Vintage Computing and Gaming | Archive » Why Super Nintendos ...
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Saved by 4 people (0 private), first by anonymouse user on 2007-01-15
- Pansapiens on 2009-10-09 - Tags gaming , nintendo , gamedev , chemistry , plastic
- Joel on 2008-09-05 - Tags computer , chemistry
- Deusx23 on 2008-03-21 - Tags gaming , nintendo , retro , snes , vintage
- Aaronkurtz on 2007-01-15 - Tags article , computers , explaination , gaming , hardware , interesting , plastic
Public Sticky notes
To further complicate matters, I have another SNES unit that was obviously produced more recently than my original one, and that console shows no sign of aging whatsoever. Comparing the units and the way different parts of them had discolored led me to believe that there is something different about the two batches of plastics — the one for the top half of the SNES chassis and the one for the bottom, or the plastic for the old unit and plastic for the new — that made them age differently over time.
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