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With this build I wanted to capture the sense of a playset with lots of functionality and modules. So there are working cranes, a helicopter and a submersible. Also, the antennas spin with a gear at the base of the tower and the propellers spin when rolled along a surface. The tower also separates into pieces to access the interior.
I wanted to build a ship/probe module that had the textures of current technology coupled with the shapes and lines of the sci-fi world not yet invented. All stickers are official (from the Discovery line.) All pictures at Brickshelf once moderated.
Dedicated to nnenn.
One of the 'rocky coast' modules.
10 done, 10 more to go.
I am not going to make it :S
But I'll try anyway.
The local train LUG's layout is always a hit! Kids can operate the crane in the busy freightyard, light up the tree in front of the main station, or drive a classic steam train in front of the frozen waterfall.
For more photos, see the full set.
The City Space theme continues to inspire. I wanted to use the curved quarter panels as a windscreen, and by excellent luck had the matching curve plate in sand blue. From then on it was just a matter of mixing the design cues and colour scheme from the sets with my build.
Rather pleased with this, looks chunky and industrial near-future. The crane, while functional, can't lift the module without ripping itself apart. Oh well.
Probably won't take any more pictures of the module itself either, it's just an empty shell that seems to be more like a double-decker carriage on a scenic train than a science module. Some more work on that will be required, I think. But that's a problem for another time. I already have an idea for a larger build that will incorporate four of these modules.
Have no idea if it works yet, but proud to have completed my first kit nonetheless., First kit-built Eurorack module: a Synthrotek ADSR. Have no idea whether it works yet
The chevrons are part of Module 1 of my modular microscale Space Base.
the prototype for this cheese slope design is here and, of course, I have to acknowledge inspiration from Katie, the master of cheese slope mosaics.
More pics in the Mars Base set.
The Theed Palace modules shown in a previous diorama have been extended from the basic two modules in the middle to four. There's now two modules with the windows and a roof module (expansion pack).
Some scenes to demonstrate their use are currently in progress.
If you enjoy viewing this and my other works, please support the Star Wars Modular Buildings/Locations project that I've created on Lego CUUSOO.
For Teunis. Doesn't meet the M>LTC modular standard's requirement for a standalone module, but makes it easier to fit modules in a yard module set together.
2 inks Screenprint (brown and gold)
Printed on "Le Modulor" by Corbusier.
Le Corbusier described it as a "range of harmonious measurements to suit the human scale, universally applicable to architecture and to mechanical things."
Available in my shop!
Here is my LDD model of the Apollo Lunar Module. It is built to minifig scale. As always, leave a comment if you like.
The Apollo 11 command module Columbia hatch exterior, as seen during the exhibition, Destination Moon: The Apollo 11 Mission, at The Museum of Flight, Seattle. The hatch served as the entry and exit point to the command module Columbia on the launch pad and after landing.
Im Moment kreist die ISS fast senkrecht zur Sonne, d.h. 24 h Sonne am Tag für uns, linke Erdhälfte immer dunkel!
Presently ISS orbiting nearly perpendicular to Sun: 24 hour sunlight and Earth's left hemisphere is in darkness!
Credits: ESA/NASA
945_1838
Drupal modules as of 11/9/07
Full-sized, legible photo can be seen here: http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne?id=2007464793&size=o
Linkable version here: www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_all.html
This photo set contains the 5 smaller printable sections.
These linkable Cheat Sheets are here:
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part1.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part2.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part3.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part4.html
www.kentbye.com/files/drupal_modules_part5.html
I created this graphic because I felt overwhelmed with how many Drupal modules were out there, and I wanted to have a single cheat sheet that I could print out and reference. But this proved to be impossible, and it took me splitting up this massive photo into 5 subsections listed above in order to legibly print out all of the modules -- all of the modules as of November 9th, 2007 that is. (There's been another 20+ new projects created since then according to http://drupal.org/taxonomy/term/14/0).
A couple of technical points: The modules are color coded according to the 30 categories listed here: http://drupal.org/project/Modules
Also this massive graphic actually has repeating modules in the sense that if a module is in three different categories, then it'll be listed 3 different times.
