Like the TMP figs had V'Ger partsIt would be cool if the Generations sailor crew each come with parts of the sailing ship - Worf has the plank and Geordi the arch, so maybe Troi has the wheel, Riker has part of the mast, etc.

Like the TMP figs had V'Ger partsIt would be cool if the Generations sailor crew each come with parts of the sailing ship - Worf has the plank and Geordi the arch, so maybe Troi has the wheel, Riker has part of the mast, etc.
I've now tried to simply remove the scorch marks instead of paining over them, since they looked just sprayed on. I've used ethanol (0 effect), isopropanol (0 effect), acetone (immediate effect, but smears it around), with regular tissue paper and q-tips. What's the best way to do this? The underlying plastic color seems unaffected, only the escape pods lose their gray paint as well, but that can be restored. The black paint also went into the shield grid and window indentations, giving it a nice unintended wash. I'd just like to make the flat hull parts between the lines evenly default gray as the plastic itself originally was. I also noticed that the treated areas are more shiny now, but that doesn't matter as much.yet another guy had the GEN D with battle damage in a worn and dirty box, but fine and packed inside, stickers still on the sheet, manual still sealed, and most importantly, the stand was in there! So I got it (for 10) just for the stand which will let my old original one finally go on proper display after >30 years. Might hang the GEN one from the ceiling so I can only see the undamaged bottom. Or I might try to paint over the scorch marks... but the ship is just a bonus, the stand is the hightlight, and I can keep the pristine sticker sheet to replace any that peel off too much on my 92 D.
I still have thatLike the TMP figs had V'Ger parts![]()
Gosh. If only those scorch marks looked like they did on the packaging instead of being straight lines that make no sense. When Diamond Select did battle damage versions of their ships, it was AWESOME!I've now tried to simply remove the scorch marks instead of paining over them, since they looked just sprayed on. I've used ethanol (0 effect), isopropanol (0 effect), acetone (immediate effect, but smears it around), with regular tissue paper and q-tips. What's the best way to do this? The underlying plastic color seems unaffected, only the escape pods lose their gray paint as well, but that can be restored. The black paint also went into the shield grid and window indentations, giving it a nice unintended wash. I'd just like to make the flat hull parts between the lines evenly default gray as the plastic itself originally was. I also noticed that the treated areas are more shiny now, but that doesn't matter as much.
Not gonna lie, the one I'd want the most of those is the Riker without the ripped shirt.
But those figures were the wrong size and had the wrong proportions to fit into my existing Playmates Trek collection.So... the 2022 one.![]()
That and/or Data without the opening circuitry panels.
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