Why Your SNES Turned Yellow 87
If, back in the day, you ever wondered why your old Super Nintendo tended to discolor, your curiosity will now be sated. Via Ars Technica's Opposable Thumbs blog, an article on the Vintage Computing and Gaming site which explains the mysteries of plastic discoloration. From the article: "Since ... different batches of plastics had ... different aging results ... then there must have been a difference of additives between them. Perhaps in one of the production runs of plastic, they didn't get the catalyst or flame retardant mixture quite right and more residues were left over in the top half's plastic batch, thus causing it to degrade more rapidly over time. And by the time Nintendo produced the later runs of Super Nintendos, they had perfected the manufacturing process of their plastic, meaning that those later models aren't as susceptible to oxidation as the earlier models are."
Great... (Score:5, Funny)
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Your younger brother peed on it, because you never let him play.
Besides, how does black plastic fade to yellow? I'd think it would turn something more akin to purple.
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Why would you think that?
The yellowing method varies between materials, but in plastics, it generally has to do with extra bonds forming between the carbons. PVC, for example, is prone to photoyellowing due to dehydrochlorination -- basically, UV splits off an HCl, thus causing the carbons to crosslink. In fact, a number of plastics are prone to UV photoyellowing -- I wonder if where you kept your SNES he
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Jealousy (Score:2)
Wii Too (Score:1)
Re:Wii Too (Score:5, Funny)
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Just because it's called a Wii, doesn't mean you should Wii on it.
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huh.... (Score:4, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
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Quite likely. But I bet most monitors (not saying yours here) are discolored by smokers.
Amigas (Score:4, Funny)
YUCK! (Score:4, Funny)
It's turned all boxy and the buttons have turned purple too!
Obligatory Russian reversal (Score:2, Funny)
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In Soviet Russia, plastic urinate on you!
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In Soviet Russia, plastic urinate on you!
Strange (Score:1)
Odd thing is that I stopped playing Nintendo around the time I turned 19.
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19 is the minimum age that one can start drinking in the area where I grew up, and may one day end up with jaundice.
I should have state "reached age of majority"
I am guilty of local bias.
well (Score:2, Insightful)
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Not that one example disproves the "Earlier ones turned yellow, later ones didn't" idea in the summary, but, for whatever it's worth, mine didn't anyway.
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Discolouration (Score:5, Interesting)
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I mean, the new Zelda game is awesome and all, but still...
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Same thing happened to old Mac's (Score:3, Informative)
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hehehe Seriously, though, I have had a number of my brown 64 units turn various colors as well. Some darker, some lighter (I actually like the milk-chocolate color, really light brown,) and one turned like an ashy-greyish color. Weird stuff, this plastic.
It really does suck when you have a 128D with a metal case... the paint on the case does not
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It's all natural (Score:2, Funny)
My old NES just decomposed - I kept it in the attic for a couple of years, but the day i went up there to get it, there was nothing nothing left but a pile of dirt. The only thing unaffected by the decay was the golden finish on my Zelda 2 cartridge.
I'm told that the wii has nuclear decay, now that's progress.
Not smoking? (Score:2)
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Infra red reveals the truth... (Score:4, Interesting)
Interestingly, my year-old keyboard has a white plastic case and keys. However, plastics that appear identical [imageshack.us] to the naked eye, aren't always so similar when viewed with IR [imageshack.us].
Also on my laptop (sort of) (Score:1)
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A lot of cheaper laptops (experience with fujitsu and dell) which are silver coloured, are just painted silver and have very ugly white plastic underneath... They look awfull when you wear through the paint.
They do think of it (Score:1)
1.Things turn yellow
2.Users get annoyed
3.??
4. Profit!!!
Seriously though, things turning yellow leads to higher replacement rate I believe. Coupled with lower manufacturing costs...
Good thing... (Score:2)
the same happened to cartidges (Score:2)
Important tip (Score:4, Funny)
Iguana 2000 (Score:1)
SNES (Score:1)
Re:SNES (Score:5, Funny)
Wait, it change color and got bigger too? I don't think that's tobacco you're smoking...
That's interesting... (Score:2)
Shatner? (Score:2)
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-Mike
Dreamcast! (Score:2)
Don't need sunlight... or smoke... (Score:2)
While I stayed in smaller accommodation for a year and a bit, I did the sensible thing and packed all my model planes away in their original packaging - clear plastic tray with a clear plastic lid, inside a thick cardboard box, in a cupboard that no sunlight was getting into. When I came to unpack them, I discovered that the tails of two planes had yellowed - as had the clear plastic in their boxes. Definitely not sunlight in that case; you'd think the manufacturer
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Simple exposure to oxygen or heat can cause yellowing too over time. And in your case, it's possible that the clear plastic packaging degraded and outgassed nasty chemicals that could have accelerated the aging of your plane.
MS Intellimouse Explorer (Score:2)
my snes photo (Score:1, Informative)
One mystery down, three to go. (Score:1)
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Keyboards and Mice (Score:2)
This article doesn't explain why snow turns yellow though.
Silly Stuff... (Score:2, Funny)
The better question (Score:1)