2GodBDGlory Posted February 7 Posted February 7 1 hour ago, Zerobricks said: Square cube law says no. Going from 1:8 to 1:6 means models are some 2,5x heavier and you start to experience issues with supporting such weights. I was pretty skeptical too. I've designed a 1:7 supercar using Unimog tires, and as you say, a seemingly small scale difference ended up with a far larger model! I looked up 1:6 cars from that Taigaole brand @Satisfied mentioned, and found models of a Porsche 911, Mclaren W1, and Lamborghini Revuelto. After calculating scale for those cars, they came out as 1:6.8, 1:6.3, and 1:7.3, respectively. So they definitely seem to be exaggerating the scale, but at least in the W1's case, not by as much as I expected. (Though it could be their listed dimensions are wrong, the real-car dimensions I looked up are wrong, or the proportions are off in a way that maximizes length?) At any rate, those truly are massive, and it's interesting to see commercial takes on at least 1:7 supercars Quote
Satisfied Posted February 7 Posted February 7 20 minutes ago, 2GodBDGlory said: I was pretty skeptical too. I've designed a 1:7 supercar using Unimog tires, and as you say, a seemingly small scale difference ended up with a far larger model! I looked up 1:6 cars from that Taigaole brand @Satisfied mentioned, and found models of a Porsche 911, Mclaren W1, and Lamborghini Revuelto. After calculating scale for those cars, they came out as 1:6.8, 1:6.3, and 1:7.3, respectively. So they definitely seem to be exaggerating the scale, but at least in the W1's case, not by as much as I expected. (Though it could be their listed dimensions are wrong, the real-car dimensions I looked up are wrong, or the proportions are off in a way that maximizes length?) At any rate, those truly are massive, and it's interesting to see commercial takes on at least 1:7 supercars Absolutely! You’ve definitely found the three sports cars from that brand. They claim to be 1:6 scale—admittedly the scale isn’t perfectly accurate—but they’re way bigger than 1:8 models, reaching about 68 cm in length. The only pity is they’re just shell cars with no gearbox; they’re only designed to add motors for remote control. They do come with larger sports car tires, though. Quote
Auroralampinen Posted February 7 Author Posted February 7 10 minutes ago, Satisfied said: The only pity is they’re just shell cars with no gearbox; they’re only designed to add motors for remote control. They do come with larger sports car tires, though. Who the h*ll puts motors into that massive heavy monstrossity. Like how you can drive that indoors and if you go outside, pieces gets losted all the time:/. Quote
Auroralampinen Posted February 7 Author Posted February 7 (edited) The new hail mary lego set has even more gears and technic than i thought :). Edited February 7 by Auroralampinen Quote
AVCampos Posted February 7 Posted February 7 1 hour ago, Auroralampinen said: Who the h*ll puts motors into that massive heavy monstrossity. Like how you can drive that indoors and if you go outside, pieces gets losted all the time:/. Well, it's probably not as heavy, but 8448 did come with instructions for motorisation with a single 9V motor (twin motors optional), and even autonomous driving with an RCX. Quote
Auroralampinen Posted February 7 Author Posted February 7 (edited) 13 minutes ago, AVCampos said: Well, it's probably not as heavy, but 8448 did come with instructions for motorisation with a single 9V motor (twin motors optional), and even autonomous driving with an RCX. Oh the Autonomous driving sounds really cool for 90s model. I didn't know the super street sensation can do that :). Interesting that it tooked nearly 30 years to make it work in real life. And the results are kind of mixed. Luckily in finland we don't have that much Autonomous vehicles. In tampere one nysse(tampere bus/public transit system name) bus route is drived by Autonomous bus and the trip is about 10km both directions or 5km one direction:). Edited February 7 by Auroralampinen Quote
AVCampos Posted February 7 Posted February 7 Actually, the implementation of autonomy on 8448 is a pair of bumper sensors that let it know if it hit something on the left or right side, so I have a slight feeling that it wouldn't be quite well accepted in real life. Quote
