ragnarok wrote:The weapons are nice but they don't seem to fit in none of the classic LEGO themes. May be it would be better if you make some helmets, flakjackets.
My thoughts exactly, but my current mold is limited to a planar parting line which precludes producing a good helmet (imagine the parting line running around the curving rim of a helmet).
You should see the list of requests I get for weapons and accessories - walkie-talkies, field radios, grenades, sniper rifles, WW1, WW2, Korean war, Vietnam War, heavy machine guns. The list is endless! Luckily, I have plenty of room in my mold to add more items.
ragnarok wrote:
The Little Armory is really setting a standart there but I believe there are more than enough AFOLs to allow space for competition.
LA's item quality is nice, but I am actually chasing LEGO quality. They have always been the "high-bar" as far as I'm concerned.
Note: After examining some newer LEGO items, I'm not certain they have the same quality control they once had. The new Tommy-gun and Uzi weapons show signs of poor molding. Examine them closely. Look for a telltale "sinking", or divot in the plastic right above the handle. This is an indication of a poor "pack out" during molding, where the mold pressure is reduced allowing shrinkage. Sloppy! They also show "pull scratching", or small scrapes, on vertical surfaces indicating a sub-par separation from the mold - typical of poor "draft" (amount of slope in the mold surfaces).
But, this is probably more than most of you are interested in. For me, now that I know how Plastic Injection Molding is done, I don't see things in the same way I used to. If you want something that will really blow your mind, take a look at the new large engine housing from the new white passenger jet #7893, and try to figure out how
that compound sliding mold was made!
---Will