Spyke
lemmy.world

Sounds right to me.

This is capitalism. The goal of the Olympics is to make money on advertising, not to give nice expensive rewards to the athletes. The athletes are tools to make money for rich people. TV, advertising, sponsors.

The cheap metal serves its purpose. It looks nice initially for a few days while the winners take pictures. After that it doesn't matter.

166
lemm.ee

I'm pretty sure they make the athletes pay for the medals too. What a ripoff.

20
Cethinreply
lemmy.zip

Maybe unpopular opinion, but they should still. Why should it be tax exempt? At the end of the day, it's not enough money to worry about so it doesn't really matter. They aren't doing charity or anything though, just work that happens to be a sport and at a very high level. If we tax the rich just a tiny bit more it brings in far more tax money though, so I'd focus on that instead.

4

Maybe they should tax it if they sell the award. Else the athletes need to pay to put their prize in their prize closet.

-3
lemm.ee

I SAID, IM PRETTY SURE THEY MAKE THE ATHETES PAY FOR THE MEDALS TOO! WHAT A RIPOFF!

But after searching for this info on the internet, I'm finding that I could be just entirely wrong about this.

15

Unless they make the sponsors pay and also like a lump sum of money from the sponsors to the athletes I don't see that as a good idea.

2

To be fair, a lot of athletes are also looking for advertising deals from being in the Olympics.

6
lemmy.ml

*After reading the article*

Patina is one thing but the front chipping is nuts.

105

I have had $10 jewelery from K-Mart that never chipped no matter what abuse I put it through.

20
lemmy.world

You can bite into lead. You can't bite into gold, silver and bronze. That's why it used to be a test for fake coins. If the chips are bite marks, the metal's really low grade. Biting into Gold and Silver is even easier.

1
vithigarreply
lemmy.ca

You have it backwards. Gold is extremely malleable and you can easily leave marks in pure gold by biting it.

17

Yep, I've since looked it up, and it's apparently the most malleable metal, with Silver coming second. To be fair, Lead is pretty malleable, too, and you can leave bite marks in it if you put it in your mouth.

1

I burst out laughing because I did not expect such a deep historical cut

You went to Ur in 1750 BC that is some fantastic linkage

15
fedia.io

Do they not coat or treat the medals in some way to prevent this from happening, or is this just some weird fluke with this one medal? For all the egregious ways the IOC wastes money, I feel like the actual medals, themselves, would be one of the last places they'd cut corners.

71
startrek.website

Could it be that the protection can't withstand exposure to alcohol? Just a thought. :P

3

The absolute shit quality is how you know it's an authentic Olympic Medal (tm)

69
lemmy.world

Did all the competitors understand that they were striving for chocolate medals? Seems a bit like a weird choice to me.

60

Makes sense why they are all shown trying to bite it, they are craving some calories after the matches.

25

Maybe bronze is a pretty complicated metal to work with. Humanity has only been using it for what, five thousand years, give or take several centuries? We probably just need to gain more experience with it before they'll come out looking as good as our stone medals.

59
lemy.lol

Dang... Probably has that same sorta crumbly over porous texture of costume jewelry that was just plated.

France bragged this was the cheapest Olympics I guess that was a promise fully kept in all areas.

56

Coin collectors would scream at you to not clean or polish it!

22

What's with the /s? Of course it's supposed to be there. Polish it and coat it if you don't want it, but don't pretend it's a mistake to leave it uncoated.

-1
lemmy.world

I'd check their hand lotions for sulfur based compounds. The quick way to patina copper is with boiled egg yolks because they contain sulfur.

But also why didn't the IOC just throw on some clear coat?

41
HorreCreply
lemmy.world

Those are an AD, they are all the brand new samsung flip phone. Its only to show them with it in hand.

4
tylerreply
programming.dev

I wouldn’t have known it was a Samsung phone if you didn’t say anything.. wasn’t a good ad until you mentioned it. I just thought it was a dumb selfie thing.

2
HorreCreply
lemmy.world

The only reason I saw it was all the ads plastered for it like every other ad break, thank what ever stars you live in an area that isnt just beating it into your skull every 5 min.

