Subject:
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Re: My Own Inverse Pony Ear Bus Stop (was: "Raeynop" schleim technique)
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Newsgroups:
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lugnet.build.schleim
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Date:
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Fri, 2 Jun 2006 21:50:17 GMT
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Viewed:
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6201 times
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In lugnet.build.schleim, Martin Nilsson wrote:
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I discovered this fitting during some sorting. The plates had gotten
jammed together.
Works especially well if you create a box from four plates. Tiles work
well too.
And I believe if you use a 3wide plate between your other two plates, its a
whole number brick height. Cant confirm it now, bricks are still packed
from the move.
Aaron
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Yes, you are right. Sort of; it should be a 2wide plate (or a 2 + (2 * n)
wide).
This insight of yours and your reply to this (by now quite old) post got me
thinking again about what this technique actually could be good for. The
result was this proof of concept MOC of a bus stop:
Its virtual: not because I didnt have the pieces to build it, but because I
dont have a digital camera here right now.
Your technique is used in the brown bench to the right.
Note in the shelter and the waste basket how inverse pony ear works together
with normal pony ear by creating four-sided inverted pony ear boxes that can
then be given a roof and fastened onto the ground by normal pony ear. If, on
the contrary, you ponyear (Am I the first one to use that as a verb?)
together four plates in a square four-wall pattern and then try to ponyear a
fifth and sixth top or bottom side onto them to make a cube it will not work
as the geometries dont add upp.
By the way when I think about it Inverse Pony Ear sounds less cryptic that
RaeYnop, if I get to name this technique.
/Martin
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Twixt Wall And Tube?
Neat technique! Your MOC does a good job of demonstrating how this might
actually be useful.
Marc Nelson Jr.
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