Auroralampinen Posted February 7 Author Posted February 7 (edited) 7 minutes ago, AVCampos said: Actually, the implementation of autonomy on 8448 is a pair of bumper sensors that let it know if it hit something on the left or right side, so I have a slight feeling that it wouldn't be quite well accepted in real life. Oh, thats more primitive than i thought or imagined. But hey good for 90s and probably really advanced for 90s tech. So i wont judge the slightly primitive system by todays standards:). Edited February 7 by Auroralampinen Quote
2GodBDGlory Posted February 7 Posted February 7 57 minutes ago, AVCampos said: Well, it's probably not as heavy, but 8448 did come with instructions for motorisation with a single 9V motor (twin motors optional), and even autonomous driving with an RCX. It was pretty cool that you could do that! I believe there was also the possibility for remote control with the right Mindstorms accessories? Quote
AVCampos Posted February 7 Posted February 7 Yes, the RCX can be controlled via this IR remote: https://rebrickable.com/parts/upn0200/control-unit-rcx-remote/ ... and the topic has now officially deralied from 2026 to 1999. 😅 Quote
Satisfied Posted February 8 Posted February 8 12 hours ago, Auroralampinen said: Who the h*ll puts motors into that massive heavy monstrossity. Like how you can drive that indoors and if you go outside, pieces gets losted all the time:/. Brands of building blocks here love making these shell cars for their 1:8 scale sports models—they remove the gearbox and stuff them with various motors for remote control, and surprisingly, they actually run pretty fast. Quote
2GodBDGlory Posted February 8 Posted February 8 13 hours ago, Satisfied said: Brands of building blocks here love making these shell cars for their 1:8 scale sports models—they remove the gearbox and stuff them with various motors for remote control, and surprisingly, they actually run pretty fast. Yeah, weight definitely hurts speed, but not as much as a gearbox does, in my opinion Quote
Oh_Hi_Mao Posted Wednesday at 05:17 AM Posted Wednesday at 05:17 AM (edited) Tumbler is C+ 719 pieces rigid shell (for 180 dollars) Edited Wednesday at 05:20 AM by Oh_Hi_Mao Typo Quote
AVCampos Posted Wednesday at 09:18 AM Posted Wednesday at 09:18 AM If so, at least it'll have an interesting steering mechanism. Quote
gyenesvi Posted Wednesday at 10:01 AM Posted Wednesday at 10:01 AM 4 hours ago, Oh_Hi_Mao said: Tumbler is C+ 719 pieces rigid shell (for 180 dollars) I guess it's going to be using the all-in-one C+ hub.. Quote
AVCampos Posted Wednesday at 10:04 AM Posted Wednesday at 10:04 AM That's my suspicion as well. Perhaps we'll finally see usage of all 4 front LEDs in an official set? As for the rear LEDs, I'd rather see them used for flame effects than boring tail lights. Quote
thekoRngear Posted Thursday at 08:11 AM Posted Thursday at 08:11 AM Unpopular opinion maybe, but that thing could have been a mechanical/non-electric one. Quote
Jundis Posted Thursday at 11:39 AM Posted Thursday at 11:39 AM 3 hours ago, thekoRngear said: Unpopular opinion maybe, but that thing could have been a mechanical/non-electric one. Hmm but we already had a bunch of those... 76240, 76023, 76303 and 76239... We are now down to 3 unknown models in 2026 ... if they are cars too, I feel discriminated for liking real Technic models. Quote
allanp Posted Thursday at 02:52 PM Posted Thursday at 02:52 PM 6 hours ago, thekoRngear said: Unpopular opinion maybe, but that thing could have been a mechanical/non-electric one. How's this for an unpopular opinion. 2026 can still turn out to be a great year IF the remaining unknown 3 models are great. That's all it really takes, just 3 great models. But at only three, they would have to be really good to call the whole year great. Nothing in the past couple years has reached that benchmark. The SLS rocket is good and the 1:5 Ducati is very good, but it's no improvement on the previous 1:5 scale Yamaha (actually it's worse due to the cam style engine, it's redeemed only by a sweet gearbox). They need to up their game if they want to rescue 2026. I STILL have hope. Quote
Johnny1360 Posted Thursday at 10:13 PM Posted Thursday at 10:13 PM On 2/11/2026 at 4:18 AM, AVCampos said: If so, at least it'll have an interesting steering mechanism. Indeed, could be a very interesting mechanism, hopefully the looks won't be modified too much to make it actually work. Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.