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 Announcements / 270
    New Lego page! —Jeremy H. Sproat
   Hey all, I've finished moving my Lego pages from Geocities to Illuminatti Online. Check it out at: (URL) you ever wondered what Barbara and I look like? Is so, then take a look at my newest stuff, "A Day in the Life of Barbara and Jeremy". Coming (...) (25 years ago, 19-Jul-99, to lugnet.announce, lugnet.general)
   
        Re: New Lego page! —Tom McDonald
     (...) Thanks! That was fun! You haven't changed much since the last time I saw you though. I think you were even wearing the same clothes. -Tom McD. when replying, contents under pressure: do not puncture or incinerate the spamcake. (25 years ago, 19-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
    
         Re: New Lego page! —Jeremy H. Sproat
     (...) I used to wear cotton all the time, until I realized that ABS plastic lasts a lot longer and cleans easier. Cheers, - jsproat (25 years ago, 19-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
   
        Re: New Lego page! —Anders Isaksson
     Thanks for a very nice trip through the film studio! Any possibility to see the *real* (non ABS) you somewhere? -- Anders Isaksson, Sweden BlockCAD: (2 URLs) skrev i meddelandet <37937C4B.1E8151D8@io.com>... (...) (25 years ago, 19-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
    
         Re: New Lego page! —Jeremy H. Sproat
     (...) Thanks! (...) Possibly -- I'll be in England starting in two weeks... Cheers, - jsproat (25 years ago, 19-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
   
        Re: New Lego page! —Charles Seyferth
     Finally! A use for the SW Battle Driods... ;) Charles (25 years ago, 19-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
   
        Re: New Lego page! —Robert Munafo
     In lugnet.announce, Jeremy H. Sproat writes: [...] (...) Do you have a clear idea what these three scales are in numerical terms? I guess "minifig" scale is fairly well defined as the ratio between the height of a minifig and the average height of (...) (25 years ago, 19-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
    
         Re: New Lego page! —Jeremy H. Sproat
     (...) They're extremely flexible. Microfig scale is anything smaller than minifig scale, and nanofig scale is smaller than that. It's not uncommon for microfig scale to be half as small as minifig scale, or 1 stud = 1 city block (though I would call (...) (25 years ago, 19-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
    
         Re: New Lego page! —Robert Munafo
     (...) In other words, 381 : 1 (because the stud spacing is 8 millimeters, and 10 feet divided by 8 mm is 381) It would be convenient if it were 10 times "minifig scale" (which is around 40 : 1). However, it's also more convenient for Americans if (...) (25 years ago, 19-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
    
         Scales (Was: New Lego page!) —Jeremy H. Sproat
     Robert Munafo wrote:> (...) The number I came up with is 384 : 1 -- assuming that the length of a 2 x 4 brick is 1.25 inches (1). (...) I was just going by the assumption that a 1 x 1 tile would make a fairly appropriately-sized cockpit blister. (...) (25 years ago, 20-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
    
         8 millimeters or 5/16 inches? (was Re: Scales (Was: New Lego page!) —Robert Munafo
     I've been looking for the discussions you alluded to but haven't found any yet. The FAQ entry for this question is here: (URL) it doesn't actually answer the question asked (it gives ratios only, not actual dimensions). Neither do the message (...) (25 years ago, 21-Jul-99, to lugnet.general, lugnet.faq)
    
         Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches? (was Re: Scales (Was: New Lego page!) —Steve Bliss
      Are you trying to measure the size of the brick, or the pitch of the bricks when they are interconnected? Steve (...) (25 years ago, 21-Jul-99, to lugnet.general, lugnet.faq)
     
          Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches? (was Re: Scales (Was: New Lego page!) —Robert Munafo
      The basic issue I'm raising is determining the engineer's standard for the "horizontal spacing" from one stud to the next. I think this is what you're calling "the pitch". The most commonly quoted dimension standard among LEGO users is this (...) (25 years ago, 21-Jul-99, to lugnet.general, lugnet.faq)
    
         Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches? (was Re: Scales (Was: New Lego page!) —Eric Brok
      A whilo ago it struck me that the base unit of LEGO probably was defined in inches not in mm. 1/16 inch is far more an obvious unit than 1.6 mm. This is an interesting fact, because it reveals the British heritage of the LEGO brick. So while TLG (...) (25 years ago, 22-Jul-99, to lugnet.general, lugnet.faq)
     
          Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches? (was Re: Scales (Was: New Lego page!) —Fredrik Glöckner
       (...) Does this imply that someone else patented the _original_ brick design, without the tubes? If so, who did? Fredrik (25 years ago, 22-Jul-99, to lugnet.general, lugnet.faq)
      
           Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches? (was Re: Scales (Was: New Lego page!) —Larry Pieniazek
       (...) Some english company, which TLG bought the original patent from. Someone has a whole website about this, seemed to be fairly miffed about it, and would periodically post the URL to it on RTL... I stopped reading RTL much so can't say if that's (...) (25 years ago, 22-Jul-99, to lugnet.general, lugnet.faq)
      
           Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches? (was Re: Scales (Was: New Lego page!) —Fredrik Glöckner
       (...) Thanks for the info. I don't care enough about this to look it up, though. What's important is that LEGO makes the best bricks. :-) I'm pretty much a pragmatist in this matter. Fredrik (25 years ago, 22-Jul-99, to lugnet.general, lugnet.faq)
     
          dimensions in patents (was Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches?) —Robert Munafo
      (...) Although this is primarily only of interest in the United States, I want to point out that the United States patents held by TLG do not seem to include any dimensions. In fact, I believe this is common for all mechanical patents in the United (...) (25 years ago, 22-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
     
          Re: dimensions in patents (was Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches?) —Nick Goetz
       The last item appears to be a soda fountain or an ice cream dispenser. Any other guesses? -Nick Robert Munafo wrote in message ... <snip> (...) 1972) (...) the (...) web (...) (25 years ago, 22-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
     
          Re: dimensions in patents (was Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches?) —Gary R. Istok
        (...) Thanks for the info Robert. As a child, I remember looking at the old Lego sets that I got in the early 1960's and wondering what the heck "PATENT PENDING" (followed by a list of large numbers) was all about. I still have some early 1960's (...) (25 years ago, 22-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
      
           "PATENT PENDING" message (was Re: dimensions in patents) —Robert Munafo
       (...) The message was present on parts in the US at least until around the mid 1970's. My best friend has some 4 x 4 black plates that he had in high school and purchased in the US (probably from a police station set like 354, 370/585, or 381/588). (...) (25 years ago, 22-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
     
          Re: dimensions in patents (was Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches?) —Beth Reiten
      I know this thread died a month ago, but I just have to stick my two cents in (not that pennies are worth much these days!): If you ever go to Legoland Bilund coming from the east, you'll drive past the Lego plant. There is a huge lawn sculpture of (...) (25 years ago, 18-Aug-99, to lugnet.general)
    
         Re: 8 millimeters or 5/16 inches? (was Re: Scales) —Robert Munafo
     Okay, I've done the experiment. The interstud spacing is 7.986 millimeters +- 2 microns. I built a 1 x 100 x 2 "wall" out of long Technic beams, and it measures 798.5 +- 0.2 millimeters (to which I added 0.1 millimeters to account for the fact that (...) (25 years ago, 22-Jul-99, to lugnet.general, lugnet.faq) ! 
   
        Re: New Lego page! —Mark de Kock
   (...) WoW! I had a lot of fun going through the pages. Nice robotic dog. But why did you dismember the minifigs? Mark "nice work!" de Kock (25 years ago, 20-Jul-99, to lugnet.general)
 

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