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Toastie

Eurobricks Grand Dukes
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Everything posted by Toastie

  1. Just my 2 cents here: There aren't that many possible reasons, are there. It must have to do with misaligned or broken or foreign metal parts inside the switch causing wrong current flows. You have taken apart the switches yourself: It is a rather delicate internal setup. Not regarding the mechanics but the springs and plastic guides etc. When this mechanism gets out of normal positioning, e.g. something pops over a limiter, then, although the plastic parts are in straight position, the metal parts may not. That happened to me after I opened a switch, modified the lever to soften its throw point, and then did not put correctly back together. My resulting leakage though was a more or less full short and partly melted the plastic parts - I have a permanent 15 V/10 A power supply on my entire layout. That dissipated a lot of wattage ... However, it never happened to me on non-modifed switches. Also, as I have modified about 20 of my 35 switch points and then - after learning it the hard way - was paying very close attention to re-assemble then correctly no more "leakage" at all. Regards, Thorsten
  2. And where on gods great earths online forums do the earthlings get a reply from the creator of a MOC - after more than 9.9 years ... (13 more days to make it 10 years)? On EB. I love this place. Regards, Thorsten
  3. @Masked Mini: I believe there is a lot of wisdom and reality in your reply. Regards, Thorsten
  4. I just ordered new business cards: In addition to everything else, it now says: "Would-be TLG Board Member; Intergalactic Strategic Planning Group (ISPG)" Have fun! Thorsten
  5. This is true LEGO building. Wonderful. So many, many details you have added to the original set. Keeping it coherent. Using parts in the creative way you are doing, and in the way you are envisioning, is - as far as I am concerned - the true LEGO style. Thank you very much for sharing! Best Thorsten
  6. This is why I phrased it as a question Believe me, I am fully aware of that. I like to challenge though. As others do. To get people onto the threshold of their comfort zone. Not "out". Just close. Without wanting to be super smart! You know the Monty Python thing ... "How to irritate people" ... I am not anywhere close to the level of a "Master Builder". Zero. But I occasionally I do turn bricks the other way around. For fun. And to be absolutely sure: There is nothing wrong with collecting!!! At all. There is one thing though: 1000+ posts don't impress me. Again: At all. People freak out on whatever. Just >personally<. I just do my thing. On an online forum, I voice it. Well: I am only on one single online forum: On EB. Because here, I am in touch with - LEGO folks. That is all, what counts. They can take it. Best Thorsten
  7. Ha! I ... knew ... it. "Pooda" has become "Brandon Pea" ... so: Call me "Inspector Columbo" from now on This is all so much fun here ... I love it. Personally, I really would like to see Poodaville. It must be fun to go there. You are so much (and with real spirit) into City ... I am sure it must be fun to go there. I am preparing my "setup" ... it is "Crazy City" (CC), I guess. And I am sure you'll like it as well, as you are no concrete head. Takes time though. But will happen. All the very best, Thorsten
  8. Like you humor! Rock on! Thorsten
  9. Well, go nuts! Question is: What do >you< want to convey? It all looks like fun. Just let it flow ... ... but maybe with a remote idea ... All the very best - it is a very nice video. Thorsten
  10. This is a very educated and fun to read discussion. This is why I love EB so much! Now, one thing I don't get at all: The "what they give us" thing. I believe that many here have assembled tons of sets (this is what I am reading; correct me if I am wrong). OK. Given that many here have these many sets ... why don't you do it the LEGO way? I mean the "original idea" way. The "family owned enterprise" way. The LEGO thing: Make it happen. This is what LEGO is about, isn't it? And then show it, if you like. Or let it be if you don't want to. With 10+ City sets + a couple of brick buckets/boxes + sets that you just buy for parts you need ... you could do everything. City, City+, Non-City, All-City, but most importantly: Your City. Is the line of sets each year, the themes and sub themes ... is that really a show stopper? Did we lose something? I am a bit puzzled. All the best, Thorsten
