fuses with the doll's fabric clothing.

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  • captact
    replied
    Try doing this without removing the arms,..as the melt effect may have damaged the socket already,..just remember to cut a slit in the punched circle for ease of the cello to go around the shoulder socket. Same goes for the hips! Good Luck!

    Ray

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  • Karen-bionic-fan
    replied
    Originally posted by captact
    What I did to mines,..ADVICE:
    1) Trim away the melted parts with Xacto knife
    2) get transparent flexible thin cello (used for school projects, replacing cello's from Mego boxes, etc...)
    3) cut circle shapes, slightly bigger than arm socket area and with hole puncher, make holes in the middle of these circle shapes
    4) With scissors, cut one slit towards inside of punched hole and place around arm socket, separating the rubber arm from the torso (might need to cut around the punched out circle to accomodate the arm socket.
    5) Once done,..cut off/trim excess cello from outside the dolls shoulder.

    HAS WORKED FOR ME FOR MANY YEARS AND THOSE GOTTEN RECENTLY.

    ...both plastic and rubber must not make contact 9with practice,..the same can be done for the hips as well.

    Good Luck!!!!!

    Ray



    Thanks I will try this do the mego woman's arms come off easy ? great tips ...

    Leave a comment:


  • Karen-bionic-fan
    replied
    Thanks guys , you have encouraged me to sort some boxes , so far iv managed to remove sellotape from boxes , sorted 3 windows and opened 2 boxes to re sort the inner card the last owner had put the figures on the card the wrong way up so the boxes would not stand easy lol one box had so much tape on it why do people put shiny tape on old boxes even as a young collector I new never to do this piff ....I worry too much anyway the end result looks better than they arrived
    Last edited by Karen-bionic-fan; May 17, '10, 8:10 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • captact
    replied
    What I did to mines,..ADVICE:
    1) Trim away the melted parts with Xacto knife
    2) get transparent flexible thin cello (used for school projects, replacing cello's from Mego boxes, etc...)
    3) cut circle shapes, slightly bigger than arm socket area and with hole puncher, make holes in the middle of these circle shapes
    4) With scissors, cut one slit towards inside of punched hole and place around arm socket, separating the rubber arm from the torso (might need to cut around the punched out circle to accomodate the arm socket.
    5) Once done,..cut off/trim excess cello from outside the dolls shoulder.

    HAS WORKED FOR ME FOR MANY YEARS AND THOSE GOTTEN RECENTLY.

    ...both plastic and rubber must not make contact 9with practice,..the same can be done for the hips as well.

    Good Luck!!!!!

    Ray

    Leave a comment:


  • Karen-bionic-fan
    replied
    Originally posted by AAAAA
    It depends on which plastics are in reaction, how reactive,& how long they been in contact. vinyls are very reactive by nature, and can remain so for years &/or decades .
    the plastic most acceptable is polystyrene, as the chemicals given off from vinyl they are absorb by the contact with polystyrene, so the chemicals will soften the plastic, and keep the plastic soft for years and travel deep with in the plastic. so cutting away might wind up cutting away a lot of the effective plastic.
    the MEGO Bendie's are VERY reactive vinyl and come in contact with a styrene
    will melt it and be deep soft area for years, until the chemical disapates until it looses it strength and becomes neutral.
    Vinyl also absorbs dyes & pigment like crazy, from Styrene, FABRIC or other vinyl 's
    and become bonded with the vinyl and run deep


    Thanks iv some MEGO figures with some problems with melts at the arms and the very same figures with no problems its a strange one indeed

    Leave a comment:


  • AAAAA
    replied
    It depends on which plastics are in reaction, how reactive,& how long they been in contact. vinyls are very reactive by nature, and can remain so for years &/or decades .
    the plastic most acceptable is polystyrene, as the chemicals given off from vinyl they are absorb by the contact with polystyrene, so the chemicals will soften the plastic, and keep the plastic soft for years and travel deep with in the plastic. so cutting away might wind up cutting away a lot of the effective plastic.
    the MEGO Bendie's are VERY reactive vinyl and come in contact with a styrene
    will melt it and be deep soft area for years, until the chemical disapates until it looses it strength and becomes neutral.
    Vinyl also absorbs dyes & pigment like crazy, from Styrene, FABRIC or other vinyl 's
    and become bonded with the vinyl and run deep
    Last edited by AAAAA; May 17, '10, 2:52 PM.

    Leave a comment:


  • Karen-bionic-fan
    replied
    Originally posted by cjefferys
    Most of Mego's female 12" figures are susceptible to "melt" at the shoulders and/or hips (the rubber limbs having a chemical reaction with the plastic torso) and green/blue marks (especially at the ankles). And some of them (Moonraker's Holly, Black Hole's Kate Mcrae, Star Trek's Ilia, Candy) are prone to suffering from greying heads too. It's a shame, but these dolls can exhibit a bunch of problems.


    Iv heard you can cut the melts away or trim them a bit is this ok to do only some figures I have have this issue ......

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