Sid Sidious

Eurobricks Knights
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Posts posted by Sid Sidious


  1. Well it should be pretty obvious why not North Korea...

    Why Austria specifically probably boils down to money. Austria probably offered the best combination of tax breaks, cheap labor, proximity to main Billund factory, proximity to ray materials, proximity to skilled labor needed to run factory, etc.


  2. Molds are big and space is expensive. The book Lego: A Love Story has a conversation in which a Lego executive mentions old molds are destroyed.

    Even if it's a 3D model, there is still a mold. LEGO is using 3D printers to produce parts.

    I think anothergol meant that each part is a file, which Lego wouldn't delete even if they did destroy the physical molds. Also, Lego (and most companies with large production volumes) don't 3D print the final product. They only use that to make prototypes.


  3. There's a great article that was written several years ago on this, but with the price increase of the cups it no longer holds true. Back then, it was true that the small cup was a better value, but today with doing some basic division, it appears both cups are roughly the same value. The large cup is a better value by .0005 cents per ounce. Cup and lid volume included, the small holds 20.5 ounces, large holds 36.5 ounces. At $8.99 and $15.99 respectively, the small is $0.4385 per ounce, and the large is $0.4380 per ounce. I haven't taken into calculation the cost savings of reusing a cup; I know we get a $0.50 discount on large cups but I'm not sure about small cups as I've never used them before. If the small cup offers the same reuse discount, it would actually be a better value by 1 penny per ounce. Nor have I examined the VIP points earned per cup. The article I was referring to can be found here: http://www.1000stein...sonAnalysis.pdf

    You guys gotta stop posting sand green pictures. I'm getting terribly jealous and it's making the wait until Sunday feel even that much longer. I actually had a nightmare last night that I had arrived at the store but there was no sand green. *oh2* *oh2* *oh2*:cry3:

    T-72 hours before my train leaves...

    That's the article I remembered reading. I just didn't remember its results, but it's good to know they're the same.


  4. This past weekend, I had the chance to see Book of Mormon on Broadway (great show, leave the kids at home), and had a few hours of free time. I headed to the Rockefeller Lego store, and it had the sand green pieces that have been making waves here. I noticed a few things:

    -It seemed like I was the only AFOL there. There were tons of people at the PaB wall, but most were either children or parents, and they were either filling the BaM packets as they were intended, or filling cups loosely with random pieces.

    -The Statue of Liberty replaced the jet BaM model (a tragic blow, I'm sure).

    -As well as Statue of Liberty and butterfly parts, notable parts included clear cheese slopes, 2x2x2 slopes in reddish brown, 1x2/1x2 inverted brackets in green, and lime cylinders.

    I quickly packed 2 small cups, and then spent more time on the large one. I couldn't remember which type was a better deal, so I hedged my bets by getting roughly equal volume of each.

    ny31.jpg

    ny11.jpg

    ny21.jpg


  5. One thing I haven't seen mentioned in this thread yet is the effect of a burst on the amount of AFOLs. How many of you have heard something along the lines of "I'd buy Legos as an adult, but they're just so expensive"? I know I definitely have. A lot of this sentiment is probably from currently available sets in retailers (not to open the "Is Lego more expensive now?" can of worms), but a lot of that probably also comes from those listicles you see all over the Internet that bring up how expensive the MF, modulars, etc., have gotten on the secondary market. If the bubble bursts and multi-thousand dollar/pound/euro sets become less prominent, the perceived barrier for entering the AFOL community will lower, so the community will grow.


  6. Five friends and I (ages 20-21) will be in Florida at the end of March, and are trying to go to Legoland Florida. Are there any coupons valid for adults? I keep seeing offers for "Buy 1 adult ticket, get 1 child ticket free!", but all of us are too old for that to apply. One member of our group is active duty military, and all of us are college students, so we'd probably qualify for student or military discounts, if any exist.


  7. In a lot of places, property taxes are determined by the square footage (meterage in some places?) of the house or the value of the property (which is then determined by the square footage of the house). So if an extra room for the Lego room was a consideration while buying a house or if you would be living in a smaller house instead of one with a Lego room and if the Lego room put you in a higher tax bracket (if your area does that for property taxes), you're paying hidden tax costs for the hobby. If your Lego room is just a converted bedroom/closet that you would have paid taxes on anyway, I wouldn't count it as a hidden cost.