Title pretty much covers it, hit me with any questions, loved the build, but took about 6 months, wouldn’t touch it for stretches.
Title pretty much covers it, hit me with any questions, loved the build, but took about 6 months, wouldn’t touch it for stretches.
So if you didn’t sand it down, that connecter would pop apart from a small breeze, at that point I didn’t want to commit to glueing anything incase I needed to take it apart or something. And I think with a little creativity and parts it could have been modified, but here we are.
The pieces were $540 CAD, to buy it in legit Lego would have been about $1,300, don’t know if you know how buying legit legos works. The instructions came from rebrickable and the user brickgloria (edit price was $60), iirc you can buy this as a kit from someone as well, that was damn near 1k though.
Yes/no on the colours, designers use colours so you can orientate the piece/s as you’re building. The instructions and build list did let you know which pieces could be “any” colour. This is at each MOCs creators discretion I’ve found, you’re free to look through the builds and modify the build list of you are so inclined.
The barrel is made from (edited) 6 4l bars with the center being a 6l bar with stop, held together with a tire. I don’t think they are non-standard better look
Thanks for answering.
Not gonna lie, its a bit pricey. But that’s okay for this kind of hobby.
The official Way to buy LEGO pieces via their Pick a Brick system is good, but their search interface is shite. I do small scale MOC expansions to my bought sets with Leocad. Just wish it would use official LEGO piece names or numbers, then it would be much easier to find and pick pieces on LEGOs website.
I took a look around their published MOCs, pretty impressive. I really like their Tycho Station.
I was under the impression that it came as a kit, since you showed the pieces in one bag. But yeah you are right of course, that with the inventory list you can mix and match the pieces and piece colors to your liking.
That’s ingenious!