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In lugnet.trains, John Kelly III writes:
> I always find these types of comments fascinating. It could be that LEGO
> has changed quite a bit since I was a Model Builder for them. (Well its
> changed a lot in that most of the shop I was part of was moved off shore.)
>
> One of the common misconceptions that occurred was that as a model shop we
> had this fantastic inventory system and could get any brick we wanted in any
> color in any quantity. Fact of the matter was that we rarely had a complete
> selection of even the most current elements. I find that I have a more
> complete assortment of bricks in Conans basement then I did in the model
> shop. What the model shop had in quantity was basic bricks and plates. If
> we needed a supply of roof bricks, wed have to order them. If we were
> lucky, they might be in inventory at the plant down the road. If they were
> not, wed look overseas to their inventories. If it wasnt there, wed
> frequently redesign the model. That is how expensive it was for a Lego
> department to order a molding run done. Wed do it occasionally. It
> usually meant that we would have boxes and boxes and boxes of that
> particular element for months since the minimum production runs were always
> greater then the number we needed.
>
> If you consider it was tough for a model shop with 15-25 full time model
> builders to justify a production run, imagine how difficult it is for a Lego
> Direct sales forecaster.
Perhaps it is, but they made 'recently?' a whole lot of new models for the
LEGOLAND GERMANY park, so, i guess they run a whole lot more bricks than
they used for the models they build. I visited LEGOLAND WINDSOR too in the
opening year and could see in 'MINI EUROPA' that they used a lot of non
commercial colored bricks. If they can make them for there models, why can't
they, let's say, run half a day longer on the same brick/color? Molding a
floppy disk case takes 3.5 to 4 seconds(front and back side). I guess that
molding the regular bricks, and especially the little ones (plates ,technic
pins, ) doesn't take longer than molding a floppy disk case.
I recently placed a 'virtual' model on my home page from a Belgian passenger
car (perhaps also used by the österreich railroad) in ORANGE/White color.
I'm quite sure it will stay an 'virtual' model because we will never get
those pieces in those colors. If interested see :
http://www.geocities.com/ludo_soete/ and select 'Trains & Cars', then scroll
down untill the end.
Regards,
Ludo
<snip>>
>
> Thanks -
>
> -John 3
>
>
> In lugnet.trains, Lawrence Wilkes writes:
> >
> > "Jason J Railton" <j.j.railton@ntlworld.com> wrote in message
> > news:H07n5n.Fn6@lugnet.com...
> > > In lugnet.trains, Tom Stangl writes:
> > > > Well, they've been CAST in dark grey, just not for public
> > > > consumption. Someone posted a MOC from Europe a copule weeks back,
> > > > using the dark grey low slopes gotten from a Red Letter day at Legoland,
> > > > from what I can remember.
<snip>
> >
> > Lawrence
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Message has 1 Reply: | | Re: Now what?
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| Honestly, I couldn't tell you. I was in the American model shop in Enfield and we had constraints that the model shop in Billund did not have. (Windsor Locks was just opening in my time and the Billund shop was handling their models.) We were not (...) (22 years ago, 3-Aug-02, to lugnet.trains, lugnet.lego.direct)
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Message is in Reply To:
| | Re: Now what?
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| I always find these types of comments fascinating. It could be that LEGO has changed quite a bit since I was a Model Builder for them. (Well its changed a lot in that most of the shop I was part of was moved off shore.) One of the common (...) (22 years ago, 2-Aug-02, to lugnet.trains, lugnet.lego.direct)
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