• We’re currently investigating an issue related to the forum theme and styling that is impacting page layout and visual formatting. The problem has been identified, and we are actively working on a resolution. There is no impact to user data or functionality, this is strictly a front-end display issue. We’ll post an update once the fix has been deployed. Thanks for your patience while we get this sorted.

ULTIMATE Lego Chaingun!

Originally posted by: Whoozyerdaddy
The rubberband chaingun took over a month to build, and is powered by an honest-to-goodness Lego motor.
That would, no doubt, be a month they didn't interact with a single female.

.............................................................. ROFL

-why so harsh, Whoozyerdaddy?

p.s. (in the basement)
except for their mothers bringing them microwaved TV dinners, and their somewhat concerned sisters telling them that it's 4am in the morning and that they have Boy Scout meetings the next morning. Then ofcourse the preps at their high school, bringing over unfinished homework from summer school, with a fifty dollar reward and an ABC gum tip if the answers are girly written - and are turned away with: "CAN'T YOU SEE I'M BUSY................." -
---get out before I summon Darth Vader to get rid of you---

damn kids who ain't got a life, but bring the rest of society to have one; the gossip we hear at the corner cafe about nerds who listen to heavy metal 24/7 and build stupid lego projects.
 
Originally posted by: Whoozyerdaddy
The rubberband chaingun took over a month to build, and is powered by an honest-to-goodness Lego motor.
That would, no doubt, be a month they didn't interact with a single female.

Hey now... That rubber band cannon will give that kid more notriety than striking out with a few ugly chicks would. A project like that could probably get him into an engineering school of his choosing if he had the grades to back it up.
 
Originally posted by: Whoozyerdaddy
The rubberband chaingun took over a month to build, and is powered by an honest-to-goodness Lego motor.
That would, no doubt, be a month they didn't interact with a single female.

Do doubt when they say crap like "Keep reading for some hot embedded YouTube action of this thing blasting away."


 
Originally posted by: spherrod
Originally posted by: OVerLoRDI
That's amazing. I wish I could find all my legos.

LEGO 😉

We had this discussion, a long, long time ago. It was many hundreds of posts long.

Conclusion: Both Lego and Legos are equally WRONG, but the former is 'correct' in the European vernacular and the latter in American vernacular.

The CORRECT way to say it (from the Lego corporate site) is "Lego Bricks."

Stop correcting people when you're just as wrong as them!
 
Originally posted by: So
Originally posted by: spherrod
Originally posted by: OVerLoRDI
That's amazing. I wish I could find all my legos.

LEGO 😉

We had this discussion, a long, long time ago. It was many hundreds of posts long.

Conclusion: Both Lego and Legos are equally WRONG, but the former is 'correct' in the European vernacular and the latter in American vernacular.

The CORRECT way to say it (from the Lego corporate site) is "Lego Bricks."

Stop correcting people when you're just as wrong as them!

Well, as a European I'm correct then 🙂

Internally in the company (presentations and meetings) the plural was always called LEGO in my experience.
 
WTF is he firing? What kinda ammos? nm, looks like rubber bands. He's gonna shoot somebody's eye out!
 
Originally posted by: spherrod
Originally posted by: So
Originally posted by: spherrod
Originally posted by: OVerLoRDI
That's amazing. I wish I could find all my legos.

LEGO 😉

We had this discussion, a long, long time ago. It was many hundreds of posts long.

Conclusion: Both Lego and Legos are equally WRONG, but the former is 'correct' in the European vernacular and the latter in American vernacular.

The CORRECT way to say it (from the Lego corporate site) is "Lego Bricks."

Stop correcting people when you're just as wrong as them!

Well, as a European I'm correct then 🙂

Internally in the company (presentations and meetings) the plural was always called LEGO in my experience.

Nevertheless, that is the official line. Please don't un-correct others. 🙂
 
Originally posted by: So
Originally posted by: spherrod
Originally posted by: So
Originally posted by: spherrod
Originally posted by: OVerLoRDI
That's amazing. I wish I could find all my legos.

LEGO 😉

We had this discussion, a long, long time ago. It was many hundreds of posts long.

Conclusion: Both Lego and Legos are equally WRONG, but the former is 'correct' in the European vernacular and the latter in American vernacular.

The CORRECT way to say it (from the Lego corporate site) is "Lego Bricks."

Stop correcting people when you're just as wrong as them!

Well, as a European I'm correct then 🙂

Internally in the company (presentations and meetings) the plural was always called LEGO in my experience.

Nevertheless, that is the official line. Please don't un-correct others. 🙂

fair enough - I seem to remember the last debate went on and on :beer:
 
Back
Top