  11. Maybe or maybe not. We've already been using Mindstorm for ages. Its motors have encoders. I was gonna say. Plus: The LEGO rotation sensor did and does a reasonable good job as encoder on RCX PBricks. Used it before for PID controlled trains (https://www.eurobricks.com/forum/index.php?/forums/topic/45440-lego-train-control-using-rcx10-pbricks/) The integrated encoder is much more elegant of course. So when @dr_spock refers to "Mindstorms", any "dumb motor + RCX rotation sensor" as well as the NXT and EV3 motors did/do that. Best Thorsten
  12. That one may work; you could use some sort of tape (machine unplugged) to lock it. BUT: Secure that thing before you do that. Does it go from zero to full forward when you turn it on? Or is there some sort of power regulation? Again: Secure that thing before plugging it in with the tape locking the on key. The spinning speed should not be too high - on the other hand your pressure on the file is key. Just be patient - with no pressure at all, just the weight of the file in the beginning. You can use any LEGO round plate for practice. A 2x2 round plate would do, it has an axle hole. Just try it. A 4x4 round plate is closer to the wheel. Both are way more challenging, as you would not have any guide as the flange on the BBB train wheel represents. When you can make a groove on these, you can make any groove you like on the BBB wheels for sure. The flange on the BBB wheels is almost a guarantee that it will work. Best Thorsten
  13. Well, it is a simple but rather crude method. A lathe is so much better - but not so many have access to one, I believe. This is why I did it that way. And: It simply works. The wheels are in perfect shape. Ben's wheels are simply superb. More interestingly though, the red LEGO rubber bands still do their task as well. I must admit though that I don't run the BR23 that often. On the other hand, the rubber bands are comparably cheap. When they do snap - put on another one. Has not happened, but ... Best Thorsten
  14. I believe this is a very delicate problem. It reminds me of the force required to push the center drivers in an out on Ben Beneke's BR 23. He used a split axle. I don't believe a purist solution will do. But who knows. A skid plate, as suggested by @jrathfon may do; you may need to adjust the force by using a leaf spring type piece. Very thin though. Good luck! Thorsten
  15. OK, was ages ago and there may be much better solutions, 10 years after. It still works though. Best Thorsten
  16. Wait - no! Within the upper class of the developed countries (as the middle class is steadily and at increasing rates dissolving ...), I truly believe that the TFOL market must be considerable. TFOL as is young folks buying LEGO sets on their own. The prerequisites are: Enough money available and interest in LEGO. I sure do believe this is a sizeable fraction. But did anyone challenge that? All the best Thorsten
  17. Sure. And this is why I pulled up that 2009 link from 1000steine. In this contribution, a poll was made by TLG themselves. As far as I know, this poll was not restricted to Germany. It 11 years old, but I was surprised to find a rather coherent picture: When you calculate with the German 10% fraction you arrive at 1 Million AFOLs should the spend about 500€ (= roughly USD). TLGs number for the average 2009 AFOL investment was 1000 USD. When you further speculate that the average spending of money for LEGO in the developed countries (this is where TLG pulls it off) within a factor of 3 the same ... we arrive at anything between 0.2 Mio and 3 Mio AFOLs. I personally believe the 0.2 is too low. I also believe that it seems to be a bit of a stretch to talk about 10 Mio ... But all this is (a little educated) speculation. Was fun to do - to get at least an idea. I'd say there are 1,064,359 (as of now) AFOLs. Anyone challenging that? All the best Thorsten
  18. Yes it is! Wonderful idea!!! Problem for me though: I do build - well ... freestyle - so for me it is "rewarding" to have the Mindcraft folks hanging out around a StarWars diorama built from a StarWars Advent Calendar items ... and a number of other bricks. I guess this does not count as diorama for LEGO sets. Hmmm. Maybe it does: For the 201X StarWars Advent Calendar In any case: Your proposal is brilliant! I shall borrow the digital camera from my daughter ... All the best, Thorsten
  19. @Philo, you did it again! This is absolutely nice. Really cool. Thank you very much! All the best Thorsten
