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- Archive-name: LEGO-faq
- Last-modified: December 16, 1994
- Url: http://legowww.homepages.com/faq/FAQ.html
-
- This is the FAQ for the rec.toys.lego newsgroup
- ***********************************************
-
- I compiled it from information in postings, email contributions and
- catalogues. Providers of larger pieces of information are mentioned.
- Please feel free to send corrections and contributions. The usual FAQ
- disclaimers apply.
-
- Please include the word LEGO somewhere in the Subject-line of email.
-
- Tom Pfeifer
- pfeifer@fokus.gmd.de
- phone (Germany) +49-30-25499-288
-
- *** This is still the December version, but now the faq is crossposted to
- misc.kids.info too. The parents there asked me to do so. Have fun.
- *** New since Dec 12:
- LegoLand season 1995
- *** New since April 18:
- lots of minor revisions
-
- The charter of this group:
- ==========================
-
- To provide a forum for the discussion of all things and experiences
- relating to the LEGO(tm), DUPLO(tm) and compatible construction
- toys. Including interesting models that one has built, experiences one has
- had using LEGO, or questions about how to build particular components.
-
- Contents:
- =========
-
- 1. Addresses, Phone numbers, Mail order, Clubs
- 2. Books, papers, videos about LEGO
- 3. Price comparison & profits
- 4. LegoLand theme parks
- 5. Large displays / play rooms
- 6. Computer connections and DACTA
- 7. Plural of LEGO
- 8. LEGO advertising
- 9. How to wash LEGO pieces
- 10. Storing / sorting / using LEGO
- 11. Taking pieces apart
- 12. LEGO history / What does LEGO mean
- 13. Material, Technology and Measurements
- 14. Nice quotations
- 15. FTP and WWW sites
- 16. Substitutes / compatibles / clones
-
- Subject: 1) International addresses, Phone numbers,
- ===================================================
- Mail order, Clubs
- =================
-
- Mail order:
- USA: see Shop at Home
- Europe: Ask your local service department for the
- "LEGO Service catalog of spare parts"
-
- AUSTRALIA
- LEGO Australia P/L.
- P.O. Box 639
- Lane Cove; N.S.W. 2066
- AUSTRIA
- LEGO Handelsgesellschaft mbH.
- Consumer Service
- Albert-Schweitzer-Gasse 11
- A-1147 Wien
- BELGIUM & LUXEMBOURG
- LEGO Consumer Service
- c/o LEGO BELGIUM
- n.v. Leuvenseteenweg 323, 1932 Zaventem
-
- CANADA
-
- LEGO Canada Inc.
- 331 Amber Street
- Markham, Ontario
- Canada L3R 3J7
- Tel. (416) 940-6600
- 1-800-267-5346 ext.222 (Lego catalogues)
- or (905) 887-5346
- Fax (416) 940-0745
- Toll-Free 1-800-387-4387 (Dacta)
- LEGO Club (newsletter, catalog information, etc.)
- P.O. Box 3700
- Markham
- Ontario, L3R 6G9
- Banbury Cross, Winnipeg, Dacta authorized distributor:
- 1-800-665-0090
-
- DENMARK
-
- LEGO A/S
- DK-7190 Billund
- Phone +45 - 75 35 11 88
- Fax +45 - 75 35 33 60
- LegoLand
- Phone +45 - 75 33 13 33
- Fax +45 - 75 35 31 79
-
- FINLAND
- Oy Suomen LEGO Pb
- PL 42; 02701 Kauniainen
- or:
- Oy Suomen LEGO Ab
- PL 46; 02631 Espoo
- Puh.: 90-520 533
- FRANCE
- LEGO France S.A., Service Pie`ces de Rechange
- B.P. 837, F-28011 CHARTRES Ce'dex.
- Te'l.: 37 28 53 68
- GERMANY
- LEGO GmbH
- Service: Regina
- 24594 Hohenwestedt/Holstein
- LEGO-hotline (short story played from tape) (069) 19733
- GREECE
- N. Kouvalias S.A.
- 25, El. Venizelou Ave.
- GR-17671 Kallithea
- HUNGARY
- LEGO Hunga'ria KFT
- 1027 Budapest
- To"lgyfa utca 28
- ITALY
- LEGO S.p.A.
- Servizio Consumatori
- Via Colombo, 12
- 20020 Lainate (MI)
- Tel. 02/93 74 581
- NETHERLANDS, The
- LEGO Nederland B.V.
- Afd. Konsumenten Service
- Postbus 18, 9860 AA Grootegast
- NORWAY
- A/S LEGO System Norge
- Postboks 66
- N-1301 Sandvika
- or: Postboks 38
- 1314 Skui
- Telefon: 67131600
- PORTUGAL
- LEGO, Lda.
- Largo Joao Vaz. 9-A/B/C/D
- 1700 Lisboa
- Tel.: (01) 847 33 41
- SPAIN
- LEGO, S.A.
