lego star war pieces

lego star war pieces

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Lego Star War Pieces

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LEGO builder Marshall Banana spent a year planning and building this 7,500 piece replica of the latest version of Han Solo’s ride. It’s one of the most beautiful pieces of garbage I’ve ever seen. The official LEGO set for The Force Awakens’ Falcon is 1.329 pieces, and it doesn’t look so hot. The biggest official LEGO Star Wars model ever made is the Ultimate Collectors Series Falcon, which consists of more than 5,000 pieces and is currently available on Amazon for $6,000. Marshall Banana’s version of the new Falcon (via The Brothers Brick) is bigger and better than both of them. The nearly three-foot-long, 22 pound creation is bristling with small details. Not even the sides of the ship were skimped on. And while other than a cockpit that seats four there isn’t much in the way of interior detail (he had to keep the weight down), Marshall Banana makes up for it in every other way possible, from guns and pipes to lighted engines. Check out the good Marshall’s Flickr stream for more shots of the incredible Falcon, along with other wonderful LEGO creations (Cowboy Bebop for the win.)




or find him on Twitter at @bunnyspatial. These are the instructions for building the LEGO Star Wars Millennium Falcon that was released in 2011. Download These Instructions as PDF: BI 3009/80+4 7965 V 29/39 1/2 [16.8 Mb] BI 3009/76+4 7965 V 29 2/2 [16.79 Mb] BI 3009/76+4 7965 V 39 2/2 [16.79 Mb] View which pieces you need to build this set ) which does not sponsor, authorize or endorse this siteImpressive Star Wars LEGO Diorama Uses Over 30,000 Pieces by James Plafke | 2:00 pm, May 22nd, 2011 Using over 388 LEGO figures and over 30,000 total pieces, designer Jay Hoff recreated the memorable arrival of the emperor scene from Star Wars for Science Discovery Day at Berkeley Preparatory School in Tampa. Everything picture above is made from LEGO, except for the starfield, which is hand-painted poster board. One may notice Hoff used some Clone Troopers instead of Storm Troopers, which he states was due to Storm Trooper Battle Pack kits being a bit too expensive.




You can check out more pictures of the diorama over at Hoff’s MOCpage. © 2017 The Mary Sue, LLC | Star Wars fan’s Lego Destroyer is 32kg of awesome In the quest for ultimate Star Wars fandom, this guy probably just won.A Reddit user has built an incredible Lego version of the Imperial Star Destroyer Tyrant from Star Wars, and it’s freaking huge.The Tyrant, created by /u/raskolnikov-, is over 1.4 metres long, and weighs a staggering 32kg, making it significantly larger than Lego’s own version of the ship.Speaking to TrustedReviews, Raskolnikov revealed that around 25,000 bricks went into the project, costing him thousands of dollars."I believe the cost is probably somewhere over $2,000, but again it's really hard to say," he tells us. "I bought a lot more pieces than I actually ended up using in the ship, so if you count those it'd be a lot more.""I like to think that those pieces are just building up my Lego collection, which did not include many grey pieces before this build," he adds.“




The Tyrant has about twenty times the volume of the 75055 Star Destroyer below it,” says Raskolnikov.The Tyrant, pictured next to Lego's own Star Destroyer setBut it gets even better, because while it looks cool from the outside, the inside hasn’t been neglected. Raskolnikov actually built an entire interior with different levels and rooms, all manned by Lego minifigures.“It was a high priority for me to have everything come apart as elegantly as possible,” Raskolnikov explains. “The roof sections retain the correct angle when they are removed, and you can simply lift the superstructure off the ship.”He continues: “The only individual piece that you ever have to remove is a technic axle that secures the bridge. The bridge stays in place without it, but I’m afraid that I’ll bump the ship and send it flying if it’s not secured.”The Tyrant even comes equipped with its own TIE Interceptors, because how else would you defend a giant Lego starship?Related: The Tyrant was part of Darth Vader’s Death Squadron, and took part in the Battle of Hoth during Star Wars Episode V: The Empire Strikes Back.It was an Imperial I-class Star Destroyer that was eventually disabled thanks to shots from the v-150 ion cannon manned by the Rebel Alliance.Watch our Best Star Wars Toys video:How much would you pay for this ludicrous Lego creation?




