May 27, 2013

LEGO Wear Test #2 - Design


I have the basic design  for the second LEGO wear test machine.  Here is a prototype made with Castilene plastic:




The result will be a long rig that will hold all 10 pairs of LEGO bricks to be tested simultaneously.  The parts will be made of machined metal fitting the brick shape as precisely as possible.  One thing that I learned from the first test is that it takes a lot of strength to hold those bricks, which is why I'm overkilling this one.


The bottom part is composed of two halves enabling the rig to either hold tight or release the piece completely.

Following comments that many viewers/readers have left, here are the new requirements:
  • Use a rotation motion to remove the LEGO bricks.
  • Keep the test speed at 10 seconds per iteration to prevent heat from friction.
  • Test 10 sets at the same time.
  • Test bricks from different eras.
  • Once the LEGO bricks have fallen the first time, rotate them 180 degrees to continue testing until it fails again.
  • Run the machine in the shed to keep the noise down.
  • Have a way to query the test status while it's running.
Not following comments that some viewers/readers have left:
  • This will not solve global warming
  • I will keep playing with LEGO bricks
  • My accent should not improve before the next test
One thing I'm leaving out is to have many control points and this test will [again] only count the iterations.  I initially wanted to monitor forces and current but it makes no sense with this simultaneous test. Next time...

For the test I've done my best to select bricks from 3 eras.  The new ones (3 pairs) were the easiest to find while the 2 pairs from the mid 70s posed a challenge.  It started with one pair I took from a set  bought at the flea market.  It was the set #370 from the mid 70s.  Looking at those two white bricks I noticed that they had a unique casting mark on one side.  After a lot of digging, I finally found two bricks with similar marks.  In a very non-scientific moment I declared that this unique feature probably means that they're from the same era.  Shoot me.



Now that the 10 pairs of bricks have been selected they are set aside until the test and other bricks are used during the rig's development.  Also, in a wave of madness, I might even run this new test twice with the side effect that I'm slowly destroying all the 2x3 bricks in the house.






3 comments:

  1. LOL about your era mention, but you are right, the side casting marks (pip=plastic injection point) are one of the features for iding bricks.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. All I need now is a bunch of them. I think I'll start some sort of 'send me your bricks' program where people would send me 4 bricks to tests and I would send them back 2 after the test is done.... mmmmm food for thought. BTW, good job on your blog.

      Delete
  2. Nice Blog !
    Our team at QuickBooks Customer Service Number 1-855-974-6537 plays a significant role in troubleshooting all the problems of QuickBooks in less time so that you can peacefully work on your software.

    ReplyDelete