Posted January 14, 201510 yr So you want to build a space ship. When finished its mission will be to mine Helium-3 from the one of the gas giant planets Jupiter or Saturn. Space headquarters in Zurich will make the decision after the testing of the Magnetic Shielding Sphere. The MSS is the last hope to protect astronauts from radiation outside of Earth orbit. This project is build in LDD and now contains 10009 bricks and growing.
January 17, 201510 yr Author Thank you for the comment. At this stage of construction the ship is 255x139x90 studs. The plans from Zurich show the length to get 5 studs longer but all else will be within the present dimensions.
January 19, 201510 yr Wow this is amazing! The ball is quite a thing to behold haha. BTW, is this thing real, or have you written a very convincing back story to this?
January 19, 201510 yr Author Construction photo update. Now Zurich informs the construction astronauts that the communication dish will be relocated before the fusion reactors are fueled and powered up. The next step will be loading the sodium into the MSS. Rockets with the sodium are on the launch pads. 11956 bricks and growing
January 25, 201510 yr Holy crap, that thing would weigh a ton... Great design though, can't wait to see how the expansions look.
February 6, 201510 yr Author Construction Update: 98% finished: The testing phase will begin soon. The final load of the liquid sodium compound is being added to the MSS. The fusion reactors are coming online and will reach 10% power before the interior core of the MSS can start its rotation. The twin Helium collector ships are LSC-stretch drones modified from LCS that were designed and manufactured by Sunder Aeronautics and Space Limited (thanks for the permission). See the post [LDD MOC] SF_32V Starfighter for more pics. Technical data on the project will be posted on the LEGO Digital Designer forum soon. The project now contains 16009 bricks.
February 23, 201510 yr This, in my opinion, is a pretty realistic looking transport/mining ship. I can definitly imagine it built in 50-100 years if we globally wanted too. Oh, and it looks awesome too!
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