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Gentle indentations will come back up if placed in a low temp oven 275-300º... for about 10 mins. At your own risk though.I've baked G1's for customs and have had indentations reverse, especially on softer bodied ponies. Baking helped on a Honeycomb that I was restoring. Hot water also worked on other softer bodied ponies when I was cleaning. Hard plastic, you most likely will just just melt it. Acetone just makes the plastic look indented and doesn't work.
Nylon can be baked without issue up to a certain temp, but I don't know it offhand. Usually when you bake a pony you do so at a very low temp, 275 or so. They do fine (gens 1-3, I've never baked a g4 so I don't know). Sorry for the delay of my experiment, haven't been feeling well. But I still want to test it.
Quote from: mlp4me on May 06, 2021, 12:02:21 PMGentle indentations will come back up if placed in a low temp oven 275-300º... for about 10 mins. At your own risk though.I've baked G1's for customs and have had indentations reverse, especially on softer bodied ponies. Baking helped on a Honeycomb that I was restoring. Hot water also worked on other softer bodied ponies when I was cleaning. Hard plastic, you most likely will just just melt it. Acetone just makes the plastic look indented and doesn't work.Cool, but I assume the oven method only works without the hair? I don't actually know the MP of Nylon but it would be worth knowing!
i would grab a really bad condition fakie and try it. i think i would do it outside if possible cause the fumes from that are not going to be good for you.