- Apartado 500
- 28850 Torrejo'n de Ardoz (Madrid)
- SWEDEN
- Svenska LEGO AB
- Fack; S-443 01 Lerum 1
- or: Box 304; S-443 27 LERUM
- Tel: 0302-229 60
- SWITZERLAND
- LEGO Spielwaren AG / LEGO Jouets SA / LEGO Giacattoli SA
- Neuhofstrasse 21
- CH-6340 Baar
- Tel: 042/33 44 66
- UNITED KINGDOM and IRELAND
- LEGO U.K. Ltd., (including club)
- Ruthin Road,
- Wrexham,
- Clwyd LL13 7TQ
-
- Customer Service - 0978 296 247
- LEGO Club - 0978 296 290
- Service, spare parts - 0978 296 233
- Anything else, DACTA UK - 0978 290 900
-
- The LEGO club costs 3.95 pounds (4.50 pounds for Ireland). They
- need: name, address, post code, sex, date of birth. Cheques made
- payable to 'LEGO U.K. Ltd' or credit card.
-
- UNITED STATES
-
- LEGO Systems, Inc.
- 555 Taylor Road
- P.O. Box 1600
- Enfield, CT, 06083-1600
- 1-800-243 4870
- LEGO Systems, Inc.
- Consumer Affairs
- P.O. Box 1138
- Enfield, CT 06083
- 1-800-422-5346 (9am-9pm Mon-Fri Eastern time,
- pseudonym "Susan Williams")
- (203) 749-2291
- LEGO Shop at Home Service
- P.O. Box 1310
- Enfield, CT 06083
- Tel.(203) 763-4011, -4012, and -6800 (8:00 - 8:00 EST)
- 1-800-835-4386
- 1-800-453-4652
- (catalog available, no charge for shipping, 3-5 weeks for
- delivery)
- LEGO Builders Club
- PO Box 5000
- Unionville, CT 06087-5000
- (one year $7.95, two years $14.00; membership kit and free
- bonus mini set, birthday mailing, Mania magazine, ...)
- LEGO Dacta
- 555 Taylor Road
- P.O. Box 1600
- Enfield, CT 06083-1600
- orders and info: 1-(800)-527-8339
- 1-(203)-745-1730
- fax: 1-(203)-763-2466
- semi-official email: LegoDacta@aol.com
- (Dan, for product info, no orders)
-
- Subject: 2) Books, papers, videos about LEGO
- ============================================
-
- The World of LEGO Toys
- Henry Wiencek
- Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers, New York
- Times Mirror Books
- TS2301.T7W474 1987 688.7'2 86-23200
- ISBN 0-8109-1790-4 (hardcover)
- ISBN 0-8109-2362-9 (paperback)
-
- Where does it come from? LEGO brick.
- Text and editing: Kathy Henderson
- illustrated by Diane Tippell
- Art Director: Debbie MacKinnon
- 22 pages, fully illustrated in full color
- Morristown, NJ: Silver Burdett, 1986.
- Library of Congress: TS2301.T7T525 1986
- Dewey: 688.7'2
- ISBN: 0-382-09362-3
- The book traces the manufacture of Lego bricks all the way from
- the sucking of oil out of the earth to the placing of the finished
- bricks in the hands of children. While this edition is supposedly
- "adapted" for the United States market, it still has a definite
- British feel to it. Type is large and writing is simple enough for
- seven-year-olds. A delightful, if not deep, the book does the job
- for its intended audience. (Wes Loder (MWL2@psuvm.psu.edu))
-
- The Epistemology and Learning Group at the MIT Media Laboratory,
- has made some of their papers and publications available via anonymous
- FTP from
- cherupakha.media.mit.edu:/pub/el-publications/EL-Memos. Some
- papers of interest to the LEGO community are:
-
- /pub/el-publications/Theses/Martin/, Apr 29, 1994
- "From Circuits to Control: Learning Engineering by Designing
- LEGO Robots"
- by Fred Martin
- memo13.PS.Z
- memo13.tar.Z
- memo13cvr.PS
- "BRAITENBERG CREATURES"
- by David W. Hogg, Fred Martin, and Mitchel Resnick
- This paper describes 12 autonomous ``creatures'' built with
- Electronic Bricks. Electronic Bricks are specially-modified LEGO
- bricks with simple electronic circuits inside. Although each
- Electronic Brick is quite simple, the bricks can be combined to
- form robotic creatures with interesting and complex behaviors,
- similar to the fictional machines described in Valentino
- Braitenberg's book Vehicles (1984).
- memo10.PS.Z
- memo10.hqx
- "CHILDREN AND ARTIFICIAL LIFE"
- by Mitchel Resnick and Fred Martin
- Artificial Life is a new field in which researchers study living
- systems by trying to build artificial versions of them. In this paper,
- we argue that ideas from Artificial Life research can and should
- be shared with children. We describe various computational tools
- (including LEGO/Logo and Electronic Bricks) that students can
- use to build artificial creatures. By building and programming
- artificial creatures (and discussing and thinking about how the
- creatures behave), children can explore some of the central ideas
- of Artificial Life -- ideas like feedback, levels of organization, and
- emergence.
- memo8.PS.Z
- memo8.hqx
- "LEGO/LOGO: LEARNING THROUGH AND ABOUT
- DESIGN"
- by Mitchel Resnick and Stephen Ocko, September 1990
- Most classroom problem-solving activities focus on analytic
- thinking: decomposing problems into subproblems. Students rarely
- get the opportunity to design and invent things. In this paper, we
- describe how LEGO/Logo, a computer-based robotics
- environment, supports a variety of design activities. We examine
- how students using LEGO/Logo can learn important
- mathematical and scientific ideas through their design activities,
- while also learning about the design process itself.
