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14.12.22

Project VII/22

Lego 10497

One day not too long ago, in the grocery store, we had divided into two groups for the last items. I ended up being at the cash registers first. My spouse came a bit later with the Project Assistants, showed the Galaxy Explorer box I had been drooling at for weeks. "Didn't you want this, or do we just return it?"

Box

Of course we didn't return it. Luckily (or unluckily?) they didn't also have the Lion Knight's Castle on the shelves. In the Project Mumblings household my spouse and the Project Assistant I didn't appreciate the Classic Space look but thought that this was a fugly construct. Heretics.


Concerning the instructions

Just the mere front cover of the instructions made me giggly, admiring the logo of the space lego. I was indubitably in the most fruitful cohort, as I loved these things when space lego set were at their peak. Sadly I never had the original Galaxy Explorer myself, neither did my cousins who gave their lego to me when they were disinterested already.

Should they ever make a modern version like this of the 6929, the Starfleet Voyager, I'd buy it without blinking. I had the original and it was awesome. That ship, too, had an openable space in the rear of the craft for stowing tools and whatnot.

Looking at the space theme's timeline I was wondering if the two-coloured space coats and visored helmets really came out that early? Apparently they did. I also had an almost complete collection of the Ice Planet sets, I think I was only missing some of the smallest boxes.

A healthy amount of pieces

This would eat a couple of pleasant evenings, easily. Depending on how much Project Assistant II or the cats would want to pretend to help...

Yay!

8.12.22

Finished: Project VI/22

A Time Machine in a DeLorean

So here it was, the Time Machine set up for the "Roads? Where we're going we don't need roads" -scene from the end of the Back to the Future, with the Lego Collector -style plaque for those who didn't know what they were looking at.

For a fun comparison shot I put all my three DeLoreans next to each other in the same pose, doors opened because the Metal Earth Models DMC-12 was permanently wide open. The doors of the Playmobil car stayed open the best, as you could see from the photo. For the comparison I reverted the Lego car's back into the Plutonium-powered version but forgot to fetch the Playmobil car's detachable power rail.




For the flight mode the Time Machine had a couple (4) transparent 2x1 bricks in the bottom, that you were to move to different places when tilting the wheels.  When the wheels were out of the way, the bricks kept the car "hovering" further from the surface than if it was resting on the wheels, and when the wheels were in use the bricks were moved to more elevated areas so that they wouldn't bump into anything you'd drive over. This was a curious little trick you'd need to be doing repeatedly, but that didn't bother me.

Fooled you! I did remember to get the power rail for one photo at least.

'80s vehicles

Now that we were basking in the glory of the infamous eighties, of course I had to take a couple of photos of the Time Machine next to Optimus Prime. Sadly they were not in the same scale.



30.11.22

More car manufacturing

This year's second Lego car

The construction process started, again, from a halfway colourful Technic frame. Pretty quickly it became clear where the main important bits were going to live in, such as the wheel rotator setup.



Some of these following photos showed, if you stared at them carefully, that I had started building the wheel rotators wrong. I noticed it only when I was testing the rotation and the L-shapes didn't align as I expected them to, and they wanted to turn to the wrong direction from the flight mode. When I noticed it I fixed it but made no specific mark when I took my photos.





After the wheel setup was built, the car's exterior started going forward in leaps and bounds. The lower front was surprisingly complex in its shape.



In addition to the chromed strips the wheel wells and the nose's edges brought the familiar look up. The Time Machine was such a child of the eighties, that this was the only conceivable look for it.




The car's rear deck was pretty modular-looking at this point. Would've been cool if you could just swap in/out the different movie versions, but alas, it was not going to be (I had spoiled myself already by checking the I/II/III variants earlier).

The rear lights were just damn cool. In an eighties way, that is.


Slowly but steadily the car's outer edges got built. All the primary colours disappeared under layers of black, grey and silver/chrome.


Finally it was time to add some interior details. Here we just had the handbrake, the dashboard base and the switch for the time circuit.

The light brick went there, and it got a TNT-plunger -like press-switch, but at this point I couldn't imagine what and how it was going to behave in the final model.


Flux Capacitor, the

It wasn't that long since I last saw the first two BttF flicks, but I could hear the sound effects as if they were on tv as I was building! Of course there wasn't a perfect lit transparent three-pronged Lego piece but the grappling hook was a great part for this model.




*giggling*

The segment LED displays - those that showed the destination time (red), current time (green), and the last time departed (yellow) - were pretty neat. I kinda expected them to be printed, instead of having to misalign stickers badly. But that's how it was, I just didn't like stickers myself, so I grumbled a bit. The important thing was that it looked fantastic.

Not much leg space between the seat edge and the steering wheel...

I was pretty sure I had read that the windshield was a unique piece just for this set. The shape was peculiar, so I didn't think there were awfully many other normal uses for that kind of a piece.

For some reason the roof and the top parts of the gull-wing doors were built now and then the build process continued to other areas of the car.

The rear of the car started getting fleshed out. Random knick-knack, attachment points for the frame and then these massive cooling funnels. Or that's what I always thought they were.


Gull-wing doors

The doors were lots of fun to build, massive and bulky as the real ones seemed to be. For the longest time it looked like they were going to be without the front edge, like in the next photos:



But the front edge got built after all, I had just expected the A-beam to be solidly by the windshield, not in the door. I imagine anything else would've been way too bulky.

Last edges and cables

These rear edges of the car were pretty tight setups, and they got clipped on to the frame quite sturdily in the end. Lots of time was spent on the translucent blues and the chrome strips. Just imagine if this was also lit up somehow!


The cables were pulled from front to back, guided by the little blocks with side hook so that they didn't get pulled by the doors.



94 Pu

The bright yellow Plutonium case that Doc Brown cheated from the Libyan terrorists was cool. It only had space for two containers, as opposed to the vastness of the Playmobil Plutonium box. Still, much better than no box at all.


It even fit nicely into the trunk with the hoverboard! At least at this point, with the trunk lid waiting for assembly in the semi-distant future.

Last bits

The back of the Time Machine got filled up with details and greeblies. At long last the cooling vents got built, again greatly kicking up the wow-factor.


Being my own self, I glued the register plate stickers so that I could flip it for an original or the 2015 version. The transparent window plate wasn't something you could actually just turn around, it had to be popped off the frame for that. Would've been too flimsy otherwise.


At this point I locked my sights to the 1985 Time Machine. It was the most nostalgic ones for me, surprise of all surprises.

These cables here weren't actually important, aside from being details, I just got so excited seeing them for the first time in decades. I had a good set of these, in various colours, back in the heyday of Classic Space.

Alternate version accessories

During the three movies some changes were made to the Time Machine. During the first one an electricity-conducting rod was added, in the end the Plutonium-powered setup was replaced by a Mr Fusion from the distant year 2015. And the 1885 version in the third flick was more steampunky.

Back to the Future Part II

I just built the Mr Fusion with its bananas and soda can contents at this point. I didn't undo the rear deck of the car to try it out yet, because I was barely done with the car itself. The other major change was the bar code - register plate in the back.


Back to the Future Part III

For the Part III car I should have reversed a few steps and undone the hood, so the box could be bolted on. Didn't feel like it right after finishing the build. Just like I didn't swap the wheel rims just for that at this point.

Almost all the pieces were there, when I built the box to see how it looked like. Just a couple of silly bits were not duplicated, so if I wanted to get it completely done, I would've needed to take them off the original or Part II setups.