John wrote:
Thanks for all the informative responses guys. Appreciate it. I re-call reading on here about finecast not standing up to the test of time or something.
Can anyone expand on that?
I seem to think that someone was worried it would simply break down over a period of time? I think someone mentioned a mode that was sagging under its own weight? Dweller in the dark maybe?
Can anyone clarify? Is there any difference say in finecast life vs plastic life? I'd expect a plastic model to last a lifetime should it be looked after but I seem to re-call someone expressing doubt about finecast lasting at all.
Thanks for the replies.
Fine cast has been linked to Gynecomastia. This may be a problem if you cast it.If you are young treat it like lead and wear gloves until it is primed.
Sagging is well documented with fine cast resin. You will find all kinds of advice on how to temporarily repair it online. Warm water will soften it so will warm air. Resin will become brittle over time. So will plastic. Even green army men oxidise and become brittle. I have some Marks plastic models that are too brittle to handle.Others seem better. It depends on heat and light.The Marks figures are 50 years old.
I cast resin. I don't use it for small thin parts. The flexible resins sag so does lead. GW LOTR models were tin. Lead is more malleable than tin. That is why tin swords break when you try to bend them. Hard resins also break. So will fine cast when it drys out.
Tin will last a long time. Some alloys are better than others. Prime metal and you probably not have to worry about it. Plastic can last 20+ years, longer if it is primed painted and cared for. I would not think a resin model with thin parts like swords would survive moderate gaming for long. How many plastic GW plastic horses break off the bases? How many swords or pikes break? I do not know. I do know that resin is more brittle than plastic.
The resin models will last longer on the display self than in the transport case.The same thing can be said for plastic and metal.
GW may have changed the resin in fine cast. It may be better but it is still resin.
How long will fine cast models last? I do not know. I am not going to buy any more so I wont have to worry about it.