-
- Israel Shenker
- Playing with blocks can be a fine art at this theme park. in:
- Smithsonian magazine v. 19, June 1988, p. 120-4+
-
- A video is available from Enfield, CT called "How Lego Bricks Are
- Made". It runs 12-15 min and takes the viewer through the various
- production and packaging stages. It also talks briefly about the design and
- manufacture of the molds or "tools". Unfortunately it does not dwell at
- all on things like how sets are designed, how themes are chosen, etc.
- Nonetheless it's informative and well worth the slight hassle of getting
- one's hands on it.
- You can "check the video out" by sending a $20 check made out to
- LEGO Systems, Inc. to:
- Ms. B. St. Pierre, Lego Systems, Inc., P.O. Box 1138, Enfield, CT 06083
- You can keep the video for two weeks and upon its return LEGO will
- mail back your original check. Simple. --- Mario (marpi0591@aol.com)
- marpi0591@aol.com
-
- Subject: 3) Price comparison & profits
- ======================================
-
- thorinn@diku.dk (Lars Henrik Mathiesen):
-
- In April 1993 LEGO published their results for 1992. The mother firm
- reported a net profit (before Danish taxes, probably) of US$100,000,000,
- while the net sales in the North American market were given as
- US$4,000,000,000.
-
- Somebody calculated the price per piece in the 'old days' as $0.10. Today
- it may be between $0.10 and $0.30. Count, calculate and mail me (Tom)
- your comments.
-
- LegoLand, Billund, Denmark is reported to sell at list prices, no factory
- discounts.
-
- Subject: 4) LegoLand theme park
- ===============================
-
- Billund, Denmark, Europe:
- +++++++++++++++++++++++++
-
- Billund is in Jylland (Jutland), a town of only just over 4500 people
- somewhere between Esbjerg (65 km) and Vejle (35 km).
-
- Tel. +45 - 7533 1333, Fax +45 - 7535 3179
- Legoland Park, Nordmarksvej 9, DK-7190 Billund
-
- (Legoland official:)
- Entrance fees for 1994: 1 day 2 days Season Groups (>=20)
- Little Kids (3-13) DKK 80 DKK 130 DKK 195 DKK 60
- Big Kids (14-59) DKK 95 DKK 160 DKK 240 DKK 75
- Senior Kids (60-) DKK 60 DKK 100 DKK 150 DKK 50
-
- (increase since 1993: little kids +5, big kids +0)
- When admission has been paid, all rides and exhibitions are free.
- The Traffic School has a separate booking and payment system.
- Guides and coach drivers are free and get free meal coupons.
-
- (end of Legoland official)
-
- In 1995 the whole park (both indoor and outdoor) will open:
- Spring: April 8 - June 6 --- 10 am - 8 pm (activities - 6 pm)
- Peak season: July 1 - Aug. 13 --- 10 am - 9 pm (activities - 7 pm)
- Late season: Aug. 14 - Oct. 1 --- 10 am - 8 pm (activities - 6 pm)
- (this is 3 weeks earlier and 2 weeks longer then 1994)
-
- In the previous years (until 1993) the indoor exhibits (8000 sq m) were
- open until December.
-
- The Legoland driving school is for kids aged 8...13. Examples of the
- replications in the park and their piece counts, found by Mike Weldy
- (bullwnkl@mentor.cc.purdue.edu) in a magazine:
-
- o Mt. Rushmore (American monument to Presidents Washington,
- Jefferson, Lincoln, and T. Roosevelt) (1.5 million regular bricks
- and 40K Duplo)
- o Billund Airport (complete with airplanes) (687,860 bricks)
- o Port of Copenhagen (3 million bricks)
- o The Statue of Liberty (1.4 million bricks)
- o Big Chief Sitting Bull (1.2 million bricks)
- o a buffalo hunt (2.5 million)
-
- fin@unet.umn.edu (Craig A. Finseth) and kokdg@diku.dk (Bo Kjellerup)
- have details how to get there:
-
- AIR:
- ----
-
- From Europe: Fly to Billund. (Yes, there are flights directly to Billund
- from most major European cities.) The airport, which was at first build
- by the LEGO company, is the second busiest (behind Copenhagen) in
- Denmark. The first model of the airport was made out of LEGO bricks.
-
- From the US or anywhere else: Fly to Koebenhavn (Copenhagen), then
- to Billund.
-
- Once in Billund, walk. It's just across the parking lot, about five minutes
- away. The Legoland Hotelis half a mile from the airport.
-
- TRAIN:
- ------
-
- You can't directly. Billund is about as far as you can get from any
- railway lines and still be on land in Europe. Since the town was
- essentially "put on the map" by LEGO Systems and that company didn't
- really get going until well after World War II, I would guess that they
- missed out on the railway building era. In any event, you can take a train
- to Vejle (nice town) and a bus to Billund (about half an hour).
-
- If you arrive with a ferry from England (Harwich - Esbjerg), take the
- train from the ferry to Esbjerg rail station, and go by bus to Billund
- (about one hour).
