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 LEGO Company / 1858
  Re: A little math cioncerning ships, containers and Minifigs
 
(...) That's true for a solid object, but as the 8wide fans point out to me all the time when I use this scaleup against them, this object isn't completely solid. you may not need 8 times as much hull brick to make a 2x hull, for example. (howver (...) (21 years ago, 19-May-04, to lugnet.lego)
 
  Re: A little math cioncerning ships, containers and Minifigs
 
(...) Excluding all internal supports and bracing, what we are really concerned about is surface area, since that's the brick we see. If an object is scaled up 2 times, its surface area goes up by a factor of 4. Thus, you would need, at minimum, 4 (...) (21 years ago, 19-May-04, to lugnet.lego)
 
  Re: A little math cioncerning ships, containers and Minifigs
 
(...) Compare with my 40ft container 40' x 8' x 9'6" high: (URL) Apart from it needing the Maersk blue bits for the star, I'd ideally like to make a ship to 8mm:1ft scale with these containers onboard, multiplying all dimensions by 4! The ship would (...) (21 years ago, 19-May-04, to lugnet.lego, FTX)
 
  Re: A little math cioncerning ships, containers and Minifigs
 
(...) (snip) (...) Well, that's sharp and all, but I think building to scale really misses the point. That container's 8 wide! I prefer my scenes more packed with detail rather than doing one 10 foot long ship so that I can fit my to scale (...) (21 years ago, 19-May-04, to lugnet.lego, lugnet.boats, lugnet.trains, FTX)

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