
berlin.de
ceres.fokus.gmd.de!tom


Archive-name: LEGO-faq 

***********************************************

I compiled it from information in postings, email contributions and
catalogues. Providers of larger pieces of information are mentioned.
Please feel free to send corrections and contributions. The usual FAQ
disclaimers apply. 

Please include the word LEGO somewhere in the Subject-line of email. 

Tom Pfeifer
pfeifer@fokus.gmd.de
phone (Germany) +49-30-25499-288 

*** New since Dec 12:
LegoLand season 1995
*** New since April 18:
lots of minor revisions

The charter of this group:
==========================

To provide a forum for the discussion of all things and experiences 
relating
to the LEGO(tm), DUPLO(tm) and compatible construction toys.
Including interesting models that one has built, experiences one has 
had
using LEGO, or questions about how to build particular components. 

Contents:
=========

 1. Addresses, Phone numbers, Mail order, Clubs 
 2. Books, papers, videos about LEGO 
 3. Price comparison & profits 
 4. LegoLand theme parks 
 5. Large displays / play rooms 
 6. Computer connections and DACTA 
 7. Plural of LEGO 
 8. LEGO advertising 
 9. How to wash LEGO pieces 
 10. Storing / sorting / using LEGO 
 11. Taking pieces apart 
 12. LEGO history / What does LEGO mean 
 13. Material, Technology and Measurements 
 14. Nice quotations 
 15. FTP and WWW sites 
 16. Substitutes / compatibles / clones 

===================================================
Mail order, Clubs
=================

Mail order:
 USA: see Shop at Home
 Europe: Ask your local service department for the 
 "LEGO Service catalog of spare parts"

AUSTRALIA 
 LEGO Australia P/L. 
 P.O. Box 639 
 Lane Cove; N.S.W. 2066 
AUSTRIA 
 LEGO Handelsgesellschaft mbH. 
 Consumer Service 
 Albert-Schweitzer-Gasse 11 
 A-1147 Wien 
BELGIUM & LUXEMBOURG 
 LEGO Consumer Service 
 c/o LEGO BELGIUM 
 n.v. Leuvenseteenweg 323, 1932 Zaventem 

CANADA 

 LEGO Canada Inc. 
 331 Amber Street 
 Markham, Ontario 
 Canada L3R 3J7 
 Tel. (416) 940-6600 
 1-800-267-5346 ext.222 (Lego catalogues) 
 or (905) 887-5346 
 Fax (416) 940-0745 
 Toll-Free 1-800-387-4387 (Dacta) 
 LEGO Club (newsletter, catalog information, etc.) 
 P.O. Box 3700 
 Markham 
 Ontario, L3R 6G9 
 Banbury Cross, Winnipeg, Dacta authorized distributor: 
 1-800-665-0090 

DENMARK 

 LEGO A/S 
 DK-7190 Billund 
 Phone +45 - 75 35 11 88 
 Fax +45 - 75 35 33 60 
 LegoLand 
 Phone +45 - 75 33 13 33 
 Fax +45 - 75 35 31 79 

FINLAND 
 Oy Suomen LEGO Pb 
 PL 42; 02701 Kauniainen 
 or:
 Oy Suomen LEGO Ab 
 PL 46; 02631 Espoo 
 Puh.: 90-520 533 
FRANCE 
 LEGO France S.A., Service Pie`ces de Rechange 
 B.P. 837, F-28011 CHARTRES Ce'dex. 
 Te'l.: 37 28 53 68 
GERMANY 
 LEGO GmbH 
 Service: Regina 
 24594 Hohenwestedt/Holstein 
 LEGO-hotline (short story played from tape) (069) 19733
GREECE 
 N. Kouvalias S.A. 
 25, El. Venizelou Ave. 
 GR-17671 Kallithea 
HUNGARY 
 LEGO Hunga'ria KFT 
 1027 Budapest 
 To"lgyfa utca 28 
ITALY 
 LEGO S.p.A. 
 Servizio Consumatori 
 Via Colombo, 12 
 20020 Lainate (MI) 
 Tel. 02/93 74 581 
NETHERLANDS, The 
 LEGO Nederland B.V. 
 Afd. Konsumenten Service 
 Postbus 18, 9860 AA Grootegast 
NORWAY 
 A/S LEGO System Norge 
 Postboks 66 
 N-1301 Sandvika 
 or: Postboks 38 
 1314 Skui 
 Telefon: 67131600 
PORTUGAL 
 LEGO, Lda. 
 Largo Joao Vaz. 9-A/B/C/D 
 1700 Lisboa 
 Tel.: (01) 847 33 41 
SPAIN 
 LEGO, S.A. 
 Apartado 500 
 28850 Torrejo'n de Ardoz (Madrid) 
SWEDEN 
 Svenska LEGO AB 
 Fack; S-443 01 Lerum 1 
 or: Box 304; S-443 27 LERUM 
 Tel: 0302-229 60 
SWITZERLAND 
 LEGO Spielwaren AG / LEGO Jouets SA / LEGO Giacattoli SA 
 Neuhofstrasse 21 
 CH-6340 Baar 
 Tel: 042/33 44 66 
UNITED KINGDOM and IRELAND 
 LEGO U.K. Ltd., (including club) 
 Ruthin Road, 
 Wrexham, 
 Clwyd LL13 7TQ 

 Customer Service - 0978 296 247 
 LEGO Club - 0978 296 290 
 Service, spare parts - 0978 296 233 
 Anything else, DACTA UK - 0978 290 900 

 The LEGO club costs 3.95 pounds (4.50 pounds for Ireland). They
 need: name, address, post code, sex, date of birth. Cheques made
 payable to 'LEGO U.K. Ltd' or credit card. 

