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Old 08-23-2019, 04:31 AM   #11
Zenith27
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Re: Preventing or Slowing Sun Damage

I have a TON of experience with this from collecting vintage Joes.

Your main source of damage is either direct sunlight or the UV that is released from light fixtures. Fluorescent lamps are usually what cause the most damage unless you expose stuff to the sun outside. It's been my experience that reflected UV is minimal but I've always had carpeted floors so they don't reflect much and wall paint doesn't seem to add anything appreciable.

Best bet, use incandescent bulbs (maybe LED too, I've not run out of incandescents yet), DON'T buy the halogen light you can get for a detolf. This keeps all the UV to a minimum.

I know this as I had only one fluorescent light in my house as a kid and none of my toys ever discoloured in the slightest, even with a bit of play outside. On the other hand my SNES, which was in the room with the fluorescent light, did turn yellow. This is also the case with lab equipment at my work. 10yrs of fluorescent light exposure to grey plastic power supply cases have discoloured them, yet the supply in my office where I normally keep the lights off, has not significantly discoloured. (The extended exposure has even created a shadowing effect under the knobs where the discoloration is slightly less.)

Also, the discolouration seems to "creep" across and entire plastic part most of the time, regardless of the side that it was exposed to the UV. I had an interesting Cobra Mamba that had beed displayed for years suspended from the ceiling. The top half piece turned an ugly brown over the entire surface, the bottom half remained fine since it was in the shadow of the top half. Cut open or open a discoloured item and it'll be the same colour inside and out.

There are tricks to remove the discoloration but they're tough on paint and stickers.
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Old 08-23-2019, 01:45 PM   #12
OldOfflineMan
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Re: Preventing or Slowing Sun Damage

Good call on the UV from fluorescent bulbs. Good thing is that I don't have any near my Transformers.

I ended up going for the Krylon spray option. Michaels' had a 25%-40% off deal and that sealed the deal for me.

Many thanks on all your input.
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Old 08-23-2019, 05:21 PM   #13
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Re: Preventing or Slowing Sun Damage

Bit of an update.

The Krylon spray didn't work:
- If I follow the directions, it frosts the glass.
- If I spray enough to make it clear, it runs.
- Even if it doesn't run, it distorts whatever is behind the glass.

In conclusion, the window film is the only option. I hope the ones I buy from China works...
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Old 08-24-2019, 02:51 PM   #14
Sun Swipe Prime
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Re: Preventing or Slowing Sun Damage

Why not put the UV filter on the windows instead of the Detolf?
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Old 08-24-2019, 05:04 PM   #15
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Re: Preventing or Slowing Sun Damage

The Detolfs are in the family room (that doubles as our home office) and the room is illuminated by light coming from both the family room and kitchen bay windows. The bay windows combined are about 100+ sq ft. I think it is more economical to line the Detolfs instead as I'm not really that concerned about sun damage on anything else in the room.

I believe another benefit is that I can move Detolfs anywhere in the house without worrying too much about lining the windows in those rooms too.

Putting the film on the Detolfs will also minimize the temperature gradient it experiences compared to installing them on the windows, which I believe will prevent it from peeling.
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