lego set 3585

lego set 3585

lego set 3537

Lego Set 3585

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Basketball TripYoung BasketballBasketball ThingsMove PlayersPlayers ToysNba LegoLego UltimateUltimate ArenaTwins LegoForwardLEGO Sports: NBA Ultimate Arena, Great for young basketball fans who love to build and play, the LEGO Ultimate NBA Arena features 10 collectible mini LEGO figures, including Jason Kidd, Allen Iverson and Antoine Walker. Move players ..., #Toys, #Building SetsSee morepin 6Teos LegoLegos MinecrftLego LootLego SoccerLego SportsLego MegaLovely LegosAmazing LegosAwesome LegoForwardLEGO Sport CitySee morepin 8heart 2Lego BeijingBeijing OlympicBeijing ChinaOlympic 2008Beijing 2008Field BeijingCity BeijingOlympic NationalOlympics 01ForwardAwesome LEGO Creations - Lego Sports City - Click Pic for 25 #lego #party #ideasSee moreNumber 221Set NumberInstructions 221221 BooksLego PlansIdea BookBook 1View LegoLego TechniquesForwardLEGO Sports Car Instructions 30349, CitySee morehttps://flic.kr/p/Sb5k1U | Good moustache style 👨! | Hey folks it's Alex here ! L because Brickset isn't so specific. I




t's the growing of the moustache everyday. Heads up to down and from what minifig : -No moustache : LEGO Creator Expert (and more) -Moustache Pointed : LEGO City and LEGO Sports -Black Bushy Moustache : Janitor -Moustache Brown Bushy Curled : Pizza Van chef, Hot Dog Vendor and Worker -Medium Moustache : Daredevil…heart 1LegoForwardLEGO Sports NBA Challenge 3432 * Click image to review more details.See morepin 2LEGO Sports NBA Jump Shoot 3550 *** Click image for more details.LegoForwardLEGO Sports NHL Hockey 65182 Slammer Stadium ** Want additional info? Click on the image.See moreheart 1Snowboard SuperSports SnowboardSuper PipeLego SportsLego PriceGirls Lego3585Lego ClubSnowboardsForwardLEGO Sports Snowboard Super Pipe (3585)See moreFav LegoLego VehicleLegos LegosToys LegoLego PorschePorsche 911Lego GuusLego WellLego OoooooForwardLego Sports Car Porsche 911See morepin 1heart 1 Colour Light Bluish Gray [BL]/Medium Stone Grey [TLG] | A new design (shown here in Light Bluish Gray) for the old part 2413 (shown here in White) began appearing in sets this year.




Viewed from the top, they appear identical but seen from the bottom the change is obvious; notches have been added along the diagonal edges so that they can now be attached to elements underneath. It appears in five sets so far (but may also be used in older sets as the previous version runs out). White is in 60012 Coast Guard 4x4 & Diving Boat and 9664 First LEGO® League Challenge 2013 Nature's Fury. Black is in 76007 Iron Man": Malibu Mansion Attack and 76001 The Bat vs. Bane": Tumbler Chase. Light Bluish Gray is in 60015 Coast Guard Plane. Decisions about whether or not to use notches have a long history at LEGO. At the time when System in Play began in 1955 you could buy little spare parts boxes of 'macaroni', the 2X2 round corner brick (part 3063), but this part came in notched and notchless versions simultaneously. Not like Schrödinger's cat though. Distribution of the two versions was seemingly random, just like when parts get new moulds today and you're unlucky enough to get both types in your set.




Although the notchless version certainly looks nicer, its limited ability to attach to elements below meant a swift death, in 1957. Also killed was the larger macaroni sister, the 2X4 semi-circular version, also available with and without notches - but even the notched version was deleted, deemed superfluous. This left only the classic 2X2 notched macaroni to survive (until a somewhat irritating redesign in 2008, but let's not go there right now). Another notchless part from that time is the 4X8 plate with a curved end (parts 712 and 713); designed that way perhaps because they were only ever used in sets as overhanging rooves, so there was no great need to change the mould. British LEGO Ltd. (the company licensed to produce LEGO for the UK, Ireland and Australia until the early 1990s) did in fact make notched versions from their factory in Wrexham, northern Wales, starting in 1965 and ending when the part went out of production just two years later. As with so much of TLG's history, the circumstances are unrecorded so we'll probably never know who instigated the redesign and why it didn't happen in Europe.