2

Oh I watched on CBC 😂. I ain’t watching on anything that has actual ads (there’s ads, but they’re Canadian)

2

See, they install that TruCoat at the factory. There's nothing we can do about that.

2
No1
aussie.zone

Grab a spray can and clear coat them as soon as they hang it around your neck lol

26

I mean, what can you expect if you only win bronze. Not like that's a phenomenal achievement most people never even get close too. Seriously though, France should be embarrassed at this.

14

I have a bronze coin I made about 6 years ago. It's been handled by more people than I can count, but it sits for months in a box in my garage.

It still looks very much like bronze, just slightly darker in the crevices.

This just looks like piss poor electroplating.

14

Yeah, if anything when you look at bronze statutes that have been in the elements for decades, the parts that people touch are the shiny, nice-looking parts.

6
Crikestereply
lemm.ee

He said himself he wore it while sweaty and let his friends wear it as well. Doesn’t give an excuse for the damned thing degrading in a week.

But sure, criticize the winner not the people who made it. Typical.

20
Instigatereply
aussie.zone

With enough time

A week is enough time? Nah.

it’s gonna turn green and start pitting

Neither of those have happened - it’s tarnished brown and chipped but not green nor pitted.

It’s called bronze rot.

This isn’t bronze rot. This is poor quality plating that’s being stripped by bodily oils in less than a week. I’ve bought bronze-plated cheap Chinese jewellery that’s lasted for years under strenuous conditions before greening or pitting.

5

I seriously doubt this fast. The Olympics have always had bronze medals. This is the first time we're seeing this..

5
lemm.ee

Touching bronze actually removes the patina.

There are statues where the parts people touch a lot look almost golden.

Like the one of the busty lady in Ireland whose boobs look gold from people touching them. The name of the statue is escaping me, but maybe someone else will remember.

13
Saeveoreply
lemmy.world

Like the one of the busty lady in Ireland whose boobs look gold from people touching them. The name of the statue is escaping me, but maybe someone else will remember.

Molly Malone.

9
mstdn.io

Just being selected to the Olympics means the person is amongst the best in the world.

Even those that end last are better in their sport than most others on the planet.

27
lemmy.world

US skateboarder learns about oxidization for the first time.

Downvoters: Google brass patina and tell me what that looks like. Olympic "bronze" medals are made of brass. Brass oxidizes. This is oxidization. It's not an inferior product or a hallmark of the cheapness if Olympics, it's a thing that happens to some metals and metal alloys.

-59
zaphreply
sh.itjust.works

I googled it and it looks like the time required for this to happen naturally means your downvotes are justified.

16
Boinkagereply
lemmy.world

So what do you think this is, if not natural patina? Unnatural patina? Olympic person secretly rubbing black stuff on their medal and posting it on Instagram for views? Do you think the Olympic committee intentionally purchased medals plated in something other than brass that would patina faster? Or do you think it's not brass and some other metal that oxidizes at a faster rate? I think it would take more effort to create a medal that patinas at a faster rate than it would to just create a medal plated in plain old brass or bronze.

Brass left alone in a clean environment will oxidize very slowly, because it's just in contact with oxygen and electrolytes from the air. Metal oxidizes much faster in certain conditions, such as when it is regularly exposed to large amounts of oxygen and electrolytes, such as those found water and acid. Some examples of things that oxidize metals faster include being in regular contact with body oils, salty sweat, or chemicals like sunscreen or body lotion. Do you think any of these substances may have gotten on a medal being worn by an athlete in the summer for a week?

Go get a piece of brass siding from the hardware store. Don't put any sealant on it. Wear it around your neck for a week and see what happens to it.

-7
zaphreply
sh.itjust.works

I think the brass plating chipped off and we're seeing what's underneath.

10

I feel like I'm taking crazy pills. Y'all motherfuckers never handled a metal other than stainless steel before. Can't wait to be vindicated when someone tells this dude to clean it with vinegar and see what happens.

-2
Echreply

So...your point is that it's a widely known process, and that the manufacturer didn't know/choose to coat it because they're not being cheap?

12