UNITED STATES 

 LEGO Systems, Inc. 
 555 Taylor Road 
 P.O. Box 1600 
 Enfield, CT, 06083-1600 
 1-800-243 4870 
 LEGO Systems, Inc. 
 Consumer Affairs 
 P.O. Box 1138 
 Enfield, CT 06083 
 1-800-422-5346 (9am-9pm Mon-Fri Eastern time,
 pseudonym "Susan Williams") 
 (203) 749-2291 
 LEGO Shop at Home Service 
 P.O. Box 1310 
 Enfield, CT 06083 
 Tel.(203) 763-4011, -4012, and -6800 (8:00 - 8:00 EST) 
 1-800-835-4386 
 1-800-453-4652 
 (catalog available, no charge for shipping, 3-5 weeks for
 delivery) 
 LEGO Builders Club 
 PO Box 5000 
 Unionville, CT 06087-5000 
 (one year $7.95, two years $14.00; membership kit and free
 bonus mini set, birthday mailing, Mania magazine, ...) 
 LEGO Dacta 
 555 Taylor Road 
 P.O. Box 1600 
 Enfield, CT 06083-1600 
 orders and info: 1-(800)-527-8339 
 1-(203)-745-1730 
 fax: 1-(203)-763-2466 
 semi-official email: LegoDacta@aol.com 
 (Dan, for product info, no orders) 

============================================

The World of LEGO Toys 
 Henry Wiencek
 Harry N. Abrams, Inc., Publishers, New York
 Times Mirror Books
 TS2301.T7W474 1987 688.7'2 86-23200
 ISBN 0-8109-1790-4 (hardcover)
 ISBN 0-8109-2362-9 (paperback)

Where does it come from? LEGO brick. 
 Text and editing: Kathy Henderson
 illustrated by Diane Tippell
 Art Director: Debbie MacKinnon
 22 pages, fully illustrated in full color
 Morristown, NJ: Silver Burdett, 1986.
 Library of Congress: TS2301.T7T525 1986
 Dewey: 688.7'2
 ISBN: 0-382-09362-3
 The book traces the manufacture of Lego bricks all the way from
 the sucking of oil out of the earth to the placing of the finished 
bricks
 in the hands of children. While this edition is supposedly 
"adapted"
 for the United States market, it still has a definite British feel 
to it.
 Type is large and writing is simple enough for seven-year-olds. A
 delightful, if not deep, the book does the job for its intended
 audience. (Wes Loder (MWL2@psuvm.psu.edu))

The Epistemology and Learning Group at the MIT Media Laboratory, has
made some of their papers and publications available via anonymous
FTP from cherupakha.media.mit.edu:/pub/el-publications/EL-Memos.
Some papers of interest to the LEGO community are: 

/pub/el-publications/Theses/Martin/, Apr 29, 1994 
 "From Circuits to Control: Learning Engineering by Designing LEGO
 Robots" 
 by Fred Martin 
memo13.PS.Z 
memo13.tar.Z 
memo13cvr.PS 
 "BRAITENBERG CREATURES" 
 by David W. Hogg, Fred Martin, and Mitchel Resnick
 This paper describes 12 autonomous ``creatures'' built with
 Electronic Bricks. Electronic Bricks are specially-modified LEGO
 bricks with simple electronic circuits inside. Although each
 Electronic Brick is quite simple, the bricks can be combined to 
form
 robotic creatures with interesting and complex behaviors, similar 
to
 the fictional machines described in Valentino Braitenberg's book 
 Vehicles (1984). 
memo10.PS.Z 
memo10.hqx 
 "CHILDREN AND ARTIFICIAL LIFE" 
 by Mitchel Resnick and Fred Martin 
 Artificial Life is a new field in which researchers study living 
systems
 by trying to build artificial versions of them. In this paper, we 
argue
 that ideas from Artificial Life research can and should be shared
 with children. We describe various computational tools (including
 LEGO/Logo and Electronic Bricks) that students can use to build
 artificial creatures. By building and programming artificial 
creatures
 (and discussing and thinking about how the creatures behave),
 children can explore some of the central ideas of Artificial Life --
 ideas like feedback, levels of organization, and emergence. 
memo8.PS.Z 
memo8.hqx 
 "LEGO/LOGO: LEARNING THROUGH AND ABOUT DESIGN" 
 by Mitchel Resnick and Stephen Ocko, September 1990 
 Most classroom problem-solving activities focus on analytic
 thinking: decomposing problems into subproblems. Students rarely
 get the opportunity to design and invent things. In this paper, we
 describe how LEGO/Logo, a computer-based robotics
 environment, supports a variety of design activities. We examine
 how students using LEGO/Logo can learn important mathematical
 and scientific ideas through their design activities, while also
 learning about the design process itself. 

