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In lugnet.trains, Harvey Henkelman writes:
> This may be CDS (Compartment Dork Syndrome) but here goes...
>
> My family has just returned from up north and they brought back...a huge tub
> of LEGO®!!! Actually they had gotten it from an aunt who had stored them for
> 7-8 years. Upon going through the collection of pieces, I found quite a few
> that were yellowed and beaten up pretty bad. However, after close
> examination it was revealed that all the crappy bricks were...gasp...Tyco
> blocks! I was relieved, because it was the LEGO® that had stood the test of
> time (mint condition). I had always wanted to watch clone bricks melt and
> burn, but didn't want to spend my precious money on these pieces of crap.
> Thanks to my aunt, I'm 4000-5000 pieces richer AND I get to torch the
> competition!
>
> Does anyone have similar experiences to share with the LUGNET community? -
I can cite the pristine TYCO Superblocks in my collection dating from at
least the time of your bricks, while formerly white LEGO bricks from the
same period are a gentle shade of urine. I think it's the luck of the draw
insofar as your yellowed vs. non-yellowed. Alternatively, perhaps the
previous owner of the bricks liked the TYCO much more and therefore used
them much more heavily than the LEGO bricks.
Dave!
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