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Marble Lego is a Lego set where all of the bricks are
made
from marble.
Various vein patterns are possible, as each batch of
marble
is unique, resulting in no two sets of Marble Lego being
the
same. Because the bricks are precision cut using a
combination
of micro water-jets and hand
finishing, this is a very
expensive luxury item.
Each kit comes with instructions and the extra
specialised
pieces needed to complete a variety of constructions.
These can be either of two types: sympathetic to the use
of marble or totally inappropriate to such a luxury
material.
One the one hand we may see an ornate miniature
palace
festooned with pillars and balconies emerging, but also a
partly ruined military bunker surrounded by rubble after
an assault can be created.
Other luxurious items can be added to extend the range,
like gold plated roof tiles; silver plumbing pipes;
miniature
animal skin rugs and trophy heads for interiors. No
expensive is spared in generating limited edition Marble
Lego.
Marble
https://geology.com/rocks/marble.shtml [Voice, Jan 09 2019]
Lego bricks
https://images.ment...R7&resize=1100x1100 Typical examples. [8th of 7, Jan 10 2019]
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Annotation:
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Lego works because of the flexibility of the plastic. Marble will not snap. |
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I see what you did there...
Does this come with a tiny country club
membership? |
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// Marble will not snap. // |
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Incorrect. Marble is a brittle, metamorphic rock with no flexibility. The one thing it definitely will do is snap under load. |
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As you correctly assert, lego works because the "skirt" of the upper brick flexes round and grips the "lump" on the lower brick, thus gripping it. The components are an interference fit. |
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If marble were machined to such a close tolerance for assembly, the vertical pressure required to attach two bricks would induce fractures - particularly since marble is inhomogenous (it exhibits "veining") and the discontinuities represent regions of different strengths, leading to stress concentrations. |
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It might be do-able by cooling the lower bricks and heating the upper ones but the assembly would still be fragile. |
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For most Lego structures, there is no need for a tight fit. You
only need it for things like overhangs and beams. Marble Lego
would lend itself well to traditional architectural models,
where there are few instances of tension. |
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I imagine if the round studs were slightly tapered
and sandblasted to create some frosted texture,
they would have similar adhesion to that of the
glass stoppers used in chemistry equipment. |
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That would probably work. It would make sense to prototype the design in glass initially, as a quick, cheap proof-of concept. |
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// traditional architectural models // |
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If, however, the builder's inclination is towards the creation of vehicles, non-gripping components would be vastly less suitable. |
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Not really. Ground glass stoppers work because the taper can
go into the neck as far as needed to give a tight fit. With lego
studs, the fit limit is set by contact between the upper planar
surface of one brick, and the lower edge of the other. |
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I believe minimum levels of grip adhesion will work
at this scale. Thorough testing will confirm. |
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It should be fairly easy to CNC machine lego peices from marble to exact tolerances. Just suction should make pulling them apart something which doesn't just happen without some effort. |
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If the bricks are laid to stretcher bond, there will be a vertical joint under the centre of each brick. This will preclude adhesion by suction, shirley ? |
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I can't be sure but just the partial vacuum created by the individual... indents and outdents should be good for a few seconds of grip. Maybe even longer if forced apart. |
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The interior of a standard 2 x 4 lego brick is mostly empty space <link>. There is no obvious way of creating or maintaining a vacuum. |
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Are you suggesting a different geometry for the underside of the marble bricks ? |
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If you're willing to demean the material a little you could attach rubber linings to the female side. |
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<Decides against googling for "lego fetish"/> |
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//Are you suggesting a different geometry for the underside of the marble bricks ?// |
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Woops, yes I was. It's been many years since I played with them. If the surface was the inverse of the underside then suction would hold them together for a time. |
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Sorry. Not the way they are now. Just solid stone blocks which fit together almost seamlessly. |
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// Not the way they are now. // |
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They've always been like that. |
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// It's been many years since I played with them. // |
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You can get tablets from the pharmacy for that, now. |
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//They've always been like that.// |
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They've always been plastic too. Things change. |
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//You can get tablets from the pharmacy for that, now.// |
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Not much you can't get tablets from the pharmacy for, now. 'magine that. |
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Lego started with wood before switching to plastic.
Suction implies that you first overcame the air
pressure to get them together. Drill tiny air
passageways in the side? |
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If the bricks were stuck together with some kind of mortar, this would provide the necessary gription. |
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// Drill tiny air passageways in the side? // |
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You'd end up creating a thing like a minuscule harmonica, which is bad enough, but it's only a short step from that to trained tiny monkeys playing minature accordions, and then there's nothing for it but a flamethrower ... |
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I have an egg shaped wooden vessel my
grandfather made as an apprentice in the
shipyard. The two halfs fit together to perfection,
as if made by a machine. There is very slight
suction to be overcome in order to separate them.
It is this type of precision that is proposed for
Marble
Lego. |
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