Israel Shenker 
 Playing with blocks can be a fine art at this theme park. in:
 Smithsonian magazine v. 19, June 1988, p. 120-4+

A video is available from Enfield, CT called "How Lego Bricks Are 
Made".
It runs 12-15 min and takes the viewer through the various production 
and
packaging stages. It also talks briefly about the design and 
manufacture
of the molds or "tools". Unfortunately it does not dwell at all on 
things like
how sets are designed, how themes are chosen, etc. Nonetheless it's
informative and well worth the slight hassle of getting one's hands on 
it. 
You can "check the video out" by sending a $20 check made out to LEGO
Systems, Inc. to: 
Ms. B. St. Pierre, Lego Systems, Inc., P.O. Box 1138, Enfield, CT 
06083 
You can keep the video for two weeks and upon its return LEGO will 
mail
back your original check. Simple. --- Mario (marpi0591@aol.com)
marpi0591@aol.com

======================================

thorinn@diku.dk (Lars Henrik Mathiesen): 

In April 1993 LEGO published their results for 1992. The mother firm
reported a net profit (before Danish taxes, probably) of 
US$100,000,000,
while the net sales in the North American market were given as
US$4,000,000,000. 

Somebody calculated the price per piece in the 'old days' as $0.10. 
Today
it may be between $0.10 and $0.30. Count, calculate and mail me (Tom)
your comments. 

LegoLand, Billund, Denmark is reported to sell at list prices, no 
factory
discounts. 

===============================

Billund, Denmark, Europe:
+++++++++++++++++++++++++

Billund is in Jylland (Jutland), a town of only just over 4500 people
somewhere between Esbjerg (65 km) and Vejle (35 km). 

Tel. +45 - 7533 1333, Fax +45 - 7535 3179
Legoland Park, Nordmarksvej 9, DK-7190 Billund

(Legoland official:)
Entrance fees for 1994: 1 day 2 days Season Groups (>=20)
Little Kids (3-13) DKK 80 DKK 130 DKK 195 DKK 60
Big Kids (14-59) DKK 95 DKK 160 DKK 240 DKK 75
Senior Kids (60-) DKK 60 DKK 100 DKK 150 DKK 50

(increase since 1993: little kids +5, big kids +0)
When admission has been paid, all rides and exhibitions are free.
The Traffic School has a separate booking and payment system.
Guides and coach drivers are free and get free meal coupons. 

(end of Legoland official) 

In 1995 the whole park (both indoor and outdoor) will open:
Spring: April 8 - June 6 --- 10 am - 8 pm (activities - 6 pm)
Peak season: July 1 - Aug. 13 --- 10 am - 9 pm (activities - 7 pm)
Late season: Aug. 14 - Oct. 1 --- 10 am - 8 pm (activities - 6 pm)
(this is 3 weeks earlier and 2 weeks longer then 1994)

In the previous years (until 1993) the indoor exhibits (8000 sq m) 
were
open until December. 

The Legoland driving school is for kids aged 8...13. Examples of the
replications in the park and their piece counts, found by Mike Weldy
(bullwnkl@mentor.cc.purdue.edu) in a magazine: 

 o Mt. Rushmore (American monument to Presidents Washington,
 Jefferson, Lincoln, and T. Roosevelt) (1.5 million regular bricks 
and
 40K Duplo) 
 o Billund Airport (complete with airplanes) (687,860 bricks) 
 o Port of Copenhagen (3 million bricks) 
 o The Statue of Liberty (1.4 million bricks) 
 o Big Chief Sitting Bull (1.2 million bricks) 
 o a buffalo hunt (2.5 million) 

fin@unet.umn.edu (Craig A. Finseth) and kokdg@diku.dk (Bo Kjellerup)
have details how to get there: 

AIR:
----

From Europe: Fly to Billund. (Yes, there are flights directly to 
Billund from


 

(Continued from last message)
most major European cities.) The airport, which was at first build by 
the
LEGO company, is the second busiest (behind Copenhagen) in Denmark.
The first model of the airport was made out of LEGO bricks. 

From the US or anywhere else: Fly to Koebenhavn (Copenhagen), then to
Billund. 

Once in Billund, walk. It's just across the parking lot, about five 
minutes
away. The Legoland Hotelis half a mile from the airport. 

TRAIN:
------

You can't directly. Billund is about as far as you can get from any 
railway
lines and still be on land in Europe. Since the town was essentially 
"put on
the map" by LEGO Systems and that company didn't really get going 
until
well after World War II, I would guess that they missed out on the 
railway
building era. In any event, you can take a train to Vejle (nice town) 
and a
bus to Billund (about half an hour). 

