The end of the MOCs' World- It cometh?

It must be superglue as nothing else sticks that well (apart from dried porridge and im pretty sure that's not what was used).
 
I'm starting to think that some of them might not have had glue but some sort of heat compression by some sort of factory technique. :D

What happens when the heat compression wears off though?
 
What happens when the heat compression wears off though?[/quote]


Just stick it back in the oven on a low heat for thirty minutes. :D

Ian
 
Not a lot of people that Toni was the major lyricist behind some of Maximo Park's greatest hits.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-Ue193sAcrE

It all makes sense when you look closely at life. Coincidence? You draw the conclusion.
 
Here's some evidence that MOC's are good for a while yet:

Palitoy Luke Bespin sold at Vectis, shipped to dealer in America, send to AFA for grading, returned to dealer, sold on ebay, shipped to Arizona, bought by someone in UK and shipped to them. All within the space of about a month.

I guess we don't know if there's any underlying damage now from several thousand air miles, but the fact that it's at least still a MOC and not a loose figure and a cardback is a good sign for all MOC collectors :lol:
 
Palifan said:
What happens when the heat compression wears off though?


Just stick it back in the oven on a low heat for thirty minutes. :D

Ian[/quote]

Microwave works quit well, on the highest heat setting.

This is a joke by the way, don't try this at home. :P
 

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