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Thread: ROTF Bludgeon's Incredible Breaking Hand warning (and help?)

  1. #11
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    Quote Originally Posted by GoktimusPrime View Post
    Couldn't they make the sword out of harder plastic? (i.e. some plastic quality as the fists themselves) -- that would solve the problem of denting on the handles.
    if you made the sword in the same hard rigid plastic... I think it would break more easily. I had the sword in his hip sheath, and after I accidentally banged my shelf, he fell down with quite a bang, I figured, luckily his sword is soft plastic otherwise that fall would have snapped his sword... I'd rather a bent sword (and one that has dents) than a broken sword, since the blade part is pretty thin and long, perfect for snapping

    on another note, does anyone think holding the small dagger would be dangerous as well? Because although handle is smaller/thinner, he does hold it pretty tight as well
    "sometimes the things you see might not be real and the things that are real you might not see"

  2. #12
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    A harder plastic on a pointy accessory would be a safety hazard. Especially if swallowed.

  3. #13
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    This is my idea of how to fix such a problem... hehe


  4. #14
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    Spent a couple of minutes filing down the fingers. Seems to have helped.

    Quote Originally Posted by GoktimusPrime View Post
    The problem is that if the hand isn't sculpted tightly enough, the sword would easily fall off during toy play when you're smacking the sword up against other weapons and bots. Couldn't they make the sword out of harder plastic? (i.e. some plastic quality as the fists themselves) -- that would solve the problem of denting on the handles.
    But then the sword could break during play (being kinda thin) or snap if it's forced into the main gun the wrong way.

    Plus, it's on the same sprue and the other flexible parts, like the decoration bits and the gears for his mech alive splitting turret (which I love).
    http://www.tfwiki.net, the Transformers Wiki - Serious intellectual discussion about transforming space robots.

  5. #15
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    Quote Originally Posted by griffin
    A harder plastic on a pointy accessory would be a safety hazard. Especially if swallowed.
    Can't they make the end of the sword blunt? e.g.: G1 swords (compare Blitzwing's sword with Overcharge's), RiD Megatron (compare w/ CR Gigatron's swords), X-Brawn's missile (blunter than Wild Ride's) et al. Energon Starscream's sword tip is kinda pointy.

    Speaking of which, Energon Starscream's sword is made of a stronger plastic. Although it is heaps chunky and Hasbro were trying to achieve a thin blade for Bludgeon to make it look more like a katana* (whereas EN Starscream's sword is more like a daiklave)

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    *Technically Bludgeon's sword is too long to be a katana and is more like an Ōdachi.

  6. #16
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    Quote Originally Posted by griffin View Post
    That's a shame.
    I might try rolling up some sandpaper and sanding out the fist holes to make the swords fit in a little easier and less likely to see the 'modification'.
    If it works, it'll also mean the fingers won't leave dents in the sword handle.
    Tried it tonight, and I'm now a lot less worried about breaking the hands. When I first had a look at the space between the fingers and the thickness of the sword, I'm amazed that it actually got in there to begin with. I remember now that I had to use a fair bit of force to get the sword in when I last/first transformed it, but it never occured to me that this would be enough force to break the hand. Also looking at the thickness of the hand itself, it now amazes me that more hands aren't broken.

    So, as mentioned above, I got some very fine sandpaper and slowly worked on the thumb and fingers, a little bit at a time - testing the sword often, to make sure I don't go too far and it can't stay in. After a few minutes on the first hand, the sword still needs a little bit of pressure, but no more than plugging in a hand-weapon.

    Comparing it to the hand that hadn't yet been done, I found that quite a bit of extra gap was needed (and the sword still needed to be pushed into the gap), so maybe Hasbro had it that way intentionally, so that as the mould degrades over time, the hands can still hold the sword. (like how the Classics Seeker mould now has problems holding the arm guns thanks to mould degradation)
    Even though the thumb looks half gone, and the fingers are 'filed' back a bit, you wouldn't even notice it without comparing it to a mint one. The fingers and thumb are still prominant, and the sandpaper was fine enough to not really notice any scuffing (which is mostly inside the hand anyway).

    I then did the other hand.

    I also tested the dagger to make sure it wasn't affected by the modification, and since it slides straight into the hand, and not past the fingers/thumb, it still holds it fine and firm.

    I'd take photos if my camera was any good with focussing close-up, but my descriptions above should hopefully be enough.

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