Lego BB-8 Hemisphere! |
Though, again, some bits are complicated, so the red dots are substituting for missing bricks and showing where the white triangle panel buttons go.
Part of the reason building slowed down is that I'd only digitally designed panel 3 so far. So while Lara was building the orange rings for the panels, I first had to design the pattern layout for the other panels on the computer.
As I mentioned last time, the body is made of 6 panels designed to fit together into a sphere. Conveniently BB-8 has 6 hatches, so each panel has one of the hatches in the middle. Here's a view of the three completed panels, arranged as they attach.
Lego BB-8 Panels 6, 3, and 5 |
The other problem is going to be a lot harder to solve. Individually the panels are pretty strong, but they don't really attach at very many points. Trying to arrange the panels for the picture above they wanted to fall apart, and even started splitting at the layers within the panels.
I finally got it to stay together long enough for the photo, but this isn't going to work for a static (non-moving) model that has to sit for more than ten minutes, let alone a model that's supposed to drive around and interact with folks. I have several ideas to solve the problem, but it's not going to be trivial; we'll see how hard it ends up being.
You can see symptoms of this problem in the interior photo below. The white lines in the middle are where the bricks were separated enough to allow light to leak in from the lights outside.
Lego BB-8 Interior showing splitting seams |
Here it is a little more zoomed out. I wanted you guys to be able to see how the panels are designed to attach to each other with a reasonably smooth join for the "hamster" robot to run around on.
Lego BB-8 Interior |
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