skaah Posted September 16, 2020 Posted September 16, 2020 Hi all, I was building 42042 and I noticed these straight triangles: Two sides at 90 degrees: 4 and 5 studs. And an angled beam of 6 studs connecting. It matches up perfectly, the elements are not under stress. However, I don't understand how this can exist. Pythagoras theorem a^2+b^2 = c^2 doesn't work out: 16 + 25 != 36. Is there anyone who understands the maths better than me who can enlighten me why this works in the LEGO system? I tried the 3-4-5 triangle but it doesn't match up! Do I have to subtract 1 of each beam length for some reason? Quote
suffocation Posted September 16, 2020 Posted September 16, 2020 The length is actually from mid-first hole to mid-last hole, so always add 1 to your Pythagorean triangles to get Lego equivalents. Quote
Mechbuilds Posted September 16, 2020 Posted September 16, 2020 (edited) We need a lego pythagoras theorem calculator for triangles.. @Sariel help our lazy arses! Edited September 16, 2020 by Mechbuilds Quote
aeh5040 Posted September 16, 2020 Posted September 16, 2020 There have been some prior discussions of similar issues: Quote
ginger-snapped Posted September 17, 2020 Posted September 17, 2020 You should check out http://tkelcreations.blogspot.com/p/blog-page_24.html. It shows the perfect (or close to perfect) lego right triangles in terms of length of beams which makes it nice to work with for lego since there is no adding/subtracting 1. And it's not just the ones with all whole numbers, some are for lengths that go down to a half stud. Quote
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