If you arrive with a ferry from England (Harwich - Esbjerg), take the 
train
from the ferry to Esbjerg rail station, and go by bus to Billund 
(about one
hour). 

BUS / AUTO:
-----------

The bus goes there. A main road goes there. As I recall, the airport 
and
LegoLand parking lots are one and the same. 

Store:
------

There is a large store and it carries the entire current line. It does 
_not_
carry old, non-standard, or discontinued kits. All sales are at list 
price. If
you're from the US, the only reason to buy anything is that the 
current line
is somewhat different in Europe than the US, so you might find a new 
kit
(and wince when you have to pay for it). Price is a smaller 
consideration
for other countries. 

Features:
---------

Family Hotel LEGOLAND, open all year round, Tel. +45 - 75 33 12 44
Banking: Den Danske Bank has a branch in the Information Office.
Handicapped: Walking-impaired and wheelchair users can go all over the
park. 

More:
-----

To keep the FAQ in limits, I'll email you the heartwarming 
descriptions by
some visitors, if you email a Subject line 'LEGOland Billund request' 
to
pfeifer@fokus.gmd.de 

New international theme parks
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

** USA ** flournoy@cs.stanford.edu (Ray Flournoy): 

LEGO has decided on its US site for a LEGOLand Family Park, and it is:
Carlsbad, California, a city near San Diego. It will open in 1999, 
probably. 

** UK ** Tom Gardner knows: 

Legoland UK will be on the site of the old Windsor Safari Park in, 
surprise,
Windsor. It will probably be finished in 1996. 

========================================

The Seattle Children's Museum (Seattle Center) has a large DUPLO
playroom. They have also had LEGO exhibits from time to time.
merritt@u.washington.edu (Ethan A Merritt) 

The Mall of America, in Bloomington, Minnesota (USA), has a Legoland
store near the center of the mall. It has a large area for play, with 
tables
and chairs. The tops of the tables are LEGO, and there are basins set 
in
the center where loose LEGO bricks are stored. There are also huge
models there: some hang from the ceiling by cables, others stand tall 
on
the ground, with moving parts and blinking lights. And best of all: 
ALL
AGES ARE WELCOME.
nudnik@camelot.bradley.edu (Steven Parks) 

... The sculptures range from dinosaurs, circus performers, and 
animals, to
scientific models of such things as the space shuttle.
... there are two *MEGA LARGE SIZE* lego blocks located in one part of
the surrounding parking lot that you might want to take a picture of.
foo@drycas.club.cc.cmu.edu (FOO) 

Currently (until Jan. 1995?) the Chicago Museum of Science and 
Industry
presents the LEGO Imagination Displays (a one story tall robot made 
out
of duplo, statue of liberty, a big red bridge that spanned a small 
valley and
had a railroad track on it that a guy on a little railroad car went 
back and
fourth on, a working LEGO clock (that had all kinds of moving working
pieces), a yellow ball `shoots and ladders' type LEGO structure (that 
had
a LEGO elevator that moved balls up to the top of this thing and then 
the
rolled down causing all kinds of things to happen - lights, windmills 
etc.,
interactive LEGO displays: robots movable by remote control, or for
practice programing). T-Shirts for sale. -- Jeff 
(crites@cc.purdue.edu) 

pattie.fulton@sfwmd.gov (Pattie Everett Fulton) remembers an exibition 
in
a museum in Frankfurt, Germany, for architectural demonstrations. 

==========================================

See address of DACTA in the address section. 

Fred Martin from the MIT provides:
LEGO Dacta is the educational branch of the LEGO company (which has
its U.S. headquarters in Enfield, CT). Dacta sells the LEGO Technic
product line -- the geared and motorized version of the LEGO system. 

Call Dacta and get their catalog, which has many LEGO Technic kits.
Recommended kits are the 1038 Technic Universal Buggy (a specialized
kit for building a small LEGO vehicle with a dual motor drive; about
US$60), the 1032 Technic II with Motorized Transmission (a small
general-purpose kit including one motor and one battery pack; about
US$76), and the 9605 Technic Resource Set (a large general-purpose kit
including two motors and two battery packs; about US$200). 

Catalog names:

 o "Making Connections" (new 1994) 
 o "Small Hands: Big Imaginations" 
 o "Gear Up for Learning" (probably obsolete) 

Dacta charges 5% shipping cost (while Shop at Home shippes free). 
Orders can be placed with a credit card over the phone or through the
mail with a check. Schools can order with a purchase order. This is 
only
for the US. For other countries you should contact your local Dacta
representatives. Most countries should have one. If not, Denmark 
should
be able to let you know where you can order from. 

vaughn@pluto.cis.udel.edu (Chris Vaughn) found in the Dacta catalog:
MS-DOS or Apple II Slot Card Pack - US$161.50 includes slot card,
cable, LEGO TC logo software and reference guides. (card is for most
MS-DOS machines, except IBM PS/2 Models 50 and above or any other
microchannel computer) 