-
- BUS / AUTO:
- -----------
-
- The bus goes there. A main road goes there. As I recall, the airport and
- LegoLand parking lots are one and the same.
-
- Store:
- ------
-
- There is a large store and it carries the entire current line. It does _not_
- carry old, non-standard, or discontinued kits. All sales are at list price. If
- you're from the US, the only reason to buy anything is that the current
- line is somewhat different in Europe than the US, so you might find a
- new kit (and wince when you have to pay for it). Price is a smaller
- consideration for other countries.
-
- Features:
- ---------
-
- Family Hotel LEGOLAND, open all year round, Tel. +45 - 75 33 12 44
- Banking: Den Danske Bank has a branch in the Information Office.
- Handicapped: Walking-impaired and wheelchair users can go all over the
- park.
-
- More:
- -----
-
- To keep the FAQ in limits, I'll email you the heartwarming descriptions
- by some visitors, if you email a Subject line 'LEGOland Billund request'
- to pfeifer@fokus.gmd.de
-
- New international theme parks
- +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++
-
- ** USA ** flournoy@cs.stanford.edu (Ray Flournoy):
-
- LEGO has decided on its US site for a LEGOLand Family Park, and it
- is:
- Carlsbad, California, a city near San Diego. It will open in 1999,
- probably.
-
- ** UK ** Tom Gardner knows:
-
- Legoland UK will be on the site of the old Windsor Safari Park in,
- surprise, Windsor. It will probably be finished in 1996.
-
- Subject: 5) Large displays / play rooms:
- ========================================
-
- The Seattle Children's Museum (Seattle Center) has a large DUPLO
- playroom. They have also had LEGO exhibits from time to time.
- merritt@u.washington.edu (Ethan A Merritt)
-
- The Mall of America, in Bloomington, Minnesota (USA), has a Legoland
- store near the center of the mall. It has a large area for play, with tables
- and chairs. The tops of the tables are LEGO, and there are basins set in
- the center where loose LEGO bricks are stored. There are also huge
- models there: some hang from the ceiling by cables, others stand tall on
- the ground, with moving parts and blinking lights. And best of all: ALL
- AGES ARE WELCOME.
- nudnik@camelot.bradley.edu (Steven Parks)
-
- ... The sculptures range from dinosaurs, circus performers, and animals,
- to scientific models of such things as the space shuttle.
- ... there are two *MEGA LARGE SIZE* lego blocks located in one part
- of the surrounding parking lot that you might want to take a picture of.
- foo@drycas.club.cc.cmu.edu (FOO)
-
- Currently (until Jan. 1995?) the Chicago Museum of Science and
- Industry presents the LEGO Imagination Displays (a one story tall robot
- made out of duplo, statue of liberty, a big red bridge that spanned a small
- valley and had a railroad track on it that a guy on a little railroad car
- went back and fourth on, a working LEGO clock (that had all kinds of
- moving working pieces), a yellow ball `shoots and ladders' type LEGO
- structure (that had a LEGO elevator that moved balls up to the top of
- this thing and then the rolled down causing all kinds of things to happen
- - lights, windmills etc., interactive LEGO displays: robots movable by
- remote control, or for practice programing). T-Shirts for sale. -- Jeff
- (crites@cc.purdue.edu)
-
- pattie.fulton@sfwmd.gov (Pattie Everett Fulton) remembers an exibition
- in a museum in Frankfurt, Germany, for architectural demonstrations.
-
- Subject: 6) Computer connections and DACTA
- ==========================================
-
- See address of DACTA in the address section.
-
- Fred Martin from the MIT provides:
- LEGO Dacta is the educational branch of the LEGO company (which
- has its U.S. headquarters in Enfield, CT). Dacta sells the LEGO Technic
- product line -- the geared and motorized version of the LEGO system.
-
- Call Dacta and get their catalog, which has many LEGO Technic kits.
- Recommended kits are the 1038 Technic Universal Buggy (a specialized
- kit for building a small LEGO vehicle with a dual motor drive; about
- US$60), the 1032 Technic II with Motorized Transmission (a small
- general-purpose kit including one motor and one battery pack; about
- US$76), and the 9605 Technic Resource Set (a large general-purpose kit
- including two motors and two battery packs; about US$200).
-
- Catalog names:
-
- o "Making Connections" (new 1994)
- o "Small Hands: Big Imaginations"
- o "Gear Up for Learning" (probably obsolete)
-
- Dacta charges 5% shipping cost (while Shop at Home shippes free).
- Orders can be placed with a credit card over the phone or through the
- mail with a check. Schools can order with a purchase order. This is only
- for the US. For other countries you should contact your local Dacta
- representatives. Most countries should have one. If not, Denmark should
- be able to let you know where you can order from.
-
- vaughn@pluto.cis.udel.edu (Chris Vaughn) found in the Dacta catalog:
- MS-DOS or Apple II Slot Card Pack - US$161.50 includes slot card,
- cable, LEGO TC logo software and reference guides. (card is for most
- MS-DOS machines, except IBM PS/2 Models 50 and above or any other
- microchannel computer)
-
- Interface Box and Transformer - US$188.00 This box is what you
- connect all your motors, lights, and sensors to. It has 2 inputs, and 6
- outputs (3 if you want to use three motors and have them all be
- reversible).
