My occupation of photographing Transformers toys has me on a crash collision that could be disastrous with Black Zarak if I don't think this through carefully. I figure that the more of us that contribute ideas and suggestions, the better off we'll be and I can finally give the world an extremely detailed gallery of this very expensive Japanese exclusive figure.

My objective is to do a very comprehensive gallery of Black Zarak and causing very minimal damage to the toy, if at all possible. Here are some ideas that I've got about how to handle gold plastic syndrome. I'd love to get some feedback from you guys about these thoughts. If you have any other suggestions or ideas, please toss them my way. You might save one of the few remaining undamaged Black Zaraks from falling apart thanks to GPS.
Let me preface this whole thought process with this: I am very well aware of how fragile gold plastic is. I own just about every gold plastic figure released over the years and have had varying degrees of success and catastrophic failures with gold plastic. I am determined that there has to be a way to lessen risk of potential damage or even possibly preventing it all together by reversing the problem prior to a catastrophic event. It's plastic. There has to be a way to restore the plastic back to being malleable. Even a rock or glass becomes malleable under enough heat without breaking.

1. Don't do it! Don't do a gallery of him! Don't even think about transforming him! Hell, don't even think about looking at him wrong!
We all know this isn't going to happen. I'd even bust out the G2 Protectobots from their packages if I ever had a chance to own them. I think First Aid is made of gold plastic. It'd be a suicide mission, but I'd do it just to have a chance to have photographs of it.
2. Would a lubricant of some sort help lessen the amount of force/pressure needed to move/transform parts? What types of lubricants are OK to use on the plastics of Transformers toys? What about WD-40, baby oil, or a silicone spray? I've used WD-40 many times before but have never thought to ask if that's the best to use for a lasting lubricant.
3. What about warming up the parts in boiling or very hot water for ten minutes? 30 minutes? Something to soften up the plastic or maybe even melt the metallic flakes? Or would the plastic melt first before the flakes?

4. What about a hair dryer to soften up parts where there's a peg connector or where a peg is inserted (such as Black Zarak's shield attaching to his arm, or a gun inserting into a figure's hand)?
5. Skip the gold plastic parts and proceed directly to buying a second Scorponok, strip out the parts from Scorponok that are gold plastic on Black Zarak, and ship the parts off to Chrome Tech USA (http://www.chrometechusa.com/
) to have them gold chrome all of those parts. This achieves the proper color scheme for this toy (but the chrome will make photographing it a complete bitch) and would look beautiful or possibly a little too "bling"-ish. Has anyone had any success with having parts chromed professionally or at home? Would chroming the parts, such as the shield, make it impossible to attach the shield to his arm peg because of the added thickness from the chrome?
6. What about gold painting some Scorponok parts to closely resemble the color of the gold plastic? Are there companies that do this professionally so that the parts will look as perfect as possible?

OK, so those are my thoughts and ideas off the top of my head. PLEASE, for the love of Primus and for the sake of saving a Black Zarak, share your ideas, suggestions, thoughts, etc with me. We're smart people, let's figure out how to preserve a toy so that I can give the world a proper Seibertron.com gallery of Black Zarak at long last.