| | Re: Eidolon Engineering releases Spiffcraft to Public Franklin W. Cain
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| | (...) Cute. :-) [pedantic] *However*, in order for it to be a *true* monolith, it must measure *precisely* 1x4x9. As any other LegoCAD-er will be able to tell you, the height of the Lego brick is different than the width of the Lego brick. Using the (...) (24 years ago, 18-Dec-00, to lugnet.space)
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| | | | Re: Eidolon Engineering releases Spiffcraft to Public Bram Lambrecht
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| | | | (...) I beg to differ :) The smallest monolith possible in LEGO is 1x4x9. You just have to orient it differently. Make it 9 studs long, 1 stud wide, and 3 bricks and 1 tile tall. Then stand it on the short end. --Bram (24 years ago, 18-Dec-00, to lugnet.space)
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| | | | | | Re: Eidolon Engineering releases Spiffcraft to Public Franklin W. Cain
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| | | | | (...) Yes, your math works... ;-) *However*, the "real" monolith was "immoveable, fused to the bedrock on which it rested" (or words to that effect; it's been awhile), and was perfectly smooth. The not-necessarily-the-...t-possible monolith that I (...) (24 years ago, 18-Dec-00, to lugnet.space)
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| | | | Re: Eidolon Engineering releases Spiffcraft to Public Ed T. Toton III
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| | | | (...) I measured the monolith I made (back when I made it a year ago), and it's within 1mm of the correct height for the width and depth, since I used smooth plates at the top. I considered that to be close enough. But yes, I took the dimensions (...) (24 years ago, 18-Dec-00, to lugnet.space)
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