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 Parts / *786 (-10)
  Re: A few ways to use old skeleton arms!
 
(...) Indeed, the fit in the 1x1's is loose (my guess is it varies by arm), but the fit in the Technic cylinder is nice and tight! Dave S. (18 years ago, 16-May-07, to lugnet.parts, lugnet.general, FTX)
 
  Re: A few ways to use old skeleton arms!
 
(...) I've had arms slip into the 1x1s before, but they seemed rather loose. Do they hold inside the pin connector any better? Jeff (18 years ago, 14-May-07, to lugnet.parts, lugnet.general, FTX)
 
  A few ways to use old skeleton arms!
 
Hey all, While building my ZombieTron, I discovered these two fits for loose old skeleton arms. (URL) Dave S. (18 years ago, 13-May-07, to lugnet.parts, lugnet.general, FTX)
 
  Re: lego pick a brick
 
(...) Thanks Tim, what is in store PAB? Is that the Lego stores? I had one close by when I lived in Burbank and they sold them by the container. The large one was $16.00 and you could get a lot of bricks in them. I found a tun of yellow and tan 1x1 (...) (18 years ago, 7-May-07, to lugnet.parts)
 
  Re: lego pick a brick
 
(...) Practically everything is cheaper on BrickLink. Very few parts are cheaper from online Pick-a-Brick and shipping just makes it worse. Now, in-store PAB is a different deal. That can be incredibly cheap, for some parts. Tim (18 years ago, 6-May-07, to lugnet.parts)
 
  lego pick a brick
 
Who might know? I was just on Lego's pick a brick and a brick 1x1 that has the studs on two sides is 9 cents, studs on 4 sides is 24 cents, almost 3 times as much for 2 extra studs. (actually 3 studs for the first one and 5 for the second one.) I (...) (18 years ago, 5-May-07, to lugnet.parts)
 
  Re: If you could wish for any single Lego element, what would it be?
 
(...) snip I have thought of this off-and-on over the time since I've read this: Make all the arches as half-arches, like the 1x5x4 arch. That would eliminate the stress point problem. Larger arches, too, like 12-stud+ spans. Also in round (...) (18 years ago, 28-Apr-07, to lugnet.parts, FTX)
 
  Re: Which glue?
 
(...) Epoxy works like wood glue, in that it needs to permeate the surface of the materials that it is bonding in order to get anything more than a light adhesion. At my last job, when we were epoxying resin tooling board together, we'd regularly (...) (18 years ago, 6-Apr-07, to lugnet.parts.mod)
 
  Re: Which glue?
 
(...) Some of the thin CA glues have a solvent added (MEK?), the superglue brand seems to have more then the others. While working on some movie props I needed to glue some detail onto a curved surface. the thin SG brand caused the thin styrene (...) (18 years ago, 5-Apr-07, to lugnet.parts.mod)
 
  Re: Which glue?
 
(...) I've found cyanoacrylate 'Super Glue' isn't good at holding LEGO together for long. But, this is mainly down to the shiny surface of parts. Where I've sanded the edge of a push switch and fitted it into a train controller, it's an incredibly (...) (18 years ago, 5-Apr-07, to lugnet.parts.mod)


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