There were also 36 projects that weren't categorized and inadvertently left out of this big graphic, but were included in part 5 of the cheat sheet -- along with the project pages that have been created without a release, projects w/ deprecated HEAD or pre-4.7.x releases & CVS namespaces that don't have a current project page.
Finally, this listing doesn't take into consideration the fact that many Drupal project releases actually contain multiple modules within them. For example, the Drupal for Facebook module is actually composed of 9 modules.
UPDATE: The 30 MB excel file that contains the raw data used to generate these visualizations has been uploaded to scribd.com
In this photo taken by Command Module Pilot John Young, the ascent stage of the Apollo 10 Lunar Module (LM) is seen prior to docking in lunar orbit. Mission Commander Thomas P. Stafford and Lunar Module Pilot Eugene A. Cernan are returning to the Command and Service Module "Charlie Brown" after descending in the LM, known as "Snoopy," to within 14.4 km of the lunar surface. The LM had flown over Landing Site 2 in the Sea of Tranquility, testing the systems and procedures that would be used during the first Apollo lunar landing that would happen two months later during the Apollo 11 mission. The LM descent stage was jettisoned into lunar orbit.
The lunar surface in the background is near, but beyond the eastern limb of the Moon as viewed from Earth (about 120 degrees east longitude). The red/blue diagonal line is the spacecraft window.
Credit: NASA
Photo number: AS10-34-5112
Date: May 22, 1969
Put your crew (or newly discovered alien lifeforms) into deep-freeze suspended animation with this cryogenics module.
"This original Lunar Module, LM-13, was intended for the Apollo 19 mission to Copernicus Crater in 1973, which was ultimately canceled."
-- Cradle of Aviation Museum,
Uniondale, Long Island, New York
This may be the most boring module of them all, I'm glad I got this one done already.
5 modules done, 15 more to go.
First module using the NELTC mainline standard. I really dig the wedge plate accent on the outside of the ballast. I am reasonably happy with the trees, but may tinker with the tops.
High-angle view of S/C-012 Command Module, looking toward -Z axis, during preparation for installation of the Crew Compartment Heat Shield, showing mechanics working on Aft Bay.
Credit: NASA
Image Number: S66-41851
Date: April 17, 1966
I realized that the colour scheme I choose for Module 1 did not match the rest of the base so I've re-done it in red.
find more pics in the Mars Base set.
Zünd Marker Modules accommodate a variety of pen and ink inserts.
Further details: www.zund.com/en/marker-module
Find out more about 200m2's range of exhibition stands. Exhibition trussing allows organisations to adapt their stand for any floor space. Adapt your stand and marketing messages for every show! Find out more at 200m2.co.uk/exhibition-trussing/
The Apollo 11 Command Module, “Columbia,” was the living quarters for the three-person crew during most of the first manned lunar landing mission in July 1969. On July 16, 1969, Neil Armstrong, Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin and Michael Collins were launched from Cape Kennedy atop a Saturn V rocket. National Naval Aviation Museum. Pensacola, FL.
Module 18,
I ran out of dark gray, I used blue instead and then covered it with some greenery.
A temporary solution so I could present something at BM Limburg.
The City Space theme continues to inspire. I wanted to use the curved quarter panels as a windscreen, and by excellent luck had the matching curve plate in sand blue. From then on it was just a matter of mixing the design cues and colour scheme from the sets with my build.
Rather pleased with this, looks chunky and industrial near-future. The crane, while functional, can't lift the module without ripping itself apart. Oh well.
Probably won't take any more pictures of the module itself either, it's just an empty shell that seems to be more like a double-decker carriage on a scenic train than a science module. Some more work on that will be required, I think. But that's a problem for another time. I already have an idea for a larger build that will incorporate four of these modules.
Modular MILS modules compatible with the MILS MultiRoad modules from Michael Gale .
It consists of 2 base modules (16 x 16 and 16 x 32 studs) with an 8 x 8 hole in the middle.
You can then place all kinds of submodules in those openings, such as:
walkway
flower bed
fountain
tree
statue for example set 40221
mosaic
...
Combine them however you want to have a different view every time.
picture taken by a AFoL collegue.
update 28/09/2022
Thanks to Michael Gale, the building instruction can be found on the L-Gauge.org page.