| | | | | Well, I built a starship bridge, I still have it somewhere, and it took
so much space for what I wanted, I can't imagine a space station I would
like to build (I think of station McKinley from ST) Sometimes, you have
to build only what your bricks allow! :)
Scott S.
P.S. I remember a traveling LEGO show, when I was 10 or 12, (1985-1987).
It had a bunch of LEGO creations from space, like the Apollo capsule,
and they had an awesome space station / colony thing. It must have been
at least 8 or 10 feet in diameter, with tons of minifigs around. Does
anybody remember this?
_________________________________________________________________________________________
Scott E. Sanburn-> ssanburn@cleanweb.net
Systems Administrator/CAD Operator-Affiliated Engineers ->
http://www.aeieng.com
LEGO Page -> http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Station/3372/legoindex.html
Home Page -> http://www.geocities.com/Area51/Station/3372/index.html
| | | | | | | | | | | | | "Scott E. Sanburn" wrote:
> P.S. I remember a traveling LEGO show, when I was 10 or 12, (1985-1987).
> It had a bunch of LEGO creations from space, like the Apollo capsule,
> and they had an awesome space station / colony thing. It must have been
> at least 8 or 10 feet in diameter, with tons of minifigs around. Does
> anybody remember this?
Was it the big white/transblue one that spun around a central axis?
It had cut outs on the side where you could look in and see scores of
minifigs working on computers and such.
Right next to it they had a modular land base that had a space train
that ran on 12V track with a Solar Power Transporter beneath it.
This was the first LEGO show I ever saw, I remember trying to build
the rotating station but I was dismayed by the number of bricks it took.
Someone on lugnet has a few pictures, can't find the link now though
-chris
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
| In lugnet.space, Christopher Tracey writes:
>
>
> "Scott E. Sanburn" wrote:
> > P.S. I remember a traveling LEGO show, when I was 10 or 12, (1985-1987).
> > It had a bunch of LEGO creations from space, like the Apollo capsule,
> > and they had an awesome space station / colony thing. It must have been
> > at least 8 or 10 feet in diameter, with tons of minifigs around. Does
> > anybody remember this?
>
> Was it the big white/transblue one that spun around a central axis?
> It had cut outs on the side where you could look in and see scores of
> minifigs working on computers and such.
>
> Right next to it they had a modular land base that had a space train
> that ran on 12V track with a Solar Power Transporter beneath it.
>
> This was the first LEGO show I ever saw, I remember trying to build
> the rotating station but I was dismayed by the number of bricks it took.
>
> Someone on lugnet has a few pictures, can't find the link now though
That spacestation (and the accompanying show) went through here many moons
ago, and one of the few pieces of Lego nostalgia I have is the guide booklet
from the tour. IIRC, the theme of the show was inventions, and so forth.
Would people be interested in scans?
James
http://www.shades-of-night.com/lego/
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
| James Brown wrote:
>
> In lugnet.space, Christopher Tracey writes:
> >
> >
> > "Scott E. Sanburn" wrote:
> > > P.S. I remember a traveling LEGO show, when I was 10 or 12, (1985-1987).
> > > It had a bunch of LEGO creations from space, like the Apollo capsule,
> > > and they had an awesome space station / colony thing. It must have been
> > > at least 8 or 10 feet in diameter, with tons of minifigs around. Does
> > > anybody remember this?
> >
> > Was it the big white/transblue one that spun around a central axis?
> > It had cut outs on the side where you could look in and see scores of
> > minifigs working on computers and such.
> >
> > Right next to it they had a modular land base that had a space train
> > that ran on 12V track with a Solar Power Transporter beneath it.
Maybe, it has been so long. I think they had those 45D 1x4x5 white
angled windows, perhaps. Ugh, bad memory!
> > This was the first LEGO show I ever saw, I remember trying to build
> > the rotating station but I was dismayed by the number of bricks it took.
> >
> > Someone on lugnet has a few pictures, can't find the link now though
>
> That spacestation (and the accompanying show) went through here many moons
> ago, and one of the few pieces of Lego nostalgia I have is the guide booklet
> from the tour. IIRC, the theme of the show was inventions, and so forth.
> Would people be interested in scans?
I would like to see them, maybe I can stir up the old memory banks!
Scott S.
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | |
| |
| Please post the scans>>>
In lugnet.space, James Brown writes:
> In lugnet.space, Christopher Tracey writes:
> >
> >
> > "Scott E. Sanburn" wrote:
> > > P.S. I remember a traveling LEGO show, when I was 10 or 12, (1985-1987).
> > > It had a bunch of LEGO creations from space, like the Apollo capsule,
> > > and they had an awesome space station / colony thing. It must have been
> > > at least 8 or 10 feet in diameter, with tons of minifigs around. Does
> > > anybody remember this?
> >
> > Was it the big white/transblue one that spun around a central axis?
> > It had cut outs on the side where you could look in and see scores of
> > minifigs working on computers and such.
> >
> > Right next to it they had a modular land base that had a space train
> > that ran on 12V track with a Solar Power Transporter beneath it.
> >
> > This was the first LEGO show I ever saw, I remember trying to build
> > the rotating station but I was dismayed by the number of bricks it took.
> >
> > Someone on lugnet has a few pictures, can't find the link now though
>
> That spacestation (and the accompanying show) went through here many moons
> ago, and one of the few pieces of Lego nostalgia I have is the guide booklet
> from the tour. IIRC, the theme of the show was inventions, and so forth.
> Would people be interested in scans?
>
> James
> http://www.shades-of-night.com/lego/
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