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zux

Eurobricks Counts
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Everything posted by zux

  1. Couple more suggestions - topic in this forum & Bricklink
  2. There are lots of variations for positioning engine in real cars. Check Lotus 7. Use quotes, these aren't getting changed once when original post is edited.
  3. One of my favourite studfull model. Great re-creation in studless, I like it! PS. R is quite often substituted by Я to give name a bit of Russian spirit.
  4. I found not all of my Technic 1 x 7 Bent (4 - 4) beams have LEGO logo. But if they do - it is visible on one of the sides around "+" hole, but nothing between the round ones. Other pieces have marks in between round holes - mould and part IDs without sign of LEGO logo.
  5. You just need to sort the pieces while disassembling A model for B. IKEA STÖDJA (medium size) are very helpful in such cases and don't take much space on a table. For BWE I'd suggest having two.
  6. Top is Track Plain Rail Straight (no slots, no notches on end) Bottom is Liftarm 1 x 7 Bent (4 - 4) Thick
  7. According to: BL - it is Expert Builder Parts Pack Brickset - it is Technical Elements Peeron - it is Supplementary Set
  8. We do :) And I got everything listed there apart from one. Still looking for missing ones.The last digital catalogues I got to download (same as paper one) are for 2015H2: NBB-ET_2HY2015_WEB_LOW.pdf NBB-LV_2HY2015_WEB_LOW.pdf NBB-LT_2HY2015_WEB_LOW.pdf Don't have URLs though. I remember someone find tons of them for 2015H2 and shared URLS on one of LEGO fan webpages. But never figured how they did that. Edit. Found for this year: https://catalogs.lego.com/BrandCatalog/BrandCatalogue2HY2016/NBB/LT/ https://catalogs.lego.com/BrandCatalog/BrandCatalogue2HY2016/NBB/LV/ https://catalogs.lego.com/BrandCatalog/BrandCatalogue2HY2016/NBB/ET/ Lucky me! :)
  9. May I ask how do you find these? I'm interested in digital versions for Estonia, Latvia and Lithuania.
  10. How do you find such channels? It is so minor, barely exist.
  11. Hi, you need to upload your pictures somewhere in the internet (Flickr, Brisafe, Brickshelf, any other picture hosting webpage) and then link it here. This guide should help you.
  12. There are many booklet sizes depending on the set they come with, so this is irrelevant. You can just measure the rest once you find desired booklet size.
  13. 11L axle is currently available in Yellow only.
  14. You got the spirit of B-group perfectly, without copying any of the existing models. Nice solution using 7mm ribbed hoses in suspension to transfer the motion to wheels. I might rebuild suspension on my P205 incorporating this and be able to fit the differential now.
  15. This, for 6 euro:
  16. Clicking "Build it" button on Rebrickable doesn't count towards "owned".
  17. Depends what you need. You've already been advised to look at Rebrickable. It allows you to export to:CSV file Bricklink (XML) BrickStore (BSX) HTML Table HTML Grid You would need to import your LDR file into Rebrickable first, then correct any errors (is any) and do the export you need.
  18. And my mind keeps imagining how you are planning your trip to Chernobyl to get your green bricks back
  19. Picture doesn't show the part clearly. Could be one of those Bionicle/Hero Factory pieces.
  20. Another minifigure series would bring a bit of a chaos. There there are quite a lot of them available on the market at the same time: S14 (we still have these), S15, S16, Disney, DFB.
  21. Originally it came from this post but I'm interested in where did they got the names from. I suspect these could be simply translated from English.
  22. I'm buy more sets than I assemble. ~20 sets (medium to large mostly) in the backlog
  23. I wonder if these are accurate? Eisenpfote Stahlklaue
  24. I thought about it and it enlightened me that the main reason behind this could be storage and time. Let's say LEGO produces some slope in number of colours for current product line. Then each colour needs to be stored separately, so roughly, number of colours = number of boxes. Now if you use printing instead of stickers this means you have to add an additional box for each printed piece. And we have a lot of pieces with stickers. This way storing and managing stock gets complicated. On assembly line, during set production (putting bricks into boxes) the process gets much more complex with printed pieces and consumes more time per set - like grabbing 10 different printed pieces from different boxes rather plain ones from one or two boxes. To keep time short (LEGO needs to make money) there wouldn't be much printed parts in the end and models would look plain without stickers. Just my 2 cents, but I feel there could be some truth here. Maybe they don't produce as much as LEGO in terms of quantity and variety so it is easier to manage the stock?
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