Interface Box and Transformer - US$188.00 This box is what you connect
all your motors, lights, and sensors to. It has 2 inputs, and 6 
outputs (3 if
you want to use three motors and have them all be reversible). 

carol@edfua0.ctis.af.mil (Andy Carol):
The Lego Control Lab for Macintosh and/or PC is available for about
US$600. It connects to any computer via serial cable (RS-232), has 8
different output ports which can control motors, lights, and sounds. 
It has
8 different inputs for buttons, angles, thermal, etc. This is _NOT_ a 
plug in
card, but rather an external device hooked up via serial cable. It is
programmed with LOGO, and has a really nice graphical system under
Mac and Windows. It's also possible to use a C and C++ API for all
control functions. 

jkoch@ee.ryerson.ca (jim koch) provides:
The price for Apple or IBM starter pack US$798.00 (Jan 92). 

vaughn@pluto.cis.udel.edu (Chris Vaughn) writes:
The Mini Board is a "miniature microprocessor-based controller board
designed for control of small robotic devices". It was designed at the 
MIT
Media Laboratory. This board is perfect for controlling LEGO devices
(and in fact looks to be much better than the interface designed by
LEGO). 

All of the information about the Mini Board is available at an FTP 
site (the
address is "cherupakha.media.mit.edu (18.85.0.47)")). This includes
diagrams and a parts list. The tech reference is a 47-page Postscript
document. 

There is a mailing list at listserv@oberon.com. Send the body
"SUBSCRIBE ROBOT-BOARD your_name" to this email address, the
body HELP for help. 

The purpose of this mailing list is to discuss robot controller 
boards, and
robot control in general. In particular, this list will be used to 
support the
Miniboard 2.0 and 6.270 board design by Fred Martin and Randy Sargent
of MIT. However, any and all traffic related to robot controllers is
welcome. 

Documentation about the MIT 6.270 is also available by FTP:
aeneas.mit.edu [18.71.0.38] in the ~ftp/pub/ACS/6.270 directory. 

slh@toklas.HQ.Ileaf.COM (Stephen L. Hain) contributes:
May I suggest adding Paradigm Software's Pearl Controller and Object
Logo to this section. The Pearl Controller connects between a 
Macintosh
serial port and a LEGO Robotics controller, and it is daisy chainable.
Object Logo has an extension consisting of a set of object-oriented
robotics programming features, allowing event-driven robot control.
Contact Paradigm at 617 576-7675. (Stephen works for them.) 

==========================

While most people point out that they just say LEGOs,
lunatic@netcom.com (Lunatic Johnathan Bruce E'Sex) dug out: 

One catalogue, dated 1980, has the following on its back page: 

 Dear Parents and Children
 The word LEGO(R) is a brand name and is very special to all of us
 in the LEGO Group Companies. We would sincerely like your help in
 keeping it special. Please always refer to our bricks as 'LEGO
 Bricks or Toys' and not 'LEGOS.' By doing so, you will be helping 
to
 protect and preserve a brand of which we are very proud and that
 stands for quality the world over. Thank you! 

 Susan Williams
 Consumer Services 

Subject 8) LEGO advertising
===========================

LEGO is new toy every day.
LEGO c'est un nouveau jouet chaque jour.
LEGO es un juguete nuevo cada dia.
LEGO ist jeden Tag ein neues Spielzeug.
LEGO e' un gioco nuovo ogni giorno.

LEGO - eine Sprache der Kinder (LEGO - a language of the children).
LEGO zeigt, was Kinder koennen (LEGO shows what children can).

European LEGO advertising is quite good - they just show an animated
film of lots of LEGO being assembled, disassembled, reassembled etc. a
few times over in 15 seconds. Some of them are quite impressive. 

===================================

From a LEGO catalog... 
 DUPLO and LEGO SYSTEM toys can be washed by hand, using
 warm water -- max. 104 degrees Fahrenheit (40 Celsius) -- and a
 mild liquid dish detergent. Storage temperature max. 104 degrees
 Fahrenheit = 40 Celsius. Electric parts are not washable. 
jc@gmd.de (Juergen Christoffel) and gilmer@gandalf.ca (Jack Gilmer)
say: 
 Put your LEGO bricks into a pillow case or a mesh bag (the kind for
 washing small articles of clothes) and wash in your washing
 machine at a low temperature. Tested in kindergarten once a year.
 (Be sure to put no metal or electric parts into the machine, and
 wash clear pieces seperately by hand) 
alekz@library.welch.jhu.edu (Alekz Vermont) says: 
 stick them in the tub w/warm sudsy water and swish about... let
 soak. swish more. drain tub. spray with shower (to rinse) and let
 air-dry... 
Do not wash your LEGO people -- their faces come off! 
 ... but mengsoo@bnr.ca (Meng Soo) notes:
 There's nothing wrong with that. I'd pretend that their faces 
melted,
 and became faceless mutant LEGO people. The fun really started
 when I discovered permanent markers... 

===========================================

One of the greatest ideas was: 
Keep them on a bed sheet: spread the sheet for playing - fold it 
together
to tide up in seconds, and put it in whatever container you like. 

