Oh, I know people can find uses for them. I just wish everyone had a chance to get a rack or two before others get 400.Fracs for relabel - 200, snappers for the hell of it - 200
Use your imagination man!
You either have to remove the inlay yourself (there are threads on how to do this) or have them milled (there are vendors available for this) and have labels made (also have vendors and other websites/platforms for this) to replace the removed ones.@grantc54 I am very interested in relabeling to fracs like you have done. I have no idea how to accomplish this task however. Could you point me in the right direction for how to do this please?
I would think this has to be the explanation. These are unused chips, it's not likely something yellow could have gotten on all of them! I just hope it doesn't keep coming back.I think it is something that happens to Light Pink. My Paulson colour sample and the Horseshould Cleveland $500 show the same yellowing
This HSI is half cleaned.
View attachment 622135
Here is another cleaned vs dirty:
View attachment 622134
It is near impossible to get out of the hats and thr edges but in lower light conditions (like I play in), I dont think anyone will notice.
WTH ... wouldn't this happen to every light pink chip? Terribles? PCA Fracs? IOC? ... this is like a nightmare. That my pristine chips, sitting their cages, will just start oozing yellow goo like a bad date...I would think this has to be the explanation. These are unused chips, it's not likely something yellow could have gotten on all of them! I just hope it doesn't keep coming back.
Exposure to low light (no uv) and nitrous oxidation most likely. Stored somewhere like a warehouse using propane forklifts is my guessI would think this has to be the explanation. These are unused chips, it's not likely something yellow could have gotten on all of them! I just hope it doesn't keep coming back.
I think it is something that happens to Light Pink. My Paulson colour sample and the Horseshould Cleveland $500 show the same yellowing
This HSI is half cleaned.
View attachment 622135
Here is another cleaned vs dirty:
View attachment 622134
It is near impossible to get out of the hats and thr edges but in lower light conditions (like I play in), I dont think anyone will notice.
I find it interesting that the inlay color more closely matches the "stained" chip. Almost like Paulson expects it to turn that color.I think it is something that happens to Light Pink. My Paulson colour sample and the Horseshould Cleveland $500 show the same yellowing
This HSI is half cleaned.
View attachment 622135
Here is another cleaned vs dirty:
View attachment 622134
It is near impossible to get out of the hats and thr edges but in lower light conditions (like I play in), I dont think anyone will notice.
The discoloration actually occurs under the inlay on some chips as well, not sure how that effects your theory.Exposure to low light (no uv) and nitrous oxidation most likely. Stored somewhere like a warehouse using propane forklifts is my guess
Anyone just leave a few in the sun to soak up some uv and see if it makes a difference? May not, if anyone could try a quick hydrogen peroxide bath on one it might help.
Gasses tend to seep into very very small places. NOx is probably the culprit, but just keep scrubbing if you think it’s a spray on costing.The discoloration actually occurs under the inlay on some chips as well, not sure how that effects your theory.
Yes please and thank you. I’ll take dibs on that clean rack.Just a headsup that an Ultrasonic clean wont do it for these, they need a good scrub with the magic eraser to get the film off. Post ultrasonic the film still came off on my hand.
I actually use a 2 bucket/eraser cleaning method as the yellow gets everywhere in the first clean. So far it takes me on average an hour per barrel.
I'd be very happy if someone comes up with a quicker method!
Also, I wouldn't recommend playing with them preclean, the film that comes off isnt always visible, but is very much visible under a black light.
View attachment 622111
Here is one rack done, I may go over some of these again as I've found I've gotten more proficient at removing the yellow.
View attachment 622107
Pros with these chips:
- great bargain
- inlays come off very easy (no nail polish remover required)
- make a great $0.25
View attachment 622114
Your hired.Anybody else have some other light pink examples?
I just scrubbed 1600 used HSI primaries by hand with magic erasers so I am not afraid to scrub these. I am willing to clean them once but dread the return of the yellow goo.
I think it is something that happens to Light Pink. My Paulson colour sample and the Horseshould Cleveland $500 show the same yellowing
This HSI is half cleaned.
View attachment 622135
Here is another cleaned vs dirty:
View attachment 622134
It is near impossible to get out of the hats and thr edges but in lower light conditions (like I play in), I dont think anyone will notice.
I actually lightly oiled a barrel of 25 secondary, and I was wondering were the yellow color left in the cloth/rag was coming from... good point!Has anyone noticed the yellow stuff on the secondary 5s and 25s? Take a white cotton rag to them and it'll show.
I dont have any snappers (yet) so I'm not 100% sure if its the same stuff.
I was wondering if hydrogen peroxide has ever been used on chips. Was thinking about stopping at the casino on my way home to get a few $1’s and try. Just not sure if it degrades chip composition.Exposure to low light (no uv) and nitrous oxidation most likely. Stored somewhere like a warehouse using propane forklifts is my guess
Anyone just leave a few in the sun to soak up some uv and see if it makes a difference? May not, if anyone could try a quick hydrogen peroxide bath on one it might help.
With all the warping and discoloration I’m revising my guess to these were stored in a warehouse, higher up on shelves located next to an industrial forced air gas powered hanging furnace. The heat, and nox from the near combustion off gasses probably bled in over time and caused this.I was wondering if hydrogen peroxide has ever been used on chips. Was thinking about stopping at the casino on my way home to get a few $1’s and try. Just not sure if it degrades chip composition.
None of this explains the fact that private color sample chips have the same problem. Is more likely that the compound degrades over time. A real shame too; might make this sale a hard pass for me.With all the warping and discoloration I’m revising my guess to these were stored in a warehouse, higher up on shelves located next to an industrial forced air gas powered hanging furnace. The heat, and nox from the near combustion off gasses probably bled in over time and caused this.
It may be a very slow process. I also suspect all the new chip dust has contributed to the yellow dust. Any estimate on when these chips were manufactured?None of this explains the fact that private color sample chips have the same problem. Is more likely that the compound degrades over time. A real shame too; might make this sale a hard pass for me.
Still, this thread makes me feel like all of my little chips in the basement are ticking time bombs.It may be a very slow process. I also suspect all the new chip dust has contributed to the yellow dust. Any estimate on when these chips were manufactured?
The Horseshoe Cleveland $500 i cleaned don't show any sign of getting worse (I cleaned them 2+ years ago I think).
Maybe I'll take a look at the secondary $5 and $25's that I have since someone else mentioned here that they also have similar problems.
Nope. Rose.The HSI secondary $25 does have a light pink edge spot