| General Category > General Discussion |
| SNES - worth buying if "acceptable"/possibly broken? |
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| Umbra:
http://www.ebay.com/itm/SNES-Super-Nintendo-Video-Game-Console-System-TESTED-WORKS-Great-D4-/390465625756?pt=Video_Games&hash=item5ae9909e9c It's in desperate need of a paint-job, but if I actually get one of these two, what should I do with it? I've been told that red/white would go with Nintendo but I'm not big on Nintendo stuff so idk. I want it to look passable as an authentic color scheme without being a carbon copy of a standard SNES. |
| wiggy:
I hate when people paint them goofy bright colors. I think something like the N64 scheme would look really tasteful. I.e. dark gray with medium/light gray switches and just leave the eject button alone. |
| BudgetGameCases:
No one in this thread is allowed to mention paint again unless paint is actually involved. What the two consoles above are suffering from is called yellowing, and there's a way to fix it: Retrobright - use it. |
| wiggy:
The problem will come back though. There's no permanent fix and further chemical treatment will weaken the already damaged, brittle ABS plastic :( I'm not a huge fan of the "fix" kits and such. |
| Maben:
--- Quote from: wiggy on September 13, 2012, 09:50:49 AM ---The problem will come back though. There's no permanent fix and further chemical treatment will weaken the already damaged, brittle ABS plastic :( I'm not a huge fan of the "fix" kits and such. --- End quote --- "To permanently prevent the yellowing from returning, just coat the parts with a clear acrylic varnish. " Honestly, I found out about this stuff a couple weeks ago and it seems pretty amazing. Definitely a better solution than painting in my opinion. |
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