Most netters strongly object sorting their pieces and enjoy sitting on 
the
floor having their pieces all around them. 

The variety and size of technic elements may still demand some 
sorting.
Hardware stores sell storage units with 18-60 drawers, intended for
sorting nuts and bolts and the like. The transparent plastic drawers 
(which
can include transparent dividers) allow one to see the contents of a 
drawer
without opening it. 

================================

People use teeth, fingernails, screwdrivers, penknives, ... 

LEGO now sells a small handle-like gizmo called a "brick separator". 
It
works GREAT! It's under US$2 and also found in some basic buckets.
[part number 821] 

dholmes@netcom.com (Dennis Holmes) means: What you need is TWO
separator tools. Stick one on top and one underneath, with the handles
facing the same direction, and then squeeze the handles together. 
Works
like magic! 

1x1x1s are easy - twist one of them through 45 degrees, and then prise
them apart with fingers. 

To separate 2x1 flats crj10@phx.cam.ac.uk (Clive Jones) writes: 

Let: -
...be the 1-wide cross-section of the 2x1 block, so:
 -
 -

represents the two blocks stuck together. Now find two 12x2 plates. 
Apply
them like this: 

 ------------ <- wiggle
 -
 -
 ------------ wiggle ->

...and wiggle them backwards and forwards *hard*. Within a second or 
so,
you'll find that all but the most stubborn plates separate, and 
getting the
2x1s off the 12x2s is then easy. 

Joe Garlicki (jg6a+@andrew.cmu.edu) has another way to separate 2x1
flats. First, take two 2x1 blocks (the regular size). Put one on top 
of the
2x1 flats, and put the other one on the bottom. Then, snap the two 2x1
flats apart. After that, it's easy to get the 2x1 flats off of the 2x1 
blocks.
Note: This method can be applied to other small plate sizes as well. 

malakai@potomac.engin.umich.edu (Jeff Jahr) uses 

... the small black mechanics wrench from some of the old space sets. 
The
jaw of wrench is designed so it can grab onto a LEGO bump - absolutely
useless for prying - but the other end is flattened like a 
screwdriver. They
seem to be made from a slightly softer plastic than the blocks to 
avoid
scratches. 

===============================================

While LEGO comes from Danish "leg godt", "lego" means 'I assemble" in
Latin. 

The recent "20th anniversary" refers to the LEGO company in the US
(1973), not to LEGO itself. It was available before because Samsonite
had a license to produce it. 

Andreas Henning (d2henan@dtek.chalmers.se) and Timo (tho@tik.vtt.fi)
say: 

The LEGO patent has expired some years ago. 

nad@cl.cam.ac.uk Neil Dodgson found: 

My "The Art of LEGO" book says that the company name, LEGO, came
from the Danish "Leg godt", roughly translated as "Play well". The
company originally made wooden toys during the depression. They also
made yo-yos for a while, during the yo-yo craze. Unfortunately this 
left
them with warehouses full of yo-yos when the craze suddenly stopped; 
so
the boss just cut all the yo-yos in half, and used them as wheels for 
toy
trucks, etc. The same guy invented the LEGO bricks, initially without 
the
tubes inside; the addition of these tubes meant that the blocks held
together really well, and sales took off. I think it was in the mid to 
late
'50s
that LEGO decided to drop all its other products and just make the 
bricks
(risky...). 

(Somebody found in a book that LEGO dropped their other product lines
when a fire burned down the building housing them. Thus, it was not as
risky to sell the bricks exclusively. It would probably have been 
riskier to
re-capitalize the wooden toy line than to drop it.) 

Bo Kjellerup (kokdg@diku.dk):
The fire was caused by the son of the boss, Kirk Kristiansen, who was
playing in their garage/hobby room aside the factory and set it all on 
fire.
BTW, the son's name was misspelled in the church's annuals, so he is
spelled with 'K' now. 

"The Art of LEGO" says that one reason LEGO survives is that it
constantly adapts itself to the modern world; e.g. the original LEGO 
trains,
and now the remodeled one that will run off the mains. Perhaps all 
these
new special blocks are a reflection of a society that wants instant
gratification, rather than spending a few hours building a model? 

found by r1b6116@zeus.tamu.edu / Ken Blair: 

Taken without permission from _Brick Kicks_ #1 ("The official magazine 
of
the LEGO builders club", USA) (circa 1987 or 88?) 

"Bricks & Pieces: The LEGO Story" 

Did you know that 300 million children have owned LEGO sets since they
were first made? And that you are one of the 68 million kids from 
around
the world who like to play with LEGO building bricks today! Here's the
story of how we grew... 

Although the international LEGO Group is now very large, it is still a
family-run company that started out quite small. More than 50 years 
ago,
a carpenter named Ole Kirk Christiansen and his 12-year old son,
Godtfred, started making toys in the little town of Billund, Denmark.
Plastic had not been invented yet, so they made toy cars, trucks, yo-
yos,
animals, and other toys out of wood. They decided that a good name for
their company would be LEGO, which means "play well" in Danish, and
also, they discovered, happens to mean "put together" in Latin! Ole 
and
Godtfred were very proud of their workmanship, and adopted the LEGO
motto that "only the best is good enough." 

