>>5858419>...Thus making it more prone to stress and breakage when it bends.lol wut? Do they not allow you to hold metal objects over there? Almost all wire will bend before it breaks. Most any typical wire hanger gauge will hold up most any 7" action figure. The figures it will have problem with are the ones that plastic stands will be useless for too. Of course, you can then go to thicker gauges if you use wire.
>Did you even read what I said? Yes, and you're saying it doesn't count because "not tooyyys!" which is missing the point of a stand: they're used to help things stand. A stand is a stand is a stand is a stand. There's no false equivocation because they're used exactly the same way.
>That sounds an awful lot like you right now. i've been posting images of various models, links to manufacturers, websites on definitions, and anyone with experience with those tanks would know what I'm talking about, but the point is that even they use plastic for the fine details.
You? No proof but "nuh uh" and "i don't believe that, thus it isn't so"
>They CAN cost more, but overall the starting cost for a diecast mold is far higher. From the figures YOU posted, metal molds cost more than plastic ones to start with and become gradually less expensive at the VERY high end.you're dumb. The link says the cost depends on COMPLEXITY and CAVITATION. Aka = detailed molds will cost more, aka TOYS. The more pieces per mold, the higher the cost. These features, found in toys, will make a mold cost much more. So you're looking at the upper end for both diecast and plastic molds. Plastic molds cost more.
But nope... you still gotta continue moving the goalposts and trying to come up with more arguments, despite all proof showing you're ignorant and are bullshitting.