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Subject: 
Re: Info o GMLTC Style Honeycomb structure
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.trains.org
Date: 
Sat, 16 Dec 2000 05:43:23 GMT
Reply-To: 
cmasi@cmasi.chem^NoMoreSpam^.tulane.edu
Viewed: 
1097 times
  

John Neal wrote:

Christopher Masi wrote:

John Neal wrote:

James Brown wrote:

In lugnet.trains, Steve Chapple writes:
In lugnet.trains, John Neal writes:
Kim Toll wrote:
I'm interested in building up a bit of a Lego landscape similar
to the GMLTC modules.

...the pattern we at the GMLTC have perfected.  Check it out here:
http://www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=1734

I too am interested in the "honeycomb" pattern details.  No sense
"re-inventing the wheel".  The link seems to only provide a hint
though - it looks like one step in an instruction book of dozens?

Nope, it's all you need (for pictoral reference, anyway).  From left to right:

2x2 bricks, in towers.  Height on these will vary depending on how
high/stable you want your structure.  IIRC, GMLTC uses 5 high towers, Mike
P. uses 6 high.  Both recommend not going much higher, or it gets unstable.

2x4 bricks, bracing and interlocking the towers.  This would be done between
tower sections (every 5 or 6 bricks high), and also just below the top layer.

2x4 bricks, as the building surface.

Pretty much it.  The green bricks are your outside wall, and you tie into the
wall every 5-6 bricks high.  That is why you need the rim of 1x4s, to avoid
"disturbing" the alternating binding appearance from the outside.  It's a very
clean and elegant design which maximizes common bricks AND is nice and strong.

-John (FU set to org)



I've been thinking about the possibilities of doing 5 or 6 high modules, to
let us work some terrain variation in.  The real hitch with that is you
start needing to store them, and you start needing to worry about
transporting them.

James

Are you guys, GMLTC, switching to a green surface? If not, why not? To
expensive? Don't see the need?

Green, tan, brown, dark gray, 220, 221....whatever it takes;-)  In our group, expense
is not an issue-- it was always about availability with reason.  Now that the earth
tones are appearing in bulk, you can rest assured that there will be no more "red
earth" (at least on the *top* layer;-)

-John


Just curious,
Chris
--
PGP public key available upon request.

Wow, now that will look truly great. Don't get me wrong, the GMLTC layouts
always looked great, but everything was well red. I kinda looked like New Jersey
at crop planting time. The green base-plates at the NELUG's layout (it was NELUG
I am thinking of wasn't it?) looked great, and extending earth tones to a GMLTC layout...wow.

Chris

--
PGP public key available upon request.

You know, no one has ever asked...

   
         
     
Subject: 
RE: Info o GMLTC Style Honeycomb structure
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.trains.org
Date: 
Sat, 16 Dec 2000 05:51:57 GMT
Viewed: 
1136 times
  

Chris

Chris

--
PGP public key available upon request.

You know, no one has ever asked...

I'll take the bait, what is it?

BTW, sent to list and you personally

Thanx,

Mark Millére
LUGnet # 525
Visit Milissa's LEGO store, Millére's Spares
<http://www.brickbay.com/store.asp?i=MMillere>

    
          
     
Subject: 
Re: Info o GMLTC Style Honeycomb structure
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.trains.org
Date: 
Sat, 16 Dec 2000 06:21:52 GMT
Reply-To: 
cmasi@cmasi.chem.tulane#NoMoreSpam#.edu
Viewed: 
1142 times
  

Mark & Milissa Millére wrote:

Chris

Chris

--
PGP public key available upon request.

You know, no one has ever asked...

I'll take the bait, what is it?

BTW, sent to list and you personally

Thanx,

Mark Millére
LUGnet # 525
Visit Milissa's LEGO store, Millére's Spares
<http://www.brickbay.com/store.asp?i=MMillere>

Mark,

  Oh, a public key is an encryption key (secret spy decoder ring stuff, but for
real[1]). PGP stands for Pretty Good Privacy, and it is a freeware program (
http://www.networkassociates.com/ ) that encrypts files, E-mail, or anything you
do not want everyone else reading. The idea is that you distribute your public
key to the world, and anyone can encrypt messages and send the message to you,
but only you can decrypt the message using your closely held private key. The
important thing is that the public key can only encrypt a message, it cannot
decrypt the message, so it doesn't matter who has the key.
  PGP was such a big deal when it came out that the government tried to put the
author in jail because he apparently represented a threat to national security.
After all, he was making it possible for normal people to write E-mail messages
that the government couldn't read.
  You can also sign messages, so people can check to see if you really sent the message.
  I guess no one has ever asked for my public key because no one has ever wanted
to send me anything important.

Chris

1. Of course, the first thing I did was send myself and encrypted message.

P.S. I have never figured out...OK, I have never tried to figure out how to set
the FUT stuff, so if anyone feels like spinning this thread off to where it
belongs feel free....

   
         
   
Subject: 
Re: Info o GMLTC Style Honeycomb structure
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.trains.org
Date: 
Sat, 16 Dec 2000 14:56:26 GMT
Viewed: 
1088 times
  

Actually we had the green farm module before they were really selling green
bricks in quantity.  Before they were selling the green 2x4s in sets, about
100-150 of them followed me home from the model shop.  (They let me keep all
of my creations that had been on my desk when I quit.)  Of course, shortly
afterwards they started selling the green bricks, but for a while it was
quite a little collection of rare bricks and colors.  (If you had looked
carefully at the old layout there was some gold and silver bricks too, I
think those are still fairly rare.)

-John3

(I never check skypoint's mail anymore it's a refuge for spam.  Mail me at
yahoo as jkelly3 instead.)


Wow, now that will look truly great. Don't get me wrong, the GMLTC layouts
always looked great, but everything was well red. I kinda looked like New Jersey
at crop planting time. The green base-plates at the NELUG's layout (it was NELUG
I am thinking of wasn't it?) looked great, and extending earth tones to a GMLTC layout...wow.

Chris

--
PGP public key available upon request.

You know, no one has ever asked...

 

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