Unpaintable plastic

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Due to Prowl's mold layout, changing the outer shell of the car while leaving the limbs white for Sideswipe left a white part on the roof that had to be covered by a sticker. All of Sideswipe's white plastic (and the corresponding parts on other versions of the mold) cannot hold paint.

Just what its name implies, unpaintable plastic is plastic to which the type of paint Hasbro and TakaraTomy use will not properly adhere, due to the chemical compositions of said plastic. This plastic is sometimes used on Transformers toys for structural reasons, due to its durability, flexibility, or resilience.

The two most common plastics that are unpaintable and often used in Transformers are Polyoxymethylene (POM) and Polyamide (PA). The vast majority of Transformers toys have at least one mold that is unpaintable.


Examples

Photodegradation

Main article: Photodegradation

While it is nothing new, photodegradation has become much more common and rapid in products released in the War for Cybertron Trilogy toylines and thereafter. Several figures' unpaintable plastic has become increasingly susceptible to decay and discoloration even while still inside the packaging or mere days after being removed from the packaging. The colors of plastics that are known to fall victim to this, so far, are various shades of white, gray and metallic-gray/silvery plastic. These figures are also known to "yellow" even when they aren't exposed to direct sunlight - even when inside windowless boxes! - and have an accelerated reaction in humid climates.

The precise cause is unclear. A common theory among the fandom is that a fire retardant within the nylon chemical buildup is the cause of this and reacts to heat and/or humidity, causing the plastic to yellow. There was even one case in TFWiki.net's own community Discord server where the fire retardant chemical seeped out of a seam in an individual's War for Cybertron Trilogy Soundwave's knee! Gross. Other proposed explanations blame the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly rapid changes in factory staff, cleaning methods, and feasibility of Hasbro site-checks, or significantly longer time spent on slowed-down Pacific cargo ships, or some mix of the above.

Frequently documented victims include:

  • Just about any version of the Megatron mold first released in the War for Cybertron: Siege toyline, that has either grey or silvery-colored plastics.
  • Cyberverse Deluxe Class Arcee
  • Studio Series Deluxe Class '86 Autobot Jazz
  • War for Cybertron Trilogy Soundwave
  • Kingdom Cyclonus
  • Generations Selects Artfire
  • Collaborative Maverick
  • Shattered Glass Collection Starscream
  • Legacy Motormaster
  • Kingdom Dinobot
  • Studio Series Bumblebee Ratchet
  • Buzzworthy Bumblebee Heroic Maximal Dinobot
  • Kingdom Tigatron
  • Cyberverse Warrior Class Hammerbyte
  • Generations Selects G2 Ramjet
  • Robot Enhanced Design G1 Megatron

Notes

  • Yes, you can probably get commercially available hobbyist paints to stick to this plastic. You are not a multi-million dollar toy corporation and you are beholden to different budget constraints, not to mention your alterations do not have to hold up to the same testing and durability standards their mass-retail toys do. This fundamental disconnect is pretty much the entire driving force behind customizing.