  20. This. I believe this is the core of the matter. The remaining issues (cutting corners, time required for building dioramas etc. pp.) all fall under these restrictions. 1600 million USD in operative profit. And no time for building dioramas? No way. They could make decisions into that direction, but they don't; because the uncountable folks in administrative departments cannot envision that. TLG has become very big. And all the very big companies I happen to have research contracts with - perform as @Mylenium has very nicely summarized. No exceptions. I also do believe in the power of legals today. Yes TLG has for sure have to clearly show what actually is in the box. And dioramas don't. However, they are highly inspiring - in the past I actually tried to steal some of their ideas - and always was short of bricks, because they were so huge. They are royally cheating () in the new catalogs as well. I just grabbed one of the 2020 January - June catalog at Smyth's today. Look very carefully: You can clearly distinguish the rendered bricky stuff from the background; however, the background is very carefully selected, nicely rendered or real stuff (but manipulated) as well. The set renders are very carefully using lighting to match the background appearance. Snow, water, rivers, trees, the moon, stars, under water worlds etc. - all carefully set-up in a way that makes the set look part of the background and often huge. And much more, as it really is (when you take the background away). Oh that is fine, it is how things are done today, I am fully aware of that. People like that. It makes them feel better. Dioramas were brickbuilt for the same thing - but there was a difference. Tyres did not throw dirt around, guns had not bullets flying straight out, with a nice trail of smoke, minifigs were not twisting in a golden whirl of whatever, and boats on a river had no bow wash. Which makes it necessary today to have a tiny, tiny text below the "picture" saying: "Boat does not float" because it actually looks like it does ... Yes, this is the world of today. Created by people who may not know anymore what the idea of LEGO really - well - was. Other than: "Make it look cool, watch out for the legals, and let's see how that stuff sells. It is as it is ... people seem want it that way, otherwise it would not work so nicely. Revenue-wise that is. All the best Thorsten
  21. Hehee - yes noticed that and recalculated a minute ago ... thanks for the heads up though! Best Thorsten
  22. In terms of operating profit: https://www.statista.com/statistics/292286/lego-group-operating-profit/ and http://kidscreen.com/2019/02/27/lego-revenue-increases-4-in-fiscal-2018/ 1,600 Million USD / 10 = 160 Million USD Revenue according to the latter link was: 5,500 Million USD / 10 = 550 Million UDS When each AFOL spends 550 USD per year, then there are 1 Million AFOLs. According to this stone-old link from 2009: https://www.1000steine.de/de/gemeinschaft/forum/?entry=1&amp;id=206987 AFOLs and TFOLs spend 1000 USD per year on LEGO. Which gets the number to very roughly 0.5 Million AFOLs. I bet there are better numbers though ... Best Thorsten
  23. Or Jake Blues (in my all-time favorite movie) saying: "So - I lied to her". I agree with @Roadmonkeytj; hopefully they will. But I doubt that. It is less "will" - rather "rules applied", period. As I said before: This whole BL deal - well - smells. Badly. Best Thorsten
  24. This is so nice! All the apparently weird but so lovely, so crazy - in other words - so LEGO details! Finally, someone who likes to put a lake onto the upper floor of a building. And so much more. I love this - I am building exactly the same way. Think the "not possible" and simply build it with LEGO. I admire your creativity - and your way of making it LEGO reality. Thanks for sharing and all the best! Thorsten
  25. Yes. But chances are I will be dead by then, looking at the mortality rate in my family. No problem here! It is as it is. But I don't like to paint things onto a canvas not in my life's reach. That is for next generations. So for me, it is 75%. Which I would judge "completely nuts" from where I came from. Thing is: I truly believe it is possible. Only with the full suite of "everything"; new means of intelligent power distribution, new means of energy storage, new avenues of making it happen, and most importantly - learning to live together on this rather small planet without believing that homo sapiens on the Northern Hemisphere are any better than folks on the "far" East. But hey, what do I know. I just live here.
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