sparkart Posted March 1, 2016 (edited) S.P.E.E.D.E.R. (Straddling Pilot Echoing Equine Disposition Ergo Rider) Here's a sample recipe to make a more realistically proportioned human rider figure that can straddle a sci-fi/fantasy speeder bike or motorcycle: S.P.E.E.D.E.R. (Straddling Pilot Echoing Equine Disposition Ergo Rider) by SPARKART!, on Flickr. Some of the connections are tenuous single-stud assemblies, so this isn't really aimed toward playability, but more for giving a sense of scale to a model. LEGO Bat-pod by SPARKART!, on Flickr. CHIPS - Central Headquarters Imperial Pursuit Squad by SPARKART!, on Flickr. LEGO Rey's Speeder on Jakku by SPARKART!, on Flickr. I hope the assembly instructions are useful and spark some creative applications. Thanks for checking it out. Edited March 4, 2016 by sparkart Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hadidi1999 Posted March 1, 2016 (edited) That is great man, They look perfect. thumbs up :thumbup: But Batman's legs seem a little to long, and too black, you have too look for them to see them. Edited March 1, 2016 by hadidi1999 Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
sparkart Posted March 2, 2016 (edited) Yes, the legs and arms are a bit spindly. As presented above, in the step-by-step assembly instructions, the SAMoSA arms, in particular, are generally too long for most applications. But it's LEGO, and easy to change the size to suit the build. It's a eye-trick or optical illusion to make them look more naturally proportioned. Sometimes, LEGO is a bit of an impressionistic art, like comic-books or black-and-white line art. You just give the audience a suggestion of a shape, and their eyes and brains fill in the rest of the detail. I'm working on a Star Wars Episode VII Rey speeder using this formula for the riding figure. I've made her arms one stud shorter...kinda. The hands and wrist area for Rey are mostly hidden behind speeder structure. I'm relying on the viewer's imagination to accept that the Rey figure is holding onto some kind of handlebar. Edited March 3, 2016 by sparkart Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
hadidi1999 Posted March 2, 2016 I see how it would work. It is a great idea, and like you said this IS LEGO, a big range of adjustments are possible to suite your needs, they don't even always have to be the same figure you could change the arms or legs for the current stance. I mean like Unikitty in the LEGO Movie. Share this post Link to post Share on other sites