This gallery features pictures of LEGOŽ models I created for various occasions or just for fun. They all have one thing in common: They are no more! I took them apart because I needed the parts, space or whatever ... Plane ----- A MOC build from the bricks of the 4124 "Advent Calendar" set. By building this I wanted to see if it is possible to build a decent looking model with those bricks, because some of the suggestions in the booklets of what to build with the combined bricks didn't look that great (One exception being the space shuttle transporter depicted on the box). Giant Car For A Bathing Lotion Mega-"Minifig" --------------------------------------------- Ever built a car to go along with your bathing lotion? Well ... I did! And I had a lot of fun building and photographing this model. For those of you who don't know: The Aquazone Mega-"Minifig" is an official licensed LEGO product, dated 1997. You can "decapitate" the figure to get your hands on the contained bathing lotion. Ingenious Pneumatic Engine -------------------------- I built this engine, developed by Alex Zorko, out of curiosity. At my initial visit to his site, I saw his impressive "Pneumatic V8 Mad Max Interceptor" and didn't quite realise what I was really looking at. At first I thought "Cool, another very detailed technic car (just like Jonathan Stevenson's Technic Corvette for example)", but I never would have thought that this car was actually able to move by it's own. But then it slowly came to me that I was looking at an ingenious piece of engineering. The idea to operate the pneumatic switches using a camshaft - stunning! My friend and I had our doubts that the engine would actually work, and after quite some discussion about it, I decided to build the 4 cylinder engine using the (great and understandable) instructions Alex is providing on his website. We couldn't believe our eyes when the finished engine actually started spinning! This moment was definitely worth the time I spent building it. I think every LEGO technic enthusiast should witness this once, or he has really missed something. (And I'm not really that much into technic, I'm more the "Model Team" guy.) But I was deeply impressed by the ingenious construction. I think even LEGO themselves never would have thought that it was possible to build a working piston engine using their pneumatic elements.