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> From: Tony Priestman <Tony@you-rang.demon.co.uk>
>
> Does anyone else have any experience of high storage temperatures
> actually damaging their collection?
>
>
> This is fairly location specific, but cross posted to .storage for
> general info.
> --
> Tony Priestman
I bought a couple Time Twisters sets at KMart this Friday (I know, I know,
but they were REALLY cheap, and thus a good parts supply).
I don't recall which set it was...has the guy who looks like he's from
Greenwich Village, and the machine has those large, sort of diaphanous, sort
of bat-type wings.
Those pieces were a bit odd looking, as were the boxes themselves. The boxes
look as though they have humidity damage, and I think the wings have heat
damage of some sort. I used to work in KMArt, and it DOES get HOT in their
storerooms.
So you might want to be extra cautious with your plastic but non-ABS parts,
such as these wings, boat sails, etc.
Rob
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Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: Loft storage of LEGO
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| (...) The biggest damage is usually done by sunlight - witness the effect on 'old' boxes left in the window of dusty old shops. Most lofts will only suffer the heat effect but 40 degrees is not far off that experienced in some holiday spots in (...) (24 years ago, 5-Jul-00, to lugnet.loc.uk, lugnet.storage)
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Message is in Reply To:
| | Loft storage of LEGO
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| I've accumulated a lot of new sets in the last year, and haven't had time to open them all. I was starting to run out of space during the summer, so I thought about storing my collection in the loft. I live in a brand new house, built to the latest (...) (25 years ago, 6-Nov-99, to lugnet.loc.uk, lugnet.storage)
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