• sanity_is_maddening@piefed.social
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    5 hours ago

    Is anyone else’s Dreamcast yellow now?

    I bought it in the year it was released and it was used quite a bit (euphemism) back then. But I dug it from the closet it was stored in and now is yellow. Remote control and all. All the consoles stored along with it still look the same. All the older ones looking the same as they always were, but Dreamcast decided to have that “we’re fucking old” moment with me. Haven’t tried turned it on out of fear of mortality being the next reminder it has in store for me.

    • ysjet@lemmy.world
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      22 minutes ago

      Just as a quite warning- retrobright will make the plastic of the dreamcast white, but it will also make it more brittle, and it’s not a permanent solution. It WILL yellow again, and repeated applications of retrobright will make it more and more brittle.

      • sanity_is_maddening@piefed.social
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        50 seconds ago

        Oh, thank you for the heads up. I got excited at the prospect of restoring it. I like to restore stuff when I can. Usually is more wood related items. Sad to hear this, but thank you for informing me though.

        Maybe I’ll just have it like it is. I’ll call it a “sepia vintage” look as a cool spin to pretend I’m not jealous that others got better and more durable plastic for the same price as me.

        Cheers and thanks again.

      • YiddishMcSquidish@lemmy.today
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        38 minutes ago

        Soak the plastic in hydrogen peroxide and oxy booster stain fighter

        For the rest of you ADHD havers who don’t have the patience to get that write up to fit on your phone screen.

      • sanity_is_maddening@piefed.social
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        4 hours ago

        Wow. This has to be one of the most phenomenal hacks that someone has presented me in a long time.

        I had no idea of this.

        Thank you very much.

        • eleijeep@piefed.social
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          3 hours ago

          No problem, let me just say that I haven’t tried it myself but I’ve watched a lot of videos of other people trying it and the worst results that I’ve seen have been the ones using a gel that they paint onto the plastic and then cover in plastic wrap. This tends to leave a streaky effect because the substance is not equally thick in every area and so it has more whitening effect where it’s thicker.

          The best results that I’ve seen have been the ones that have completely submerged the plastic in a liquid peroxide solution, or have suspended the plastic above the solution to immerse it in the vapors that evaporate off from the peroxide (pure oxygen). These methods give completely uniform coverage so they whiten the plastic equally in every place.

          It seems that you also need strong UV, and people that live nearer the equator have better success using the sun. But in the absence of good UV lighting, heat also seems to have some effect.

          Good luck!

    • The Picard Maneuver@piefed.worldOP
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      5 hours ago

      Mine’s still white, but I’d always heard there were different types of plastic used in consoles (and computer cases) back then, some of which would become discolored, and others wouldn’t. Might be true, unless anyone in your house has been a smoker in the last 25 years.

      • sanity_is_maddening@piefed.social
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        4 hours ago

        No. No smokers. And the console was stored in the original box in a closet. Not in the corner collecting dust. So it must be the plastic it was used somehow. Sad. I always really liked the Dreamcast look. And it is still one of my favorite controllers after so many years.

        • ysjet@lemmy.world
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          21 minutes ago

          You are correct, it’s the plastic. Or rather, the fire retardant mixed into the plastic.

        • SparroHawc@lemmy.zip
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          4 hours ago

          Look up a cleaning solution called ‘RetroBright’. It’s designed to remove the yellowing from the ABS housings of old electronics. I’m pretty sure the recipe for it is available free online, or you can order pre-mixed bottles of it. You have to be a little careful with it because it’s mostly hydrogen peroxide, but I hear it works great.