lørdag 14. juli 2012

Lego finner ny anvendelse

The bespoke Lego sculpture took four Rolls-Royce apprentices and graduates eight weeks to design and complete using 152,455 Lego bricks. The engine is part of a display in the Innovation Zone at the Farnborough Airshow. The bespoke Lego sculpture took four Rolls-Royce apprentices and graduates eight weeks to design and complete using 152,455 Lego bricks. The engine is part of a display in the Innovation Zone at the Farnborough Airshow.


Lego Rolls-Royce jet engine

STORY HIGHLIGHTS
  • Rolls-Royce unveiled a half-size replica of their Trent 1000 engine
  • The bespoke model took eight weeks to complete
  • It features 152,455 Lego bricks and weighs a massive 5,800 kilograms

Farnborough, England (CNN) -- The Rolls-Royce Trent 1000 jet engine can spin at 1,200 miles per hour and deliver a mighty 75,000 pounds of thrust -- unless it's made of Lego bricks.

A version of the British manufacturer's most up-to-date aircraft engine made up of more than 152,000 toy bricks was among the more unusual displays at this year's Farnborough Air Show in the UK.

The half-scale model, complete with spinning Lego turbines, took specialist company BrightBricks eight weeks to construct and is made up entirely of standard Lego parts.

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