Jump to content

Retroshift

Eurobricks Vassals
  • Posts

    36
  • Joined

  • Last visited

Everything posted by Retroshift

  1. +1 to MiloNelsiano. Great communication and smooth collectible minifigure trade transaction!
  2. nice, the pantograph misses an overhead catenary wire though ;-)
  3. It's a nice MOC but try staying with the real Lego pieces. Like Fred said, there are already Lego baseball players and fielders and there will probably be more great theme sets in the future.
  4. wow, I like the idea but this seems like a lot of work and very costly; it's nearly impossible to integrate a subway grid below a lego cityscape: you'd have to surround it with rock and add several underground stations to make it realistic; but then again you need to elevate the entire city because otherwise the subway wouldn't be underground, it would be more like a regular tunnel
  5. Lovely design. Is it possible to get the building instructions for this model?
  6. interesting, didn't know, where you from?
  7. Hi, PM me please, I live in Belgium. WANT (all with accessories) 1) Nurse 1) Zombie 4) Soccer player HAVE (all with accessories unless stated otherwise) 2) Witch 3) Mummy 4) Werewolf 5) Cave Woman 6) Genie 6) Minotaur 6) Skater Girl x2 11) Constable x2 11) Mountain Climber x2 12) Swashbuckler 12) Wizard x2 13) Egyptian Warrior x3 13) Evil Wizard 13) Galaxy Trooper x2 13) Goblin 13) King 13) Lady Cyclops 13) Paleontologist Girl 14) Zombie Pirate DI) Stitch 16) Spy x2 17) Retro Spaceman 17) Roman Gladiator NIM) Shark Army Octopus
  8. Transport in a truck I know but cardboard boxes aren't too safe to stack or to protect against moist or damaging impact. And labeling is a waste of time imo. A clear plastic box that can be locked up should be easier. Money is not the issue as those boxes are durable and for multiple purposes.
  9. Hi, I am about to move soon and I was looking for some clear/transparant storage boxes/bins/containers that can store two 32x32 studded base plates next to eachother. Clear material is an advantage because you do not have to label your boxes. I want to move/transport/stock my modular Lego buildings. Therefore, the inner bottom dimensions of the box should be at least 51cm/21inch length, 26cm/11inch width and 30cm/12inch height. It would be nice to also have a clear box that is half the height of this one, in order to store lego sets that are less heigh, or upper floors of modular buildings. When it is exactly half the height but has the same length and width, the two different boxes can be stored very tidily. It would also be best if the boxes are nestable when empty and stackable when full. The boxes should be sturdy (with nerves) and durable, made of polypropylene, have no wheels but a flat bottom and if possible be air- and watertight. Also, lids/latching grip systems seem best for lifting and nesting. I know this is a lot to ask, and I didn't find a single box in Europe/North-America that met these requirements. I'm surprised noone ever seems to have thought about this. So, do you guys have any good ideas/alternatives? How do you store/move entire (modular) Lego sets? Breaking them down and rebuilding them seems a lot of time-wasting.
  10. thanks for your fast reply about your first solution proposition: where to find that .mde-file? about your second solution proposition: I tried it before and it gives me the message: "unknown database type ..."
  11. Hi, nice job with the LDD Manager! I've encountered some problems tho. I have Windows 8.1 x64 - Office 2013 x64 - LDD - LDD Manager - MS Access 2010 Runtime x32. Whenever I try to open Access 2010, I get this error message in Dutch: which briefly means that the database cannot be found. Does this message occur due to a conflict between two different Access versions? I'd rather not uninstall my Office 2013 (with Access included) tho :/ Is it that hard to make LDD Manager and Bricklink work with Access 2013 x64. Soon, it will be the new standard program... Thanks for your reply! Kind regards R.
×
×
  • Create New...