View allAll Photos Tagged microscale
A 1:125 scale ship. It has a full interior as always. Though there is space for the bed and toilet I don't have the pieces for them. This is also why the ship is blue not grey.
The landing gear retracts though not very well. there is also a engine room added from the cross section of the ship. It is removable to access the lower cargo hold.
The lower hatch is also there but it is kept closed to keep the 3 stud wide part of the ship and the 4 stud wide part of the ship together.
White MOC on beige tablecloth not as high-contrast as I'd hoped.
Fin on the left not at the right angle :(
My microscale mosque is part of a Micropolis module. Next to the mosque are a block of three large 1930s family homes with bay windows and a row of modern family homes.
A MOC, made ​​in 2008, that I created for the Mini Castle Contest. Represents the Jason's Argo. You can see how I build it in this link: www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=345644
The nK-26 Armoured depicted here is from the 2nd Shock Division during the highly unsuccessful forest campaigns on Yuma-53. The right-arm mounted anti-armour cannon proved wholly useless in the dense forests while the left-arm mounted direct fire mortars ended up causing considerable blast and tree fragmentation damage to friendly units. Tactical misuse of mechs on Yuma-53 prompted a wholesale re-thinking of the concept.
The nK-26 is actually a pretty simple mech to contstruct. The main problem is that is uses 8 pneumatic t-pieces to articulate the arm and leg joints. The leg structure is actually cribbed from the Lego: Vikings 'Fenris Wolf' set. I kind of envisage this as a first generation of mech. The limbs are fairly vulnerable, it's squat, low-slung and bulky.
The result of experimenting with the new technique I invented for making the towers. It was simply sticking cogwheels on axles, and that's what was the effect.
See more at Brickshelf: www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=485845
I wasn't entirely happy with the Library, too colorful, not brutal nor classy enough.
Anyway, my trusted assistant has been tasked with destroying it.
There it goes.
This shot shows the crane, which is tall enough to reach the bridge. In the background is the pipeline.
Ovenntrie Castle is situated on an island off the coast of the Elvish kingdom of Hesperia, representing the closest human encroachment to that fiercely exclusionary enclave. It is the only point of outside trade for the elves, and a lucrative source of income for the humans who keep the castle and town.
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Built for the 48x48 castle category of the 2018 Summer Joust.
Now I just have to add some bad guys, get the lighting right and then I will be proud of this massive moc.
Old MOC of the earth, circa 2003. Created by hand (I worked out the hight/width required using 5:6 ratio, Then created a quarter circle cardboard cutout to work out the shape. country shapes were then estimated from atlas images.)
Photo by ROSCO, mugs meet 2003
It rolls quite well, as long as you don't hit anything www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?i=4169205
Complete with the actual monsters that actually rampage through our city regularly (when the current is flowing East, from Japan).
Mr. Green is a fast close-combat mech, which gets its name from a propensity--and capability--to disassembling other mechs on the field of battle, readying them for recycling.
The basic frame has been heavily re-built, reinforcing and upgrading the motors on all joints. While other mechs lumber about the battlefield, or maybe manage a heavy jog, Mr. Green can run, leap, climb--even tumble. In the hands of a capable operator, Mr. Green is almost as agile as a soldier.
Similarly, the armor has been significantly upgraded. All this agility and armor enables it to fulfill its mission: charge into heavy enemy fire and get close enough to their mechs to tear them apart.
The frame itself has been given heavy claws on the feet, and a right arm capable of slicing right through most mechs. The left arm is equipped with a laser lance, mounted on a quick-actuating double-pivot mechanism so that it can be plunged into any mechs with armor that resists the claws.
Each mini-module consists of a tan 6x6 plate with dark grey tiles and other details. The mini-modules can be changed and switched to different positions.
Melbourne's shrine of Remembrance, 2 day to build with my arm in a sling. Includes the eternal flame.
Photos by Teunis Davies
More photos at www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=366691