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Subject: 
Re: Hardest Piece to remove?
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.general
Date: 
Tue, 30 Nov 1999 18:29:11 GMT
Viewed: 
503 times
  
In lugnet.general, Jeremy Sproat writes:

Nope.  Take a space antenna piece, and send it pointy-end-down through a hole
in a Technic plate, and push them together.  The studs on the plate hold onto
the antenna base pretty well on their own, and the stud on the antenna is
firmly wedged into the hole in the plate.  A very useful arrangement, but nigh
impossible to separate later...

Nah, that's an easy one.  Just take a stack of technic beams about 2 plates
less than the length of the space antenna.  Place the technic plate onto the
beams, with the antenna going through the holes.  Hold the whole mess together
tightly and give the pointy end of the antenna a good whack on a table or block
or something nice and solid.  The technic beams hold the antenna straight so
you don't bend it, and it pops right out.

Adrian
--
http://junior.apk.net/~tremor/lego.html



Message has 2 Replies:
  Re: Hardest Piece to remove?
 
If I'm not mistaken, I believe there are two parts you can put together that are _impossible_ to remove without destroying one of both of them. Don't try this at home :) Get one of the octagonal Aquazone 'duct' pieces that has an angle at one end. (...) (25 years ago, 30-Nov-99, to lugnet.general)
  Re: Hardest Piece to remove?
 
Or, the antenna will get bent. I tried something like this when separating a tyre from a wheel. I out an antenna in the wheel center, whacked it on a table, and the antenna went right through the wheel! --Tobias (...) the (...) together (...) block (...) (25 years ago, 16-Jan-00, to lugnet.general)

Message is in Reply To:
  Re: Hardest Piece to remove?
 
(...) Nope. Take a space antenna piece, and send it pointy-end-down through a hole in a Technic plate, and push them together. The studs on the plate hold onto the antenna base pretty well on their own, and the stud on the antenna is firmly wedged (...) (25 years ago, 30-Nov-99, to lugnet.general)

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