April 27, 2016, 1:17 pm 1:1 scale or nothing! April 27, 2016, 4:58 pm People have way too much time on their hands, but I'm totally not jealous :) May 3, 2016, 9:48 amThe ships looked even better on TFA after all these years.Images by lluisgib and LEGO System A/S Set:10188 Star Wars Death Star Including: 24 characters, trash compactor monster, Tie advanced, 12 film scenes, Hyperlaser Recommended Retail Price: 399,95 € / 399,99 USD It is the first time that I face a Set of this size. 3803 pieces in a set that any fan of Star Wars™ must have in their collection. The Death Star II is a set with scenes of the classic trilogy (Episodes IV and VI. Always inside the star) that reproduces many of the most mythical passages of the saga. Fights, action,… everything can happen within the Death Star. The Death Star was a space station of the Galactic Empire. It was a titanic sphere of greyish color, which had a diameter of 120 kilometers.




In its upper hemisphere it had a laser capable of destroying whole planets. The interior of the Death Star had 84 levels of operation, each one with a surface of 1,428 km. Each level included 357 zones. It had a crew of 25,984 stormtroopers, 87,001 imperial officials, 368,685 assistants and more than 100,000 pilots and civilians. The construction began during the beginning of the Galactic Empire. Its mission was to destroy the planets of the rebel alliance, which did not want to join the Empire, as well as to be a control centre of the imperial troops. An improvised operation of the Rebel Alliance managed to destroy the Death Star that was orbiting the Yavin planet, with the intention to disintegrate it. Only 30 fighters (15 Y-Wing and 15 X-Wing) executed a dangerous operation trying to shoot the station in its unique peak, discovered thanks to the planes of the station that carried the droid R2D2 Figures of the Ship: Type: Space Battle Station Armaments: 15.000 turbolasers, 700 tractor beams projectors, 1 hyperlaser, 7,000 TIE fighters, 4 military attack cruiser, 20,000 military ships and 11,000 combat vehicles




Crew: 774,000 crew, 87,001 officials and 378,685 assistants. The first surprise when you open the box is the size of the instruction book (it really is a book). Used to the smaller manuals with stapled pages, or in several issues, the fact of finding a manual with 263 pages, about 2 kg of weight and bound in spiral, is quite a shock. The bags of pieces are distributed in four cardboard boxes, which give consistency to the outer box. The gross weight of the box is about 9kg. The second surprise (and I have to recognize that was a little more disagreeable) is to find no logical order in the bags of pieces nor is any specific numbering used follow the assembly passages. Partly it can be comprehensible that a set of this magnitude requires an extra effort in its assembly. But when you are in front of 3803 pieces upon the table, without any order but their size, you begin to shake a little. The “solution” that I chose was to place all the bricks and plates of bigger size in a great box, and the smallest ones in trays with separators.




It helped to put a little order to the initial chaos. The Set comes with 25 characters (24 minifigs/droids and the trash compactor monster). Some minifigs are available in others sets. Others, however, appear for the first time in this set: • Luke Skywalker™ (dressed Stormtrooper™) • Han Solo™ (dressed Stormtrooper), • Death Star Droid • 2 Death Star Troopers™ In this set, the LEGO® company has recovered the chromed laser sabers that already appeared in the first years, giving it a touch of quality. Another difference is that the R2-D2 appears with the gray head (instead of white like in the other sets) that also gives it realism. The set of minifigs is a good sample of the main characters in episodes IV and VI. The pieces of the minifigs are distributed in many bags among the 4 boxes, reason why it was difficult to me to build them in one go. Some of the pieces (as the body of Chewbacca™) appeared later during the assembly of the model.