When plastic became available after World War II, LEGO began to make
both wooden and plastic toys. It was about this time that the idea of
plastic LEGO bricks was introduced. Godtfred loved to build with these
colorful new pieces, and was continually putting them together and 
taking
them apart to build new designs. In fact, it was Godtfred who 
perfected
the special design that makes every single LEGO brick fit together in 
any
combination, over and over again. The first LEGO building set was made
more than 30 years ago- and the bricks from that set can still be used 
with
even the newest LEGO building set of today! 

LEGO bricks first appeared in the United States in 1961 and quickly
became as popular here as in Europe. The international LEGO group is
now worldwide, and is run by Kjeld Kirk Kristiansen, Old Kirk 
Christiansen's
grandson. As the company keeps growing, so do the kids of exciting


 

(Continued from last message)
LEGO kits that are now sold in 129 different countries ... from DUPLO
preschool to FABULAND, LEGO BASIC, to LEGOLAND, LEGO boats
and trains to LEGO TECHNIC SETS. In fact, this year alone, we will
make more than six billion bricks and building pieces for all the LEGO
lovers 'round the world- like you! 

From _The_World_Of_LEGO_Toys_, by Henry Wiencek, Harry N.
Abrams, Inc., 1987,
quoted by dulcaoin@cats.ucsc.edu (joshua):

1949 was the revolutionary year for the company--it was in that year 
that
the company introduced something then called the "automatic binding
brick." For years Ole Kirk [found of LEGO] had been making wooden
blocks in the traditional European style--simple, handmade cubes that
could be stacked one on top of the other. When he began producing
plastic toys he copied the old wooden design in the new material, but 
the
plastic cubes didn't seem quite right..."It occured to us that the 
bricks
would become an even better toy...if they could be 'locked' together."
What emerged...was later to become the real LEGO brick. 

devaney@ACFcluster.NYU.EDU: Before LEGO was in the US market, the
luggage manufacturer Samsonite has had a manufacturing license, but
without much success in the toy market, so LEGO took the license back
and opened a shop in Connecticut. 

==================================================

The LEGO motto: Det bedste er ikke for godt. (Only the best is good
enough.) Actually a word-by-word translation would be, "The best is 
not
too good" - in which "not too good" parses nicely into the idiom of a
Jutlandish understatement, making the between-the-lines statement be,
"Actually, we'd prefer to deliver rather better than the best". 
Henning
Makholm (hem@math.ku.dk) 

from Wiencek's The World of LEGO Toys, paraphrased by
saint@cats.ucsc.edu (Dan): 
 LEGO brick are made out of ABS (acrylonitrile butadiene styrene),
 it is heated to 450 degrees Fahrenheit (232 C), then injected into 
a
 mold which is kept at 85 degrees. The pressure used to mold the
 bricks varies from 24 to 150 tons. The molds are kept within one
 degree of the 85 degree specification. ABS absorbs moisture, so
 the entire molding hall is kept at 50% humidity. The allowable
 tolerance for a brick is two-hundredths of a millimeter, or about
 eight ten-thousands of an inch. 

My xwebster says: ABS: a tough rigid plastic used esp. for automobile
parts and building materials. 

bullwnkl@mentor.cc.purdue.edu (Bullwinkle J. Moose / Mike Weldy) found
in Israel Shenker's article: 

The ABS granules is dyed to LEGO's secret specifications in factories 
in
Holland and Germany. Molds for the pieces are made in a factory in
Germany and two factories in Switzerland. The margin of error in the
molds can only be 5 one-thousands of a millimeter -- less than the
thickness of a human hair! For security reasons, LEGO inters worn-out
molds in the concrete of its new buildings. 

There are LEGO factories in Billund(3), Switzerland, Brazil, South 
Korea,
and the United States (in Enfield, Connecticut). 

More Random Lego tests: Random pieces are selected and tested for
size, sharp points or edges, damage when dropped or compressed,
torsion, flammability, toxicity, colorfastness, and "clutch 
power"(resistance
to separation). Optimal clutch power comes after 8 to 10 couplings. 

One last Lego test: Pneumatic-powered steel jaws mimic children's 
jaws,
treating the pieces to the ultimate test-- trial by biting! 

Two 2X4 bricks can be joined 24 different ways. Six can be joined
102,981,500 different ways. 

