AKA Brick 1x1x2 with extra tube side, AKA the Emmet Brick. When I first saw this piece on the interwebs I was intrigued. After seeing Caperberry's amazing build with it, I had to try it for myself.
As he mentions in another post, the piece is essentially a 1x1 plate atop a headlight brick atop two 1x1 plates. But the headlight brick would have no stud on the side, just the square in the back. From a geometry perspective, there's nothing new to see here. Anything you can do with the hind end of a headlight brick can be done. But if for some reason you need that three and a half part connection to have some strength without a recessed side stud, well here it is.
A big difference from the headlight brick is that there is a whole lot more plastic below the anti-stud (or tube side, says TLG). Headlight bricks have a tendency to crack. I'm wondering if this has anything to do with the location of that portion of the brick in relation to the pip. If the plastic is injected at the top of the solid stud, then it will flow around the square portion of the mold and meet in the middle. Theoretically this should be fine as the already molten medium will bind together. But that's theory. Another theory would state that by the time the injection gets around the chilly metal mold it has already lost some of its viscosity and binding properties. But I would think you would need several more seconds for that to become a factor. The Emmet Brick has an extra 6.4mm of ABS wall below the anti-stud that should relieve that problem. I'm sure hoping that hairline on my Emmet Brick is the shot pattern.
One application I could see is when you want an anti-stud facing sideways and you don't want to deal with a bunch of SNOTtery. The headlight brick will give you the same function unless you have another layer of pieces just inside. In that case the side stud of the headlight brick sticks out a little farther than the lip of the brick. An interior conflict will ensue. Certainly not a difficult one to resolve though.
*SPOILER ALERT*
In the movie this piece was actually a Kragle cap. This piece does a fine abstract job of representing that. However I think a red axle connector would look a little more correct with better dimensions and texture. But getting that piece to stick to Emmet's back in a non-destructive way would involve a little more creativity. Or a new part.
Showing posts with label The Piece of Resistance. Show all posts
Showing posts with label The Piece of Resistance. Show all posts
Set Review - The Piece of Resistance 30280
Well I hate to sound cliche or late to the party but The LEGO Movie is AWESOME! I have some complaints and eyebrow raises but overall it was a nice hour and a half of non-commercial. There may be some spoilers slipped in here and there so beware. Or just go see it already.
In the action-opening scene of the movie, Emmet finds himself in front of some sort of pile of rocks or goo or gooey rocks or garbage or something I couldn't quite identify. Within is a glowing piece of something that's equally hard to identify. It is prophesied as the piece of resistance. Emmet touches it and boom, the setup is over and the story begins.
If you spent $50 at Shop @ Home, you could get the polybag of this scene for free. The polybag consists of Emmet and a pile of glowing rocks with a simple Technic blasting mechanism. By simple I mean lever whose force breaks away a one stud connection. Connected to this mechanism is the Piece of Resistance, AKA the Emmet Brick. *Edit: I just discovered this is the same setup and mechanism as Thor and His Cosmic Cube 30163 from 2012. Hmm...
The build is simple, as we'd expect from a polybag. My 3 KFOLs had endless fun slamming Emmet down onto the mechanism to make the rock pop off. I gave them a brief synopsis of the scene and they continued to play it out over and over for a half hour. No, they did not come to the theatre with me to see the movie. Maybe I'm a bad LEGO dad but I'm also a poor LEGO dad. They won't suffer to wait and see it and it's much cheaper to buy the DVD and watch it endlessly than it is to go to the cinema just once. I'm shrewd, that's what I am.
The life of this promo seemed pretty short lived to me and I'm glad I got one when I did. I'm not much of a minifigure guy but at least I have a new Emmet Brick to try to ponder uses for. If you want one you'll have to hit up the usual secondary markets for $7 and up for the set; 60c and up for the brick.
*SPOILER ALERT*
Tune in Wednesday for a more in-depth look at the Emmet Brick.
In the action-opening scene of the movie, Emmet finds himself in front of some sort of pile of rocks or goo or gooey rocks or garbage or something I couldn't quite identify. Within is a glowing piece of something that's equally hard to identify. It is prophesied as the piece of resistance. Emmet touches it and boom, the setup is over and the story begins.
If you spent $50 at Shop @ Home, you could get the polybag of this scene for free. The polybag consists of Emmet and a pile of glowing rocks with a simple Technic blasting mechanism. By simple I mean lever whose force breaks away a one stud connection. Connected to this mechanism is the Piece of Resistance, AKA the Emmet Brick. *Edit: I just discovered this is the same setup and mechanism as Thor and His Cosmic Cube 30163 from 2012. Hmm...
The build is simple, as we'd expect from a polybag. My 3 KFOLs had endless fun slamming Emmet down onto the mechanism to make the rock pop off. I gave them a brief synopsis of the scene and they continued to play it out over and over for a half hour. No, they did not come to the theatre with me to see the movie. Maybe I'm a bad LEGO dad but I'm also a poor LEGO dad. They won't suffer to wait and see it and it's much cheaper to buy the DVD and watch it endlessly than it is to go to the cinema just once. I'm shrewd, that's what I am.
The life of this promo seemed pretty short lived to me and I'm glad I got one when I did. I'm not much of a minifigure guy but at least I have a new Emmet Brick to try to ponder uses for. If you want one you'll have to hit up the usual secondary markets for $7 and up for the set; 60c and up for the brick.
*SPOILER ALERT*
Tune in Wednesday for a more in-depth look at the Emmet Brick.
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