Hanso Posted October 25, 2016 Posted October 25, 2016 (edited) At our Flickr page you can view the photos of our visit at Lego World 2016 in Utrecht: https://flic.kr/s/aHskMd9EAj. A video is also available: Enjoy, Hans Edited October 25, 2016 by Hanso Quote
JJ2 Posted October 25, 2016 Posted October 25, 2016 Thats really cool, lots of programming must have gone into this. Quote
Hanso Posted October 26, 2016 Author Posted October 26, 2016 14 hours ago, LvdH said: Oh that's what it was! I remember seeing it, but I had no idea what is what supposed to do If the children asked me what it was, my answer was "It is a candy delivery system". But if the parents asked me, I told them it is a Mind(fullness)storms machine: a full run with four candies took about 13 minutes ... ;-) 11 hours ago, JJ2 said: Thats really cool, lots of programming must have gone into this. We estimate the total building time (so both the Lego structures as the C# application) somewhere between 1500 - 2000 hours for the whole team in the last year. Some parts are reused or improved from earlier years, if you add that to the total time I think you should double it. Quote
Blakbird Posted October 26, 2016 Posted October 26, 2016 This is so incredibly creative and fun to watch. Thanks for sharing. Quote
Hanso Posted October 27, 2016 Author Posted October 27, 2016 10 hours ago, Blakbird said: This is so incredibly creative and fun to watch. Thanks for sharing. Thank you for your kind words. It was also fun to do. I already have new ideas for Lego World 2017! Hans Quote
Carl86 Posted October 27, 2016 Posted October 27, 2016 Cool project. I like some of your building techniques. Quote
Hanso Posted October 28, 2016 Author Posted October 28, 2016 17 hours ago, Carl86 said: Cool project. I like some of your building techniques. Thanks for your reply. At Lego World, the (new) delivery station drew the most attention (in the positive way ;-). Most people didn't understand what it would do, until they saw the station in action. The mechanism of pushing the containers from the wagons, lifting the containers and the lockers: it all worked as I designed it. I learned a lot in the last years of building, for example: the first items were totally not designed for transport-ability. Nor was it designed for three or four days of continuous play, so we needed a power supply attached to it. But attaching a power supply is not that easy for a moving object, like the crane. For the new buildings, I took most of these 'abilities' into account at the design phase. Would it be interesting to write a longer article about this? Quote
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