No; unfortunately, I didn’t find it.
It’s now disappeared into that dark hole in my shop were all screws and small detail pieces go, never to be seen again
Aw crap, I miss read that
No; unfortunately, I didn’t find it.
It’s now disappeared into that dark hole in my shop were all screws and small detail pieces go, never to be seen again
They are resin prints.Hi Dann, are these metal prints?
Ladies and gentlemen...
The gods have smiled upon me.
After 2 hours of rummaging through my shop.... calculating every possible destination along the chunk’s last known trajectory...and emptying the contents of an entire industrial shelf (tons of model kits, etc) I found the following item in a corner of one of the shelves, silently laughing at me, haunting me, torturing me, secretly judging me...
View attachment 1351445
I’m off to go buy a lottery ticket while my good luck is still in effect.
I encourage you all to reach out to me—virtually and respecting social distancing rules—to absorb some of my good luck mojo.
It will not last.
Thanks for the update man!BIG UPDATE
don’t use the torch method until I report back with new instructions
I also have to wait for permission to go into detail and use names
DO NOT TOUCH your chunks yet
Noted my man!!!!BIG UPDATE
don’t use the torch method until I report back with new instructions
I also have to wait for permission to go into detail and use names
DO NOT TOUCH your chunks yet
I used a torch on my own chunk to bend the little prongs. Turned it a nice blue color but otherwise I didn’t have any issues? What should I be watching out for, just the bluing?
On the other I did for a member of the forum here I just bent it cold to avoid the bluing, that worked as well with a little force.
I mean, worse case scenario, everyone torches their chunks and has to re-buff it right?I have been told by a very reputable person the top of the chunk has silver on it, while the sides are rusty brown
I’m trying to get the time frame, was this during rotj or is this now
He’s gone kind of silent, I don’t know if he over stepped his bonds
To me with all my reference and the pop culture quest video I see brown just like in my video
But this guy is very VERY reputable.. wish he would verify the time line of his reference
Also it makes more sense from a natural aging standpoint for it to have been a little shinier on top during production, and very oxidized post production to the present day.I mean, worse case scenario, everyone torches their chunks and has to re-buff it right?
I have been told by a very reputable person the top of the chunk has silver on it, while the sides are rusty brown
MY Running theory is that the shaved sides of the mystery chunk on the V2 could have removed the zinc on the sides but not the knurled face. This is why it could have been bright steel/zinc on set in Yuma etc.
In that case the zinc on the face would be present and bright like sliver, while the sides would rust over a very quick period of time. However, in my experience no amount of zinc can inhibit raw steel oxidation and exposure over an extended period of time if it is in close proximity. Given time, proximity to steel oxidation, and potential cleaning... even galvanization/zinc will be prone to surface darkening and oxidization.
Thus I think:
RoTJ V2 was probably *relatively* bright on all sides in filming.
Shaved flange on the boot stud revealed oxidizable steel, and over time revealed...
Rusted sides and zinc knurled face.
Over time, with rusted sides and a zinc knurled face the oxidation extended to the surface of the zinc and with oxidation occurring on both ends the zinc (over the past 40 some years) has darkened and oxidized to match the steel, if not being completely destroyed in the process of steel oxidization.
Can you rub some of that luck on a grain of salt and send it my way. pleaseLadies and gentlemen...
The gods have smiled upon me.
After 2 hours of rummaging through my shop.... calculating every possible destination along the chunk’s last known trajectory...and emptying the contents of an entire industrial shelf (tons of model kits, etc) I found the following item in a corner of one of the shelves, silently laughing at me, haunting me, torturing me, secretly judging me...
View attachment 1351445
I’m off to go buy a lottery ticket while my good luck is still in effect.
I encourage you all to reach out to me—virtually and respecting social distancing rules—to absorb some of my good luck mojo.
It will not last.
Perfectly said! Great thought process going here.MY Running theory is that the shaved sides of the mystery chunk on the V2 could have removed the zinc on the sides but not the knurled face. This is why it could have been bright steel/zinc on set in Yuma etc.
In that case the zinc on the face would be present and bright like sliver, while the sides would rust over a very quick period of time. However, in my experience no amount of zinc can inhibit raw steel oxidation and exposure over an extended period of time if it is in close proximity. Given time, proximity to steel oxidation, and potential cleaning... even galvanization/zinc will be prone to surface darkening and oxidization.
Thus I think:
RoTJ V2 was probably *relatively* bright on all sides in filming.
Shaved flange on the boot stud revealed oxidizable steel, and over time revealed...
Rusted sides and zinc knurled face.
Over time, with rusted sides and a zinc knurled face the oxidation extended to the surface of the zinc and with oxidation occurring on both ends the zinc (over the past 40 some years) has darkened and oxidized to match the steel, if not being completely destroyed in the process of steel oxidization.
EXACTLY my thoughts, Bryan.MY Running theory is that the shaved sides of the mystery chunk on the V2 could have removed the zinc on the sides but not the knurled face. This is why it could have been bright steel/zinc on set in Yuma etc.
In that case the zinc on the face would be present and bright like sliver, while the sides would rust over a very quick period of time. However, in my experience no amount of zinc can inhibit raw steel oxidation and exposure over an extended period of time if it is in close proximity. Given time, proximity to steel oxidation, and potential cleaning... even galvanization/zinc will be prone to surface darkening and oxidization.
Thus I think:
RoTJ V2 was probably *relatively* bright on all sides in filming.
Shaved flange on the boot stud revealed oxidizable steel, and over time revealed...
Rusted sides and zinc knurled face.
Over time, with rusted sides and a zinc knurled face the oxidation extended to the surface of the zinc and with oxidation occurring on both ends the zinc (over the past 40 some years) has darkened and oxidized to match the steel, if not being completely destroyed in the process of steel oxidization.