-
- carol@edfua0.ctis.af.mil (Andy Carol):
- The Lego Control Lab for Macintosh and/or PC is available for about
- US$600. It connects to any computer via serial cable (RS-232), has 8
- different output ports which can control motors, lights, and sounds. It has
- 8 different inputs for buttons, angles, thermal, etc. This is _NOT_ a plug
- in card, but rather an external device hooked up via serial cable. It is
- programmed with LOGO, and has a really nice graphical system under
- Mac and Windows. It's also possible to use a C and C++ API for all
- control functions.
-
- jkoch@ee.ryerson.ca (jim koch) provides:
- The price for Apple or IBM starter pack US$798.00 (Jan 92).
-
- vaughn@pluto.cis.udel.edu (Chris Vaughn) writes:
- The Mini Board is a "miniature microprocessor-based controller board
- designed for control of small robotic devices". It was designed at the MIT
- Media Laboratory. This board is perfect for controlling LEGO devices
- (and in fact looks to be much better than the interface designed by
- LEGO).
-
- All of the information about the Mini Board is available at an FTP site
- (the address is "cherupakha.media.mit.edu (18.85.0.47)")). This includes
- diagrams and a parts list. The tech reference is a 47-page Postscript
- document.
-
- There is a mailing list at listserv@oberon.com. Send the body
- "SUBSCRIBE ROBOT-BOARD your_name" to this email address, the
- body HELP for help.
-
- The purpose of this mailing list is to discuss robot controller boards, and
- robot control in general. In particular, this list will be used to support the
- Miniboard 2.0 and 6.270 board design by Fred Martin and Randy Sargent
- of MIT. However, any and all traffic related to robot controllers is
- welcome.
-
- Documentation about the MIT 6.270 is also available by FTP:
- aeneas.mit.edu [18.71.0.38] in the ~ftp/pub/ACS/6.270 directory.
-
- slh@toklas.HQ.Ileaf.COM (Stephen L. Hain) contributes:
- May I suggest adding Paradigm Software's Pearl Controller and Object
- Logo to this section. The Pearl Controller connects between a Macintosh
- serial port and a LEGO Robotics controller, and it is daisy chainable.
- Object Logo has an extension consisting of a set of object-oriented
- robotics programming features, allowing event-driven robot control.
- Contact Paradigm at 617 576-7675. (Stephen works for them.)
-
- Subject: 7) Plural of LEGO
- ==========================
-
- While most people point out that they just say LEGOs,
- lunatic@netcom.com (Lunatic Johnathan Bruce E'Sex) dug out:
-
- One catalogue, dated 1980, has the following on its back page:
-
- Dear Parents and Children
- The word LEGO(R) is a brand name and is very special to all of
- us in the LEGO Group Companies. We would sincerely like your
- help in keeping it special. Please always refer to our bricks as
- 'LEGO Bricks or Toys' and not 'LEGOS.' By doing so, you will
- be helping to protect and preserve a brand of which we are very
- proud and that stands for quality the world over. Thank you!
-
- Susan Williams
- Consumer Services
-
- Subject 8) LEGO advertising
- ===========================
-
- LEGO is new toy every day.
- LEGO c'est un nouveau jouet chaque jour.
- LEGO es un juguete nuevo cada dia.
- LEGO ist jeden Tag ein neues Spielzeug.
- LEGO e' un gioco nuovo ogni giorno.
-
- LEGO - eine Sprache der Kinder (LEGO - a language of the children).
- LEGO zeigt, was Kinder koennen (LEGO shows what children can).
-
- European LEGO advertising is quite good - they just show an animated
- film of lots of LEGO being assembled, disassembled, reassembled etc. a
- few times over in 15 seconds. Some of them are quite impressive.
-
- Subject: 9) How to wash LEGO pieces
- ===================================
-
- From a LEGO catalog...
- DUPLO and LEGO SYSTEM toys can be washed by hand, using
- warm water -- max. 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 Celsius) -- and
- a mild liquid dish detergent. Storage temperature max. 104 degrees
- Fahrenheit = 40 Celsius. Electric parts are not washable.
- jc@gmd.de (Juergen Christoffel) and gilmer@gandalf.ca (Jack Gilmer)
- say:
- Put your LEGO bricks into a pillow case or a mesh bag (the kind
- for washing small articles of clothes) and wash in your washing
- machine at a low temperature. Tested in kindergarten once a year.
- (Be sure to put no metal or electric parts into the machine, and
- wash clear pieces seperately by hand)
- alekz@library.welch.jhu.edu (Alekz Vermont) says:
- stick them in the tub w/warm sudsy water and swish about... let
- soak. swish more. drain tub. spray with shower (to rinse) and let
- air-dry...
- Do not wash your LEGO people -- their faces come off!
- ... but mengsoo@bnr.ca (Meng Soo) notes:
- There's nothing wrong with that. I'd pretend that their faces
- melted, and became faceless mutant LEGO people. The fun really
- started when I discovered permanent markers...
-
- Subject: 10) Storing / sorting / using LEGO
- ===========================================
-
- One of the greatest ideas was:
- Keep them on a bed sheet: spread the sheet for playing - fold it together
- to tide up in seconds, and put it in whatever container you like.
-
- Most netters strongly object sorting their pieces and enjoy sitting on the
- floor having their pieces all around them.
