Monday, December 1, 2008

Day 7 - Completed!





We actually finished this on Wednesday 19 November but I have been a bit tardy in writing it up. Here are the finished pics. My assistant is happy that the ordeal is over but not too chuffed that the spaceship doesn't actually fly - I did warn him. The pictures don't really convey the full weight of the lego used in the model, it is pretty impressive.

Monday, November 17, 2008

Day 6 - Stung into action

Stung by some fierce e-mail criticism re: lack of progress I give my assistant a severe dressing down. Post-tears, I hope you all feel guilty now, you know who you are, we get stuck in and the top surface starts to take real shape.




(5 hours)

Sunday, November 9, 2008

Day 5 - Underside completed


All the under side panels are done and in place plus some front detail parts. This took around 2 hours to complete. My assistant frequently complains that "this spaceship is taking a long time to make" and is now a rare sight at construction sessions - I think he is losing interest (?)

Tuesday, November 4, 2008

Day 4 - The shape of things to come


Really starting to take its distinctive shape shape now, we have built the two front-most sections in outline and the underpanel of one of them. The underpanels fit into the main frame with a very clever interconnection which must have taken the designers ages to come up with. According to the manual we are just about under half way through now.

(2 hours)

Sunday, November 2, 2008

Day 3 - Progression Sessions



Quite a bit of progress made with the assistance of the missus. Two rear cargo structures, the engine assembly and one side were completed. The seven legs snapped in easily. Progress is swifter now that most of the parts are out of bags and also because the construction has sucked up around 5 or 6 hundred pieces so far. Note Sam's smart new haircut.





(4 hours)

Friday, October 31, 2008

Day 2 - Seven Legs

Still over half the pieces need to be sorted, but I get impatient and start to build again. This has a stop-start effect as some parts are readily to hand whilst other bits require lengthy bag searches. Even when sorted there are so many piles around the study it becomes an exercise in memory retention to re-find a pile of parts. I still can't face building the comprehensive super-structure so pick the 7 landing legs to make. This turns out to be a mistake as they are fiddly and complex constructions. Progress not helped by my assistant continually breaking the radar assembly from yesterday and insisting I fix it again and again. I have reconstructed the radar assembly about 30 to 40 times now. 2 hours (!) later and the 7 landing legs are done (almost; one is missing a part)...

It's no good, I'll have to take on the main structure. Actually this turns out to work pretty well and has the effect of getting some large pieces out of the piles and into something coherent. It is incredibly complex for a Lego kit and very cleverly designed, although I'm pretty sure that none of this section will be visible when it's finished. It's interesting from a structural engineering point of view but I begin to feel like the kind of nerd who pores over the blueprints of the Starship Enterprise. (b.t.w. must remember Star Trek is as real as Star Wars...)

(approx 5 hours today)

Thursday, October 30, 2008

Day 1 - Sort you must




OK, OK I give in. At this rate we will never finish. I now sort Lego parts for the best part of 2 hours, interrupted only by my assistant's bathtime.



Note it is Sam the boy, not Samantha the girl. He will be getting his hair cut on Saturday.

(approx 5 hours)