Geometry, provided by Jef Poskanzer (jef@netcom.com): Thanks to
various pointers, especially the MIT course notes, here is the metric
version. **All measurements in mm.** 

|side: __ __ __ __ top: +----------------+
| +----------------+ | () () () () |
| | | | |
| | | | () () () () |
| +----------------+ +----------------+
|spacing of knob centers: 8 
|diameter of knobs: 5
|height of block: 9.6
| 
|end: __ __ bottom: +================+
| +--------+ # -- -- -- #
| | | # ( )( )( ) #
| | | # -- -- -- #
| +--------+ +================+
|height of knobs: 1.7 
|thickness of block walls: 1.5
|outer diameter of cylinders: 6.31
|thickness of cylinder walls: 0.657

(height of block) =
 (spacing of knob centers) * 6 / 5
(thickness of block walls) =
 ((spacing of knob centers) - (diameter of knobs)) / 2
(height of knobs) =
 (height of block) / 3 - (thickness of block walls)
(outer diameter of cylinders) =
 sqrt(2) * (spacing of knob centers) - (diameter of knobs)
(thickness of cylinder walls) =
 ((outer diameter of cylinders) - (diameter of knobs)) / 2

============================

I'm surprised that no one has ever mentioned the glorious sound of 
LEGO.
LEGO bricks are about the only present you can tell what is by shaking 
it. 
chelius@studsys.mscs.mu.edu (The Shaggy T.A.) 

I can hear that restful sound of LEGO pieces in my mind even now. It's
kind of like the peaceful sound of a waterfall, but more tinkly. 
kurisuto@chopin.udel.edu (Sean J. Crist) 

LEGO is not a toy. - It's a way of life. 
mikes@bioch.ox.ac.uk (Mike Smith) 

==============================

Paul Gyugyi (gyugyi@earthsea.stanford.edu) maintains an FTP archive of
LEGO information. It is located at earthsea.stanford.edu in 
~ftp/pub/lego,
there is a README there that describes what the site contains, for
example CAD, faq, games, images, sets, uploads. The latter is an 
upload
area for contributions. 

A World Wide Web (WWW) server is also available, the URL for it is 
http://legowww.homepages.com. It contains a lot of information that 
has
been collected from the newsgroup and the FTP site, maintained by 
David
Koblas (koblas@netcom.com). You may also be interested in
crow@coos.dartmouth.edu (Preston F. Crow)'s pages at PC's LEGO
Empire http://www.cs.dartmouth.edu/~crow/lego/empire.html 

===============================================

Finally some information about similar products. Most people state 
that
the quality is much lower then original LEGO pieces. 

erikred@uiuc.edu (Erik Robert Wilson) TYCO are reported to sell
compatible basic bricks in 500/1000-piece buckets for approx. $0.03 
per
piece. They also made that LEGO-looking telephone. There are LEGO
compatible "superblocks" as well as DUPLO compatible ones. They are of
fair quality (for a clone) in different colors (orange, green, hot 
pink, neon
yellow, regular pink, violet, sky blue, pastels), including 1/2 height 
plates
(not LEGO 1/3). If you mix them with your originals, you can use non
LEGO colors so they are easily distinguishable. 

Mini-Micro Blocks are found in 1000-piece buckets about $0.02 per 
piece.
There are large quantities of the basic 2x4, 2x2, and 1x2 bricks, more 
tight
but reported to be fully LEGO-compatible. Made by a company called
Ritvik, which also makes Mega-Micro blocks. 
ed@odi.com: The Ritvik Mega-Blox are giant-scale; a 1x1 brick is about
2cm x 2cm by 8 cm. The knobs are only a tiny bit shorter than the base 
of
the bricks, and they don't hold together via friction; turn a model 
upside
down and it falls apart. The charm is that they're great for very 
small
(pre-Duplo) children who don't have the strength or coordination to 
play
with Duplo or LEGO.
Ritvik Toys Inc., P.O. Box 1408, Champlain, NY 12919
HQ in Quebec, Canada. Offices in U.K., Australia, and New Zealand. 

Ken Koleda (KOLEDA_K@msb.flint.umich.edu):
Tandem Bricks, made in Taiwan Tandem Toys, Rolling Hills, CA 90724
Notes: Largest brick is the 2x4 full height. A large portion of these 
bricks
are 1x flats. The flats are the same height as LEGO (1/3). Colors are
similar to lego, except with a good number of gray flats and greens 
bricks.
Quality is similar to other clones, generally somewhat below LEGO 
(loose,
but workable). 

PEDLO is reported to be similar, but not compatible with LEGO. Their
plates are only 1/2 height of full bricks, not 1/3 like LEGO. 

mckinney@adonis.ee.queensu.ca (Alexander (Sandy) McKinney):
Qubo ville Basic Building Bricks, look identical except for the LEGO
missing from each of the studs. Assortment of 23 standard pieces, 2x4,
2x2, 1x4, 1x2, 1x1, about CAN$ 2.95
Made in Italy by GOMPLA S.n.c. di Bisello D.&C., Via Emila Romagna
13/15, 35020 Saonara (PD) - Italy Imported by Wallace Companies Inc.,
USA, 175 Citation Court, Birmingham, Al 35209 CANADA, WSP
Marketing Int., 49 Valleybrook Dr., Con Mills, Ontario, M3B 2S6 

elgaard@diku.dk (Niels Elgaard Larsen) says:
Some years ago LEGO did have a lot of trouble with a far east company
that made LEGO clones called "0937". I wonder if they placed them
upside-down in the stores. 


 
