lego spare parts technic

lego spare parts technic

lego spare parts italy

Lego Spare Parts Technic

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eBricks was established in the year 2000 to serve the needs of LEGO enthusiasts around the globe. Today, eBricks supplies individuals, businesses, and schools with sets, minifigures, instructions, and everything else LEGO branded. eBricks is a family owned unofficial LEGO® distributor. We professionally supply millions of LEGO® parts, sets, instructions, minifigures and anything else LEGO® related to kids, kids at heart, corporations, resellers, collectors and schools. We take pride in taking stance with the original slogan at The LEGO Group, “Only the best is good enough”. There's no project too small or too large for eBricks. Whether you need fast and responsive sourcing support to complete convention event displays or require large volume supply to realize the production of custom sets, we are there for you! If you are looking for old sets or individual elements our BrickLink storefront, eBricksOnline, is an excellent place to begin your search. eBricks will buy your LEGO® collection.




Whether it's Town, Technic, Train, Toolo, Toy Story, or Thomas & Friends; Batman, Belville, Basic, Blacktron, Bulk, or Bionicle: If it is a LEGO® Brand product we are interested! LEGO®, LEGOLAND®, DACTA®, DUPLO®, PRIMO®, FABULAND®, SCALA®, TECHNIC®, MINDSTORMS®, and ZNAP®, etc. are trademarks or registered trademarks of the LEGO® Company, which does not sponsor, authorize, or endorse this site. does not sponsor authorize or endorse this site.eBricks LLC © 2000-2016 all rights reserved. Site Design by LibertyBRICKA parts kit available designed to give NXT 2.0 (8547) users the parts they need to build projects designed for NXT 1.0 (8527).  This is not an official LEGO kit and is assembled from new and some used parts.  Availability may be limited, and other limitations may apply, see the web site for details. Get the Education Resource Set Education Resource Set (the 9695 kit or the older 9648 kit) from comes very close to getting you all the parts you need to supplement the




NXT 2.0 set to be able to build projects intended for the the original NXT set, so getting just this kit will be enough to build many (but not all) of the projects designed for the original NXT. The Education Resource Kit kit will also give you a number of other useful and special parts, as well as a nice pair of sorting trays and a bin to store parts in. original Education Resource Set The NXT 2.0 (8547) kit plus either the 9695 or 9648 kit will give you all the parts of the original NXT (8527) set with theBuying individual parts from is one way to get missingSome other solutions are noted. To find kits that have other parts from the original NXT set that you might be missing, you can consult the and click on a part number to find kits that contain it.  longer for sale from LEGO are often available on , as are individual parts if you can find them. If you don't have the 9648 or 9695 kit, here is the complete list of missing original NXT




8527 parts when using the NXT 2.0 We're sorry, but the Web address you've entered is no longer available. Search our product catalog: 88 used & new from Discover savings on building sets, games, dolls and more. LEGO Technic 42050: Drag Racer MixedDetailsLEGO Technic 8293 Power Functions Motor Set FREE Delivery in the UK. Product Dimensions38.2 x 9.4 x 26.2 cm Manufacturer recommended age:10 - 16 years Main Language(s)Italian manual, German manual, French manual, English manual, Spanish manual, Spanish Number of Puzzle Pieces647 Click here for information about recycling electrical and electronic products 16,341 in Toys & Games (See top 100) Date First Available1 Jan. 2016 Wheelie from the start line to the finish with the high-powered Drag Racer, featuring a vivid-blue and black color scheme with flame stickers, working steering and a detailed V8 engine with moving pistons. The body shell of this is robust 2-in-1 LEGO Technic model can be lifted to reveal the chassis, exhaust pipes and working transmission.




Upgrade with the 8293 Power Functions motor set (not supplied) for motorized driving and wheelie functionality. Rebuild into a Supercharged Dragster for a double build-and-play experience. not appropriate for children under the age of 3 See all Product Description Technic 42052 Heavy Lift Helicopter Set Technic 42026: Black Champion Racer 42044 Display Team Jet Action Figure Set See all 76 customer reviews See all 76 customer reviews (newest first) Good set and challenged my grandson Speedy delivery, great item for Christmas present, thank you.Enjoyed my 12 year old. Grandson very pleased with this Xmas gift Bought this for my nephew, he absolutely loved it. Exactly as described and the person it was bought for loved it!challenging enough to keep busy for a while.nothing negative to say about lego. Lovely item and a good step up from Lego city to grow with child and more robust so can play with it without it breaking which is a massive plus.