-
- The variety and size of technic elements may still demand some sorting.
- Hardware stores sell storage units with 18-60 drawers, intended for
- sorting nuts and bolts and the like. The transparent plastic drawers
- (which can include transparent dividers) allow one to see the contents of
- a drawer without opening it.
-
- Subject: 11) Taking pieces apart
- ================================
-
- People use teeth, fingernails, screwdrivers, penknives, ...
-
- LEGO now sells a small handle-like gizmo called a "brick separator". It
- works GREAT! It's under US$2 and also found in some basic buckets.
- [part number 821]
-
- dholmes@netcom.com (Dennis Holmes) means: What you need is TWO
- separator tools. Stick one on top and one underneath, with the handles
- facing the same direction, and then squeeze the handles together. Works
- like magic!
-
- 1x1x1s are easy - twist one of them through 45 degrees, and then prise
- them apart with fingers.
-
- To separate 2x1 flats crj10@phx.cam.ac.uk (Clive Jones) writes:
-
- Let: -
- ...be the 1-wide cross-section of the 2x1 block, so:
- -
- -
-
- represents the two blocks stuck together. Now find two 12x2 plates.
- Apply them like this:
-
- ------------ <- wiggle
- -
- -
- ------------ wiggle ->
-
- ...and wiggle them backwards and forwards *hard*. Within a second or
- so, you'll find that all but the most stubborn plates separate, and getting
- the 2x1s off the 12x2s is then easy.
-
- Joe Garlicki (jg6a+@andrew.cmu.edu) has another way to separate 2x1
- flats. First, take two 2x1 blocks (the regular size). Put one on top of the
- 2x1 flats, and put the other one on the bottom. Then, snap the two 2x1
- flats apart. After that, it's easy to get the 2x1 flats off of the 2x1 blocks.
- Note: This method can be applied to other small plate sizes as well.
-
- malakai@potomac.engin.umich.edu (Jeff Jahr) uses
-
- ... the small black mechanics wrench from some of the old space sets. The
- jaw of wrench is designed so it can grab onto a LEGO bump - absolutely
- useless for prying - but the other end is flattened like a screwdriver. They
- seem to be made from a slightly softer plastic than the blocks to avoid
- scratches.
-
- Subject: 12) LEGO history / What does LEGO mean
- ===============================================
-
- While LEGO comes from Danish "leg godt", "lego" means 'I assemble"
- in Latin.
-
- The recent "20th anniversary" refers to the LEGO company in the US
- (1973), not to LEGO itself. It was available before because Samsonite
- had a license to produce it.
-
- Andreas Henning (d2henan@dtek.chalmers.se) and Timo (tho@tik.vtt.fi)
- say:
-
- The LEGO patent has expired some years ago.
-
- nad@cl.cam.ac.uk Neil Dodgson found:
-
- My "The Art of LEGO" book says that the company name, LEGO, came
- from the Danish "Leg godt", roughly translated as "Play well". The
- company originally made wooden toys during the depression. They also
- made yo-yos for a while, during the yo-yo craze. Unfortunately this left
- them with warehouses full of yo-yos when the craze suddenly stopped; so
- the boss just cut all the yo-yos in half, and used them as wheels for toy
- trucks, etc. The same guy invented the LEGO bricks, initially without the
- tubes inside; the addition of these tubes meant that the blocks held
- together really well, and sales took off. I think it was in the mid to late
- '50s that LEGO decided to drop all its other products and just make the
- bricks (risky...).
-
- (Somebody found in a book that LEGO dropped their other product lines
- when a fire burned down the building housing them. Thus, it was not as
- risky to sell the bricks exclusively. It would probably have been riskier to
- re-capitalize the wooden toy line than to drop it.)
-
- Bo Kjellerup (kokdg@diku.dk):
- The fire was caused by the son of the boss, Kirk Kristiansen, who was
- playing in their garage/hobby room aside the factory and set it all on fire.
- BTW, the son's name was misspelled in the church's annuals, so he is
- spelled with 'K' now.
-
- "The Art of LEGO" says that one reason LEGO survives is that it
- constantly adapts itself to the modern world; e.g. the original LEGO
- trains, and now the remodeled one that will run off the mains. Perhaps
- all these new special blocks are a reflection of a society that wants instant
- gratification, rather than spending a few hours building a model?
-
- found by r1b6116@zeus.tamu.edu / Ken Blair:
-
- Taken without permission from _Brick Kicks_ #1 ("The official
- magazine of the LEGO builders club", USA) (circa 1987 or 88?)
-
- "Bricks & Pieces: The LEGO Story"
-
- Did you know that 300 million children have owned LEGO sets since
- they were first made? And that you are one of the 68 million kids from
- around the world who like to play with LEGO building bricks today!
- Here's the story of how we grew...
-
- Although the international LEGO Group is now very large, it is still a
- family-run company that started out quite small. More than 50 years
- ago, a carpenter named Ole Kirk Christiansen and his 12-year old son,
- Godtfred, started making toys in the little town of Billund, Denmark.
