Subject:
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Re: A project suggestion= Let's develop a Theme ourselves....
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Newsgroups:
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lugnet.cad, lugnet.general, lugnet.town
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Date:
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Sat, 16 Sep 2000 14:15:50 GMT
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Viewed:
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28 times
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In lugnet.cad, Kevin Wilson writes:
> Farlie A wrote:
>
> > Well no lock because I was thinking more along the lines of the systems in
> > Europe (and possibly Norfolk?) which as far as I am away don't have locks. Ie
> > canal as in Ship Canal?
>
> Inland navigable water systems have to have some method of changing
> level, which usually means locks (there are other methods, but they are
> less common). Water going downhill tends to get a bit too exciting for
> reliable passenger or freight transport :-)
That said some ideas for new X-trem team sets could have a waterfall?
> From a Lego POV, in fact
> you would be better off keeping everything on the same level but a canal
> or river system without locks would seem a bit odd.
Perhaps we could have a lock plate at the upper end of 'canal' built using
the theme? The problem is then how you suppourt the uuper plates? or produce
a workable lock in between easilly? I have also noticed someone suggesting
having a split plates in another message on this thread. This is an excellent
idea!!
> European water
> navigation sytems do indeed have locks, including on rivers like the
> Rhine, very large ones in fact! LL Windsor has a nice set of locks in
> the Sweden area of miniland, IIRC.
>
> > > One thing to bear in mind is that canal systems vary widely from country
> > > to country and are almost non-existent in the US as compared to Europe.
> > > Sounds like you're planning a UK-style canal system which might not have
> > > very wide appeal.
> >
> > Not at all. Like I said above. Think navigable waterway (as in Shannon,
> > Missipi,Rhur etc.) not Birtish Canal (as in the Grand Union). I think that
> > river based navigational 'systems' exist in the US?
>
> We're talking big, wide waterways here. Even road width of a standard
> roadplate would only be about equivalent to a Brit-style narrow canal.
> Narrowboats are 8ft wide I believe which would approximate to the same
> width as a car for lego purposes.
Or Dutch Polders?- I seem to recall them being narrow compared to large river
baed systems?
>
> > Canal was just a convinent notation for the parts and sets.
> > I felt river would have meant lesiure craft only. I wanted something that
> > involved frieght movment as well as passangers!!
>
> I agree. I like the whole idea very much but I think you're thinking
> tooo small scale! If this is our own theme we don't have to stick with
> Lego's production limitations, we could use 32x32-stud blue plates for
> the waterway.
I was using 32x32 as base size in case TLG tunes in and lifts suggestions and
also so that it was compatiable if I ever put in the drawings to TLG myself.
Perhaps I need to consider using larger basplate ie 48x48 or even 64x64?
Or maybe my ideas for a 'narrow' canal are in keeping with the intellignet mis-
scaling in Lego(R) Town? (Opnions Lugneters!).
>
> Another nice thing about introducing canals or rivers is that they give
> us a great excuse for bridges!
Yeah!!! :-)))
Alex
>
> Kevin
> -----------------------------------------------------------------------
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> http://ourworld.compuserve.com/homepages/kwilson_tccs/lego.html
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