Toys & Games > Building & Construction ToysToday I would like to address a subject that often comes up in comments but we haven’t fully explored in an article as of yet. So here it goes; LEGO vs. Mega Bloks. Mega Bloks is a Canadian company, that is basically looked at as a LEGO rip-off and copycat by LEGO fans, with lower quality products and cheaper prices. They use the same studs-and-tubes design as LEGO, package their sets similarly, and their sole purpose seems to be to trick parents and kids into buying a Mega Blocks set instead of a LEGO one. However Mega Blocks also has a niche for themselves by owning some unique licenses – something that LEGO fans may find interesting and venture to explore. Mega Bloks have the rights for making Thomas the Tank Engine, Hello Kitty, Need for Speed, Halo, World of Warcraft, Barbie, Hot Wheels, Skylanders Giants, and Call of Duty sets. Some of you may comment “LEGO is best and all other brands are evil rip-offs that should be burned!” – but hear me through before throwing stones bricks at me, and perhaps you will gain a different perspective.




I own both LEGO and Mega Bloks sets and have fairly extensive experience with both. In addition I’m one of those people who are not afraid to mix the two brands for an extended building experience. As this is a LEGO vs. Mega Bloks post, I will compare the two brands in various categories so you might gain a better understanding of the similarities and differences. Of course we are all familiar with LEGO minifigures; they are cute and chubby with a yellow skin (except for the licenses minifigs). LEGO minifigures are all made up of the same, fully compatible body-parts, so you can mix and match them any way you like. They also fit within the LEGO system with multiple attachment points. In recent years there has been a lot of focus on minifigures due to demand by LEGO fans and collectors, which resulted in a greater variety of facial expressions, better quality and more detailed printing, and even a series of collectible minifigures. Mega Bloks figures are very different from LEGO’s little guys.




They have articulated joints for a much wider range of posing. This is their biggest advantage. Most of them have unique moulds – which means they are not as interchangeable and customizable as LEGO minifigs. In fact, trying to pop together the mini ball-joints proves to be quite a challenge and many times impossible. In Mega Bloks sets the figures come fully assembled, whereas in their collectible packets they come in parts and you need to assemble them. LEGO has been releasing a wide range of accessories for minifigures; tools, weapons, body-armor, backpacks, and more. The details on the accessories tend to be general in nature, so the same design can fit into many different themes, and even serve different purposes. (For example a minifigure-size dinner-plate can serve as a decoration on a building, or a minifigure tool can become part of an engine.) As far as Mega Bloks, I only own their HALO line of products, so I can mainly compare guns and backpacks, not everyday tools and other weaponry.




In general, Mega Bloks accessories are much more detailed and only serve one purpose. They even come with printed highlights to make them as accurate as possible. They are popular with LEGO customizers who are looking for accuracy and detail. (Mega Bloks accessories are compatible with LEGO minifigures as even though LEGO and Mega Bloks figures are quite different, their size is about the same and they both have claw-like hands.) LEGO is known to be an expensive toy. Their mid-priced sets are in the $30-$50 range, which is not pocket-change. And not to speak of the larger sets! The advantage though is that LEGO elements are fully compatible and you can re-use them in an unlimited variety of ways. The same piece can be a brick in a castle-wall, or part of an engine. There are no junk-pieces in LEGO that can only be used for one thing. All pieces are used over and over in many different sets for many years, even decades. They can all interconnect in a variety of ways and be part of the full system.




If you have just a medium-ish LEGO collection you can reuse the parts again and again without having to buy more and more sets. This variability, and the fact that LEGO elements are very high quality gives them tremendous long-term value. The downside of this is that it is harder to achieve life-like detailing with LEGO. You would need to build in a fairly large scale and use many small elements if you want to be as realistic as possible. Mega Bloks, although based on the same studs-and-tubes system as LEGO, doesn’t focus as much on compatibility and connectivity, but more on life-like details. Their sets are more like models or maquettes that are fit together as a jig-saw puzzle, reusability of the elements and fitting into a comprehensive system is not the focus. They make a lot of specialized large pieces that are only available in one set. Making your own custom models and landscapes would be significantly difficult. You can also end up with heaps of pieces that you can only use one way and have little long-term value or play-value in general.




Mega Bloks is also known for lesser quality and precision, which is reflected in the cheaper prices. But they make things like camo-bricks with different colors fused together, which is very cool. Building instructions for LEGO sets are pretty easy to follow. In fact, there has been a lot of improvement in the last few years; colors are easier to differentiate, trickier assemblies have zoomed-in views, and there is a list of parts added in each step. Also, for larger sets bags are numbered so it is easier to build the set in sections instead of dumping all the parts in one big pile and searching endlessly. Mega Bloks building instructions take a slightly different approach. I found them to be a bit harder to follow – probably because I’m more familiar with LEGO’s instructions. I like the fact that they highlight the studs were a new piece goes. However they do not include numbered bags, even for their larger sets, which makes them very hard to figure out and put together, wasting a lot of time searching for parts.

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