- Plastic had not been invented yet, so they made toy cars, trucks, yo-yos,
- animals, and other toys out of wood. They decided that a good name for
- their company would be LEGO, which means "play well" in Danish, and
- also, they discovered, happens to mean "put together" in Latin! Ole and
- Godtfred were very proud of their workmanship, and adopted the LEGO
- motto that "only the best is good enough."
-
- When plastic became available after World War II, LEGO began to make
- both wooden and plastic toys. It was about this time that the idea of
- plastic LEGO bricks was introduced. Godtfred loved to build with these
- colorful new pieces, and was continually putting them together and
- taking them apart to build new designs. In fact, it was Godtfred who
- perfected the special design that makes every single LEGO brick fit
- together in any combination, over and over again. The first LEGO
- building set was made more than 30 years ago- and the bricks from that
- set can still be used with even the newest LEGO building set of today!
-
- LEGO bricks first appeared in the United States in 1961 and quickly
- became as popular here as in Europe. The international LEGO group is
- now worldwide, and is run by Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen, Old Kirk
- Christiansen's grandson. As the company keeps growing, so do the kids of
- exciting LEGO kits that are now sold in 129 different countries ... from
- DUPLO preschool to FABULAND, LEGO BASIC, to LEGOLAND,
- LEGO boats and trains to LEGO TECHNIC SETS. In fact, this year
- alone, we will make more than six billion bricks and building pieces for
- all the LEGO lovers 'round the world- like you!
-
- From _The_World_Of_LEGO_Toys_, by Henry Wiencek, Harry N.
- Abrams, Inc., 1987,
- quoted by dulcaoin@cats.ucsc.edu (joshua):
-
- 1949 was the revolutionary year for the company--it was in that year
- that the company introduced something then called the "automatic
- binding brick." For years Ole Kirk [found of LEGO] had been making
- wooden blocks in the traditional European style--simple, handmade
- cubes that could be stacked one on top of the other. When he began
- producing plastic toys he copied the old wooden design in the new
- material, but the plastic cubes didn't seem quite right..."It occured to us
- that the bricks would become an even better toy...if they could be 'locked'
- together." What emerged...was later to become the real LEGO brick.
-
- devaney@ACFcluster.NYU.EDU: Before LEGO was in the US market,
- the luggage manufacturer Samsonite has had a manufacturing license,
- but without much success in the toy market, so LEGO took the license
- back and opened a shop in Connecticut.
-
- Subject: 13) Material, Technology and Measurements
- ==================================================
-
- The LEGO motto: Det bedste er ikke for godt. (Only the best is good
- enough.) Actually a word-by-word translation would be, "The best is
- not too good" - in which "not too good" parses nicely into the idiom of a
- Jutlandish understatement, making the between-the-lines statement be,
- "Actually, we'd prefer to deliver rather better than the best". Henning
- Makholm (hem@math.ku.dk)
-
- from Wiencek's The World of LEGO Toys, paraphrased by
- saint@cats.ucsc.edu (Dan):
- LEGO brick are made out of ABS (acrylonitrile butadiene
- styrene), it is heated to 450 degrees Fahrenheit (232 C), then
- injected into a mold which is kept at 85 degrees. The pressure used
- to mold the bricks varies from 24 to 150 tons. The molds are kept
- within one degree of the 85 degree specification. ABS absorbs
- moisture, so the entire molding hall is kept at 50% humidity. The
- allowable tolerance for a brick is two-hundredths of a millimeter,
- or about eight ten-thousands of an inch.
-
- My xwebster says: ABS: a tough rigid plastic used esp. for automobile
- parts and building materials.
-
- bullwnkl@mentor.cc.purdue.edu (Bullwinkle J. Moose / Mike Weldy)
- found in Israel Shenker's article:
-
- The ABS granules is dyed to LEGO's secret specifications in factories in
- Holland and Germany. Molds for the pieces are made in a factory in
- Germany and two factories in Switzerland. The margin of error in the
- molds can only be 5 one-thousands of a millimeter -- less than the
- thickness of a human hair! For security reasons, LEGO inters worn-out
- molds in the concrete of its new buildings.
-
- There are LEGO factories in Billund(3), Switzerland, Brazil, South
- Korea, and the United States (in Enfield, Connecticut).
-
- More Random Lego tests: Random pieces are selected and tested for size,
- sharp points or edges, damage when dropped or compressed, torsion,
- flammability, toxicity, colorfastness, and "clutch power"(resistance to
- separation). Optimal clutch power comes after 8 to 10 couplings.
-
- One last Lego test: Pneumatic-powered steel jaws mimic children's jaws,
- treating the pieces to the ultimate test-- trial by biting!
-
- Two 2X4 bricks can be joined 24 different ways. Six can be joined
- 102,981,500 different ways.
