Dearth
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2009
- Messages
- 873
- Reaction score
- 189
Hey Taylor,
I can do better than advice!
I actually have a broken red-shirt Floyd in my parts bin who has a broken/missing LEFT hand and an intact right hand.
If you don't mind letting Floyd out of your sight for a little while, send him to me and I can swap the figures' entire right forearms at the elbow with a quick boil-and-pop, and put the fully repaired Floyd back in the mail to you.
[Wait, is yours the red-shirt version? If it's a blue-shirt version, I may have to dig out the broken stump and pop in just the good right hand, but either way, it's still do-able.]
I will also try to get the left hand moving without damaging it. It's probably just 'painted shut' like a window.
If you want to try it yourself, my method is pretty much 'feel your way' but the main thing is to grasp the hand and slightly push IN towards the forearm as you try to move it. For some reason, pushing down/in while turning seems to break the paint a bit better, without screwing the hand off the interior post.
Alternately, you might want to dip the left arm in some hot water for about thirty seconds, maybe a minute, and see if you can pop it straight out while it's softer.
Contact me at Ploovo241@aol.com and we can discuss the mailing procedure for the repair.
Alex
I can do better than advice!
I actually have a broken red-shirt Floyd in my parts bin who has a broken/missing LEFT hand and an intact right hand.
If you don't mind letting Floyd out of your sight for a little while, send him to me and I can swap the figures' entire right forearms at the elbow with a quick boil-and-pop, and put the fully repaired Floyd back in the mail to you.
[Wait, is yours the red-shirt version? If it's a blue-shirt version, I may have to dig out the broken stump and pop in just the good right hand, but either way, it's still do-able.]
I will also try to get the left hand moving without damaging it. It's probably just 'painted shut' like a window.
If you want to try it yourself, my method is pretty much 'feel your way' but the main thing is to grasp the hand and slightly push IN towards the forearm as you try to move it. For some reason, pushing down/in while turning seems to break the paint a bit better, without screwing the hand off the interior post.
Alternately, you might want to dip the left arm in some hot water for about thirty seconds, maybe a minute, and see if you can pop it straight out while it's softer.
Contact me at Ploovo241@aol.com and we can discuss the mailing procedure for the repair.
Alex