Although it might seem something wrong, I was excited to find the piece when I did not expect it. After all, it gives a little emotion to the building process The model is mounted from bottom to top, in one go. You are mounting each one of the floors and their accessories at the same time. In this way you see all the functionalities (they are many) that are incorporated. I will detail some of them, which I consider especially interesting and significant. First of them (in the lower level) it is the trash compactor, the one from the rescue scene of Princess Leia of the jail and that finishes in the waste basket of the star. In the model the walls of the compactor can move to squash the characters. Also they have incorporated elements which act like trash and the masts that the characters use to try to stop the compactor walls. There is a small hollow from the plant above (the jail) that simulates the place where the characters escape towards the compactor. It is reproduced in another section of the level the gap where Luke and Leia arrive in their attempt to escape, and which they must cross using a rope.




The gap is very well reproduced, with the stickers that simulate the lights of each floor, and the accesses at different levels. The intermediate level is where the more famous scenes and elements from the saga are. First of all, we find the Hyperlaser, the weapon that allows the star to have its destructive power. It is mounted in a very original way and there are points in which the used technique has surprised me (I am still wondering if all the techniques are “legal”), but the result is impressive. It has control panels and horizontal and vertical movement. Also there is the sliding door, which gives access to the control room. Alongside, there is the area of the jail. There you can find the control area of the cells, the cell in which is locked up Princess Leia and the floodgate of escape to the trash compactor. It is remarkable to how the design simulates a long corridor of cells with the use of smaller and smaller concentric arcs, until it finishes in a sticker that simulates that set of arcs.




In the ceiling there is a monitoring camera that moves by all the level. The other two “rooms” of the second level are the Throne Room of the Emperor and the hangar of the Tie Advanced. In the first room two imperial guards are looking after the security of Palpatine™ Emperor. The lights surrounding the throne are very original. In the second room, there is a TIE Advanced, with an arm that holds the fighter, and an access area in the floor with an elevator to reach the lower floor In the upper level, there are also four scenes. One of them is a repair zone for droids. It is quite detailed, with his tools, their stretcher and “spare parts” for droids. The Imperial conference hall is the place where the Emperor and his subordinates meet to discuss the Empire strategy. There are seven chairs, a round table that can be lifted to find a laser Blaster underneath. The other two rooms are the hyperlaser control room (where you can control horizontal and vertical movement, and where the objective is visualized), and a room with two laser towers with horizontal and vertical movement.




Finally, in center of the star, an elevator allows to connect several of the rooms of the three floors. It would be easy to say that it is a very well designed set and with a wonderful level of detail. But this time it seems to be the true. It is really difficult to find a failure in the design. Each one of the rooms have been thought up and designed with a care that, whatever that you look you remain astonished. It is possible to think that this is an exhibition set, but with its multiple mechanisms and interconnections between rooms, it is possible to recreate part of the film in a quite faithful way. The assembly is a little hard. It is divided in 193 steps, but many of the steps have several subgroups inside, which gives a false sensation about how you are really advancing in the model. Although the pieces are not inside numbered bags, the instructions show in each step the pieces that you need, which facilitates the assembly, since you can choose the necessary pieces, before executing it.




As a curiosity, when I finalized the assembly, I had to review the steps looking for the right place for three pieces. I could find all…. except one, but in the end I discovered that it was an extra piece (a grey 1x4 plate). With this anecdote I want to warn that there is a moment where you can´t see pieces in the instructions and it is easy to forget something. It is a set for the lovers of Star Wars™, although its price can be a problem for some people. It reproduces mythical scenes from the saga. The selection of minifigs will make the most avid collectors happy. It has a multitude of mechanisms and movable elements, which give the set some playability. Also the care in many details is great, like the chromed laser swords, the lights surrounding the Throne or the jail. About cons, only to mention the way in which the pieces in the box come, that demands an exercise of previous order. Jan Beyer, LEGO® Community Development Manager and LEGO Iberia S.A., Joachim Schwidtal and Rosa Seegelken

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