-
- Geometry, provided by Jef Poskanzer (jef@netcom.com): Thanks to
- various pointers, especially the MIT course notes, here is the metric
- version. **All measurements in mm.**
-
- |side: __ __ __ __ top: +----------------+
- | +----------------+ | () () () () |
- | | | | |
- | | | | () () () () |
- | +----------------+ +----------------+
- |spacing of knob centers: 8
- |diameter of knobs: 5
- |height of block: 9.6
- |
- |end: __ __ bottom: +================+
- | +--------+ # -- -- -- #
- | | | # ( )( )( ) #
- | | | # -- -- -- #
- | +--------+ +================+
- |height of knobs: 1.7
- |thickness of block walls: 1.5
- |outer diameter of cylinders: 6.31
- |thickness of cylinder walls: 0.657
-
- (height of block) =
- (spacing of knob centers) * 6 / 5
- (thickness of block walls) =
- ((spacing of knob centers) - (diameter of knobs)) / 2
- (height of knobs) =
- (height of block) / 3 - (thickness of block walls)
- (outer diameter of cylinders) =
- sqrt(2) * (spacing of knob centers) - (diameter of knobs)
- (thickness of cylinder walls) =
- ((outer diameter of cylinders) - (diameter of knobs)) / 2
-
- Subject: 14) Nice quotations
- ============================
-
- I'm surprised that no one has ever mentioned the glorious sound of
- LEGO. LEGO bricks are about the only present you can tell what is by
- shaking it.
- chelius@studsys.mscs.mu.edu (The Shaggy T.A.)
-
- I can hear that restful sound of LEGO pieces in my mind even now. It's
- kind of like the peaceful sound of a waterfall, but more tinkly.
- kurisuto@chopin.udel.edu (Sean J. Crist)
-
- LEGO is not a toy. - It's a way of life.
- mikes@bioch.ox.ac.uk (Mike Smith)
-
- Subject: 15) FTP and WWW sites
- ==============================
-
- Paul Gyugyi (gyugyi@earthsea.stanford.edu) maintains an FTP archive
- of LEGO information. It is located at earthsea.stanford.edu in
- ~ftp/pub/lego, there is a README there that describes what the site
- contains, for example CAD, faq, games, images, sets, uploads. The latter
- is an upload area for contributions.
-
- A World Wide Web (WWW) server is also available, the URL for it is
- http://legowww.homepages.com. It contains a lot of information that
- has been collected from the newsgroup and the FTP site, maintained by
- David Koblas (koblas@netcom.com). You may also be interested in
- crow@coos.dartmouth.edu (Preston F. Crow)'s pages at PC's LEGO
- Empire http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~crow/lego/empire.html
-
- Subject: 16) Substitutes / compatibles / clones
- ===============================================
-
- Finally some information about similar products. Most people state that
- the quality is much lower then original LEGO pieces.
-
- erikred@uiuc.edu (Erik Robert Wilson) TYCO are reported to sell
- compatible basic bricks in 500/1000-piece buckets for approx. $0.03 per
- piece. They also made that LEGO-looking telephone. There are LEGO
- compatible "superblocks" as well as DUPLO compatible ones. They are
- of fair quality (for a clone) in different colors (orange, green, hot pink,
- neon yellow, regular pink, violet, sky blue, pastels), including 1/2 height
- plates (not LEGO 1/3). If you mix them with your originals, you can use
- non LEGO colors so they are easily distinguishable.
-
- Mini-Micro Blocks are found in 1000-piece buckets about $0.02 per
- piece. There are large quantities of the basic 2x4, 2x2, and 1x2 bricks,
- more tight but reported to be fully LEGO-compatible. Made by a
- company called Ritvik, which also makes Mega-Micro blocks.
- ed@odi.com: The Ritvik Mega-Blox are giant-scale; a 1x1 brick is about
- 2cm x 2cm by 8 cm. The knobs are only a tiny bit shorter than the base of
- the bricks, and they don't hold together via friction; turn a model upside
- down and it falls apart. The charm is that they're great for very small
- (pre-Duplo) children who don't have the strength or coordination to play
- with Duplo or LEGO.
- Ritvik Toys Inc., P.O. Box 1408, Champlain, NY 12919
- HQ in Quebec, Canada. Offices in U.K., Australia, and New Zealand.
-
- Ken Koleda (KOLEDA_K@msb.flint.umich.edu):
- Tandem Bricks, made in Taiwan Tandem Toys, Rolling Hills, CA 90724
- Notes: Largest brick is the 2x4 full height. A large portion of these bricks
- are 1x flats. The flats are the same height as LEGO (1/3). Colors are
- similar to lego, except with a good number of gray flats and greens bricks.
- Quality is similar to other clones, generally somewhat below LEGO
- (loose, but workable).
-
- PEDLO is reported to be similar, but not compatible with LEGO. Their
- plates are only 1/2 height of full bricks, not 1/3 like LEGO.
-
- mckinney@adonis.ee.queensu.ca (Alexander (Sandy) McKinney):
- Qubo ville Basic Building Bricks, look identical except for the LEGO
- missing from each of the studs. Assortment of 23 standard pieces, 2x4,
- 2x2, 1x4, 1x2, 1x1, about CAN$ 2.95
- Made in Italy by GOMPLA S.n.c. di Bisello D.&C., Via Emila Romagna
- 13/15, 35020 Saonara (PD) - Italy Imported by Wallace Companies Inc.,
- USA, 175 Citation Court, Birmingham, Al 35209 CANADA, WSP
- Marketing Int., 49 Valleybrook Dr., Con Mills, Ontario, M3B 2S6
-
- elgaard@diku.dk (Niels Elgaard Larsen) says:
- Some years ago LEGO did have a lot of trouble with a far east company
- that made LEGO clones called "0937". I wonder if they placed them
- upside-down in the stores.
-
- ** end of rec.toys.lego faq **
-