Gold Plastic Syndrome: Difference between revisions

From MediaWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
m added BWN Randy as most recent toy w/ GPS, and bit on TM Megatron
Expanded... and from what I've heard, TM Megs doesn't have GPS. Stress-point issues, yes, but not GPS.
Line 1: Line 1:
A term coined by the fandom, '''Gold Plastic Syndrome''' (commonly shorthanded to '''GPS''') is used to describe the phenomenon of a toy's plastic --in most instances gold-colored, hence the name-- becoming brittle to the point of snapping or even crumbling, even under minimal-stress conditions. GPS is notably widespread among toys made in the tail-end of [[Generation 1]], typically the second year of [[Pretender]]s and even some European-market exclusives, but examples have surfaced from lines as recent as [[Generation 2]] (the [[Aerialbot]] [[Slingshot (G1)|Slingshot]] and even [[Beast Wars (toyline)|Beast Wars]] ([[Grimlock (G1)|Grimlock]]) as well as Beast Wars Neo [[Randy (BW)|Randy]]. Beast Wars [[Transmetal]] [[Megatron (BW)|Megatron]] suffers similar symptoms in his dark brown plastic, but his Beast Wars Metals toy, which used a diffrent plastic, is unnaffected.
A term coined by the fandom, '''Gold Plastic Syndrome''' (commonly shorthanded to '''GPS''') is used to describe the phenomenon of a toy's plastic decompsing and becoming brittle to the point of shattering or crumbling under minimal-stress conditions. This is different from the realtively more common stress-fracture type of plastic breakage that can occur in some Transformers toys. All noted instances of GPS have occured in hard, glossy gold-colored plastics that appear to have a "swirl" to their coloraton.
 
GPS is notably widespread among toys made in the tail-end of [[Generation 1]], typically the second year of [[Pretender]]s and even some European-market exclusives, but examples have surfaced from lines as recent as [[Generation 2]] and the [[Beast Wars (toyline)|Beast Wars]] series. Transformers toys are not the only ones to suffer from this; there have been reports of G.I. Joe and Visionaries toys' gold plastics also crumbling seemingly of their own accord.
 


==The Cause of GPS==
==The Cause of GPS==




==GPS Misconceptions==
==GPS Misconceptions==
The most common misconception about GPS is that ''all'' gold-colored plastic can suffer from this rot. Only certain plastic grades have been noted to be susceptible to GPS; in the past few years, more durable, pliable plastics have become the norm for toy construction, so the gold plastic on more recent toys like [[Cannonball (UT)|Cannonball]] are highly unlikely to have the flaw.
The most common misconception about GPS is that ''all'' gold-colored plastic can suffer from this rot. Only certain plastic grades (described above) have been noted to be susceptible to GPS crumbling; in the past few years, more durable, pliable plastics have become the norm for toy construction, so the gold plastic on more recent toys like [[Cannonball (UT)|Cannonball]] are highly unlikely to have the flaw.
 
Also, not every type of plastic breakage is the kind caused by GPS. In most instances of broken toys, visible stress marks appear long before any breakage in the form of discoloration, and are typically very clean "snaps" due to excess pressure. GPS breakages seemingly come from simple decomposition of the plastic without any form of excees force at all, and the breaks tend to leave shards of plastic and dust.
 




{{stub}}
{{stub}}
[[Category: Toys]]<div id="wikia-credits"><br /><br /><small>From [http://transformers.wikia.com Teletraan I: The Transformers Wiki], a [http://www.wikia.com Wikia] wiki.</small></div>
[[Category: Toys]]<div id="wikia-credits"><br /><br /><small>From [http://transformers.wikia.com Teletraan I: The Transformers Wiki], a [http://www.wikia.com Wikia] wiki.</small></div>

Revision as of 07:54, 15 May 2006

A term coined by the fandom, Gold Plastic Syndrome (commonly shorthanded to GPS) is used to describe the phenomenon of a toy's plastic decompsing and becoming brittle to the point of shattering or crumbling under minimal-stress conditions. This is different from the realtively more common stress-fracture type of plastic breakage that can occur in some Transformers toys. All noted instances of GPS have occured in hard, glossy gold-colored plastics that appear to have a "swirl" to their coloraton.

GPS is notably widespread among toys made in the tail-end of Generation 1, typically the second year of Pretenders and even some European-market exclusives, but examples have surfaced from lines as recent as Generation 2 and the Beast Wars series. Transformers toys are not the only ones to suffer from this; there have been reports of G.I. Joe and Visionaries toys' gold plastics also crumbling seemingly of their own accord.


The Cause of GPS

GPS Misconceptions

The most common misconception about GPS is that all gold-colored plastic can suffer from this rot. Only certain plastic grades (described above) have been noted to be susceptible to GPS crumbling; in the past few years, more durable, pliable plastics have become the norm for toy construction, so the gold plastic on more recent toys like Cannonball are highly unlikely to have the flaw.

Also, not every type of plastic breakage is the kind caused by GPS. In most instances of broken toys, visible stress marks appear long before any breakage in the form of discoloration, and are typically very clean "snaps" due to excess pressure. GPS breakages seemingly come from simple decomposition of the plastic without any form of excees force at all, and the breaks tend to leave shards of plastic and dust.




You left a piece out!

This article is a stub and is missing information. You can help MediaWiki by expanding it.