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(www.thewave.engineer)
scatbot | 4 hours ago | 32 Comment
On the other hand, a lot what the company does today just sucks. Set prices are outrageous. Printed bricks get replaced with stickers and many sets feel like display models than something you can play with. The Mindstorms/NXT line had huge potential but then just sort of fizzled out. And the push towards smartphone-dependent toys feels weird. Who actually wants their kids staring at a phone to play Lego?
It's so sad, because the core product is basically perfect.
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vidarh | 4 hours ago | 5 Comment
A detail I didn't realise until I was an adult was the difference between the black and grey technic connecting pins. They look interchangeable, and for a lot of things they are.
But there's a fraction of a mm raised lines on the black one, and it's enough to produce significantly more friction, and that difference is utilised in designs.
And apprently there's now a new version of the black one, and people notice these things, and measure them - this article gives an idea of just how these tiny changes, well below tolerances for some of the "knockoffs", can produce a different effect:
https://ramblingbrick.com/2021/01/27/what-if-they-introduced...
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wek | 4 hours ago | 5 Comment
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butILoveLife | 4 hours ago | 5 Comment
Tons of dimensions on 100k/yr injection molded(and otherwise) parts have similar dimensions. (Although admittedly, after testing in pre-production, I don't know if they are tested again and have drift)
Lego has been making the same parts for decades and their parts are extremely simple. I imagine their 1-off parts for intellectual property based sets do not have this requirement.
I think Lego has a huge incentive to promote this idea that they are high quality to justify the enormous price of decades old technology.
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kspacewalk2 | 4 hours ago | 2 Comment
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lqet | 4 hours ago | 2 Comment
In the late 90ies, I regularly played with my uncle's old LEGOs from the late 60ies and early 70ies. They were stored in an unheated attic for 25 years. I remember that some of the old bricks didn't "snap" at all anymore to my newer bricks. They were either extremely difficult to stack onto a new brick, or didn't have any friction left.
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rob74 | 3 hours ago | 2 Comment
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pubby | 4 hours ago | 3 Comment
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Thorrez | 4 hours ago | 2 Comment
The article never mentions what piece has a 0.002mm tolerance. Is there any such piece? If there's no such piece, then "0.002mm tolerance" is not just "misleading without context", it's straight up false.
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solidsnack9000 | 1 hour ago | 1 Comment
A balanced 16-cavity mold costs 3-4x more than a single-cavity mold but only produces 16x the parts, which is why they only make economic sense above 500,000 units.
rkangel | 3 hours ago | 2 Comment
Also interesting is that in very large models, there is decoupling between sections. Lego has design rules for how large a well connected chunk of Lego can be, which are driven by the tolerances. Above that you are then loosely coupling those large "chunks".
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nmeofthestate | 3 hours ago | 1 Comment
Initially I thought this meant a lego minifig head has 128 internal cavities, but finally realised it means a single mould now makes 128 heads.
yubainu | 3 hours ago | 1 Comment
twodave | 3 hours ago | 1 Comment
lich_king | 4 hours ago | 4 Comment
> A 2x2 brick can withstand over 4,000 Newtons of force, which lets children build tall structures.
> But in an assembly system like LEGO's, small errors accumulate. Stack ten bricks end-to-end and the cumulative tolerance is ten times larger. This is why LEGO models larger than 1 meter become difficult to build
> The lesson isn't that everyone should match LEGO's tolerances. It's to understand what your product actually requires, then build your manufacturing system to deliver that at the scale and cost your business model demands.
I know I'm tilting at windmills, but come on.
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WillAdams | 4 hours ago | 1 Comment
https://archinect.com/features/article/149974598/the-brief-a...
I wish one of their competitors would take up this dimension standard --- it would be a lot more useful for making structures which interact across dimensions/rotations.
- | 3 hours ago | 1 Comment
Normal_gaussian | 4 hours ago | 4 Comment
My recent experience calls bs on pulling them apart.
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exabrial | 4 hours ago | 1 Comment
yubainu | 2 hours ago | 2 Comment
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jimmar | 4 hours ago | 1 Comment
antonyh | 3 hours ago | 3 Comment
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SV_BubbleTime | 51 minutes ago | 1 Comment
Legos don’t have draft.
That means nothing to 99% of you, but someone else here must understand what the implications of that are for releasing from molds at a mass scale.
lvl155 | 1 hour ago | 1 Comment
m3kw9 | 4 hours ago | 4 Comment
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- | 4 hours ago | 1 Comment