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1) We don't cover our tables with bricks (they are painted LEGO brick
green), we use spring loaded clamps to hold the tables together (they're
about a $1 a piece at Home Depot)
2)I always take a few pieces of cardboard with me to shim up the tables if
the floor isn't level, they work great and I just toss them after the show.
3) I believe the pipe they're referring to is just PVC pipe that fits over
the legs
Hope that helps,
jt
--
James J. Trobaugh
North Georgia LEGO Train Club
http://www.ngltc.org
Michel Magnan <m_magnan@telusplanet.net> wrote in message
news:GDI6pF.C0w@lugnet.com...
> For the train clubs that use folding legs, I was wondering if you could answer
> the following:
> 1. If you don't have enough Lego bricks to cover the entire surface of the
> talbles, how do you hold the adjacent tables together?
> 2. Do you have a problem with keeping the tables at the same height, given
> the varrying floring conditions at various venues?
> 3. Can you alter the height of the folding legs, the PNLTC refers to some
> kind of "pipe sock" to do this. Anyone have any idea as to how this was
> done?
> Thanks for your time.
> Michel Magnan
>
> > I agree that the folding legs are the way to go if you want to save space in
> > transporting them and setting up. I used the "conventional" bolt on legs for
> > a year and that was all I could take. I was tired of being the last group to
> > leave the train shows. So I converted our tables to use the folding table
> > legs:
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