Wednesday, May 4, 2016

May the Fourth

Big post today!

I finally have completed the UCS Millennium Falcon! A little over 5100 Lego and 2 years of ordering from eBay and Bricklink and staring a bleary eyed at my spread sheet of parts have lead to one of the most awesome Lego sets, EVAR!

I have lots of pictures to share, so I will keep the jawing to a minimum. Happy Star Wars Day!

And done!




All in all it is great set. There is huge amount of greebling (detail work) that you can see in the close-ups below. All of the top and sides are cover with bars, taps, levers, etc which really give the set an authentic "What piece of junk!" feel.




The most surprising thing I found is that most of the top plates are just resting in place. The upper sections of the hull can be removed to reveal the inside of the Falcon. This would be awesome IF the UCS Millennium Falcon was like the 7965 set that had a detailed interior. Having a detailed interior would have made this set completely ridiculous both in awesomeness and in price, so I can give Lego a pass on skipping that.

Besides, it gives me the chance the to redo the interior myself one day. Glad I have a copy of the Millennium Falcon cut-away book.



This is the "Ops" bag.
All the parts that I got too many of or the wrong color.
It was a fantastic project and I would do again in a heartbeat (though I might settle for the cheaper off-color parts for the interior section). I hope you all enjoyed watching my progress! Stay tuned, I hope to start something new soon!

Monday, March 28, 2016

More Progress of the Falcon



Almost ready for the Kessel Run
Most of the hull plates done and installed, the radar dish temporarily attached and a good start to the cockpit. It pretty much looks like the Millennium Falcon!

I had to make an emergency order for a length of tubing used for the detail work. You need 3 lengths for the Falcon: 8L 12L and 20L. Somehow I ordered all the 12L that I needed at the 8L length. Grrrr...

Other than that, I'm into the final seven steps and looking good on parts. I'm hoping that is smoothing building from here on out.

Wednesday, March 16, 2016

Starter set!

While trying to pad out my last (hopefully!) order for the Falcon, I decided to get my son his very own bricks.

Granted, he's 18 months old, so it will be a while before he can play with them...

Since they are for him, I went ahead an washed them with warm soapy water. Usually Lego have a protective coating that helps prevent them from getting too dirty (and makes it a pain to try a paint them). I figure that by the time they are classified as "used", that coating is gone so a dunk in warm soapy is in order.


One mixed lot of bricks for the little guy! I just have to hold onto them for a few years...

Saturday, March 12, 2016

Last order for the Falcon Rebuild!

I have begun the final push to complete the Falcon before May the Fourth!

According to my notes I have 99.65% of all the parts I need, the only ones I'm missing are 8 3x3 round corner plates (Part 30357). I was suppose to get 16 of them in my last order but the seller contacted me to say they had an inventory error and only had 8. Given that my part counts on this project have been conically wrong, I had to sympathize with them.

So today when I got a 10% off coupon from another seller (Thanks iamklasick) I had purchased from, I went ahead and got the final parts (I hope MY counts are right). 

Here is the latest shots I have on the progress:

Now with side access hatches!
I also picked up Set 75136 Droid Escape Pod mainly because I wanted C3P0 for the Falcon (why didn't they include him in UCS set?) and I like the newer paint job they are doing for R2.

It actually is a pretty cool little set in its own right, 4 minifigs, lots of details on the escape pod itself and neat little hidden compartment for the Death Star plans.



Thursday, March 3, 2016

Random progress shots


Here is trio pictures as I push through several more step on the way to completing UCS Millennium Falcon.







The first is R2 showing off the underside hull plates from steps 71-74 (see, boring).

The middle has Chewie working on the side air locks from step 79. (these were surprisingly complex assembles).

Last is Han posing with the top hull plates from steps 75 and 76.

With less than one hundred pages of instructions left and nearly all the parts in, I'm in good shape to make the May 4th completion!

Now if I can just find a good C3PO...

Wednesday, March 2, 2016

What were they thinking...?

I would love to be a Lego Master Builder. Working at Lego, designing new models, surrounded by all the Lego I could ever want...

And I know it would not all be glamorous, no job is. But even knowing that and limitations that folks like Ulrik Pilegaard and Mike Mike Dooley talk about in their book "Forbidden Lego", I think it would be awesome for at least a little while to roam the halls of Lego.

Barring that heady experience, I would love to have a few beers with one. Especially the ones that designed the UCS Millennium Falcon, if at the very least to ask a few questions about the design.

Every large set has a few instructions where you kinda pause and scratch your head trying to figure out what designer was trying to accomplish. Usually, fast forwarding a few steps, the puzzling instructions become clear. Every once in while though, you run across things like this:

All for one!
This is the rear of the Millennium Falcon, you can see the transparent blue 1x2 tiles used for the engine exhaust and light gray "Boat Rigging" that wraps around the rear of the ship to make the blue tiles look like they have their own little compartments. Those boat rigging piece connect via 1x1 dark gray tiles with a clip on top (center) and they, in turn, connect to a stack of three 2x3 light gray plates.

Why go with three 2x3 light gray plates when a single 2x3 brick should do the same job? Plates are not three times cheaper (and I doubt they were in 2007 when this set debuted). I cannot see how having a stack of plates would be more structurally sound than a single brick. My best guess is they experimented with a stack of two plates but then decided to bump to three near the end of the process.

Another example from the  UCS Millennium Falcon can be found a bit later while building out the assemblies of the outer hull:

On the left is the underside of one of the hull assemblies. Notice that near the middle you can see a single dark red brick.  

When you attach this assembly, only the top side is visible and what you see is on the right. 

That red brick is now on the inside of the Falcon, in a place where you will never see it. 

The compliment assembly on the other side does not have the red brick.

The Millennium Falcon has several asymmetrical features where one side will have a different color part, or different feature; just like the movie Falcon it is decorated to look patched and modified. So it is not crazy that one side has a random dark red plate that the other does not have. The strange thing is that you will never see it in the completed build!

Again, I think this was probably an oversight. At some point in the build process that part was visible and over the series of design iterations it was covered but never removed or replaced. 

Aberrations like these do not detract from a great set, at most they may cause the builder a few minutes of time as they scratch their head head and think "That's strange" to themselves. In the case of one of the largest and most complex sets offered, you would expect to find a few of these puzzles somewhere in the 300+ pages of instructions. 

And for UCS Millennium Falcon, a ship that is famous for all the quirks resulting from years of tinkering by Han, Chewie, Lando and others, it seems appropriate to have a few oddities built in. 

Monday, February 29, 2016

February order is in!


Steps 71-74 are a bit boring to document with pictures. They all provide external hull plates for the underside of the Millennium Falcon.

The most exciting being step 71 which is in the background of the photo below. It attaches directly under the engines at the rear of the Falcon and has a lot antennas and movable triangular wings ("Angle the defector shield!" perhaps?). The rest are large patches of gray to fill in the gaps underneath.

Steps 71 (background) and 95 (foreground)

Far more exciting is I got the large 4x4 turn table that is the swivel mount for the radar dish (that Lando took out in VI).  This is actually Step 95 but since I had all the other parts I could not resist putting it together.