These notched versions are very rare nowadays but the ones pictured here are even rarer; Blue [BL]/Bright Blue [TLG] prototypes never released in a set! My thanks to Gary Istok for supplying this picture and for these great bits of historical trivia from his LEGO history book. As wing pieces began appearing in LEGO, such as in aeroplane and Classic Space sets, they too were notchless. My guess is, like the 4X8 curved plates, that this was because their primary intended usage did not require the diagonal edges to be attached to parts below - they were, by definition, wings. Although in the very first year the 4X9 aeroplane wing appeared, 1987, it was also used as the base of a fire crane! In that same year part 2419 appeared, the 3X6 wedge plate with two 45° cut corners. Significantly, it did have notches so was clearly intended for wider usage. This apparent distinction I'm drawing between 'notchless wings' and 'notched wedges' seemed to continue throughout the 1990s and early 2000s.




But in 2003 the 3X4 notchless wing with 1X2 cutout (part 4859, first introduced in 1985) was redesigned with notches. And now in 2013, the decision has been made to give the 4X9 aeroplane wing notches too, so for those who still like to use it as a wing, the presence of notches is a distinctly unwelcome aesthetic. I never use it as a wing, so now there's another diagonal tool in the box at a wonderfully shallow angle. Apparently the redesign was discussed at quite some length by Design Lab (the TLG department responsible for designing new elements and acting as “custodians” of the System) and I can imagine why. It's a strange part, for a number of reasons. Firstly, those rounded corners on the wedge end. Given the part was being standardised to a degree, I'd have thought those corners would have been sharpened. TLG have had to round off corners on various parts to meet recent child safety laws but that surely wouldn't apply here - if so, all plates would need to be rounded - but maybe adding sharp corners to something intended to be used as a sticky-outy swooshy aeroplane wing was deemed a bad idea.




Or perhaps the rounded corners were retained simply to respect the history of the part. Secondly, it's nine studs wide. Wing parts often seem to have odd dimensions (literally), but a nine-wide plate is unique (or so I am told, and can't be bothered to research). I like this and am glad it wasn't altered to be eight or ten studs like common plates. Now that it has notches it could simply be used like a regular plate in a build, so long as you're covering up the diagonals. Whilst you don't often need a nine-wide plate and could almost certainly find a workaround, I just like knowing that the option is there! And finally, the angle of the diagonal edges; each crosses an area six studs wide but only half a stud deep, whereas all notched wedge plates stick to whole-integer studs. I'm happy the aeroplane wing can now be stuck on a plate, but the effect of that half-stud limits many applications. But hey we like idiosyncrasies in LEGO. This edge is kinda nice: Here I've embraced the half-studdiness and staggered several to make a very gentle slope then filled it in, to create a three-to-four stud tapered 'brick':




There have been many crazy angles in wing parts over the years but as I mentioned, in contrast, the notched wedge families are wonderfully systematic - let's remind ourselves of these. This was generated in LDraw so there isn't a notched aeroplane wing to use yet. As well as notchless plates I've omitted octagons and compound angled plates, for clarity. Brian D'Agostine (DagsBricks) has compiled a thorough listing of angled plates, both notched and notchless, on his excellent blog. You'll also find a similar one for sloped bricks, and he cross-references angles between the two which is very handy for SNOT work. A purely systematic approach to redesigning the aeroplane wing would have been to change the angles to 6:1 ratio; thus losing the half-stud corner whilst retaining the overall 4X9 dimensions. But that would have been a huge aesthetic alteration. Keeping the angle shallow but losing the half-stud (12:1 or say 10:1 as a compromise) would have required a much wider and deeper plate.

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