SirNadroj Posted September 14, 2007 Posted September 14, 2007 It truly is an impressive ship. Anyone know who made it? *sweet* Quote
Eurobricks Emperor Bonaparte Posted September 14, 2007 Author Eurobricks Emperor Posted September 14, 2007 (edited) Let's continue the discussion in the original thread for this ship. I'll close this one. Edited September 14, 2007 by Bonaparte Quote
Governor Mister Phes Posted September 28, 2007 Governor Posted September 28, 2007 We should merge them! Quote
Eurobricks Emperor Bonaparte Posted September 28, 2007 Author Eurobricks Emperor Posted September 28, 2007 (edited) We should merge them! You are right, because the new thread contained some new pictures. Merged! Edited September 28, 2007 by Bonaparte Quote
Captain Green Hair Posted October 1, 2007 Posted October 1, 2007 I like the build up of the rear, however i dislike the front, it looks like crap. It's too low and blocky. The sides could use some slope too, but this isn't that bad as it is. Quote
Governor Mister Phes Posted October 1, 2007 Governor Posted October 1, 2007 It clearly is NOT Megablocks. It is built will the Lego bricks and the elements are clearly not Megablocks. Cannons, rigging pieces, rowboats, mast sections, all Lego elements. The structure does look like it was at least designed after the PotC Black Pearl to a certain degree. Aren't those Mega Blok sails? Quote
Scouty Posted October 2, 2007 Posted October 2, 2007 I think MB sails would be in a tougher type of cloth form. These appear to be a softer, translucent kind. A mighty fine ship, I must say! Quote
CVSPIS_CELIDVS Posted July 18, 2008 Posted July 18, 2008 Ladies and gentlemen, the creator of the Black Pearl and the Pirates scenes and the provider of the Pirates sets in the exhibition in Taiwan is Brian Heins, and his ID in TWLUG is lynxavr. Previews of Brian's Black Pearl: http://www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?f=117340 Brian(lynxavr)'s Brickshelf gallery: http://www.brickshelf.com/cgi-bin/gallery.cgi?m=lynxavr Brian's website: http://www.blockparadise.com/ Quote
WhiteFang Posted July 18, 2008 Posted July 18, 2008 CVSPIS CELIDVS, thanks for showing us the origin of this outstanding showcase. This Black Pearl is amazing, by the sheer scale of it. This is an incredible ship, that will strike fear among the enemies in the high sea. Simply love these brown parts! Quote
Brian Heins Posted July 18, 2008 Posted July 18, 2008 (edited) Hello everyone. I am sorry that I have been very busy and am finally finding this post about my pirate creation. Right now, (Summer 2008) this massive ship is sitting in a couple of boxes in a LEGO shop near Taipei Airport in a city called Nan Kan. I don't know when the boxes will next be opened. However I do have about a hundred pictures to filter through to give you details about the ship. It is valued at $15,000 and is built of so many pieces that I did not count after 150,000. It is the 3rd version of my "Ghost Pirate Ship" and the first was named X, the second XL, so this would then be XXL, and they kept getting bigger. It took about 3 months working in free time, so a total of maybe 14 hours a week - I would guess 168 man hours? SO there are some stats if that's what you like. I built the first ship "GPSX" based on the standard LEGO hull size, then longer - using all the center hulls I owned. Having it on display with some standard LEGO castle and pirate sets I saw how cool it was to be towering over the "normal" LEGO sets. So the second "GPSXL" was built based on normal LEGO cannons and did not extend the length, but did get larger upper decks. The third "GPSXXL" is truly a mismatch of scale. I must apologize for not making it proper. As I was constructing the first ship for an exhibition, I ran out of time trimming the sails and just threw the top together. Also the first ship was the most inconvenient, the main hull being too long for any box. Live and learn. So with the second ship, the display was at my convenience and it stayed at the school most of the time, then when it came home it got scrapped right away. Then I decided that I needed to get more unique nautical parts. The first problem was my desire to create a brown ship, I was sick of the black. I also ran out of all shipbuilding parts so I scavenged the markets and bought up lots of pirate LEGO from everywhere (but mostly Australia). Lastly I raided the local LEGO shops and LEGOLAND pick-a-brick, cleaning out their supply of brown 1x12 beams and 2x10 plates every day. Now I was ready to build a really massive ship. I'll write more when I have time, and I'll get the pictures up as soon as I can, I hope in the next 2 weeks. Some details you don't know: - Rudder actually turns with the main steering wheel. - Lanterns flicker with an LED mounted in each, connected to RCX with a program to adjust the power output. - Captain's quarters has 4 ceiling mounted amber color lanterns also running on the RCX power output program. - Hull separates into 3 parts and locks with Technic axels, it's strong enough to hold from any point with one hand and no bowing of the deck. - All cannon ports open with LEGO chains. - Only the fabric for the sails and the LED lights are non-LEGO elements. - Most of the ship is modular and sets in place without locking mechanisms. - Cargo doors on the main deck slide open for access through the cannon deck down to the lower deck in the hull. - Storage and brig are on the bottom deck, a fully detailed galley is in the forecastle and the crew sleeps at the cannon deck. - Areas that need access, such as the rigging for the rudder through the deck and electrical, are closed using Technic pins and modular walls. - Both anchors lower and raise, but the chain spindles do not spin. - I did learn about mast rigging to tie most of the ropes in proper places, but some are simply needed for structural support and others to give it a more menacing appearance. - I hate the skinny masts. :-( [i didn't have enough large round bricks to make wider masts, plus I didn't like the look of the 4x wide mast so these were a compromise. If there are 3x round bricks, then I would substitute. Also the height of my masts is limited by the original LEGO masts, I tried my best to make them "reasonable" but I didn't learn enough about sailing to really do the details perfectly, so I'll save my perfectionism for my job and keep the LEGO building fun and free. I like to build without rules.] - Almost forgot, the kitchen stove also has a flickering red LED and amber LED with a battery pack hidden in the storage area below the deck. I hope to display the ship again at a show or shop, maybe tear down the rigging and masts and start from the deck up again. - Brian Heins (now in Southern California) Edited July 18, 2008 by Brian Heins Quote
Eurobricks Emperor Bonaparte Posted July 20, 2008 Author Eurobricks Emperor Posted July 20, 2008 Hi Brian! It's fantastic to have you as part of this community. Your ship is a true masterpiece. I love watching the pictures and I hope to see more of them so I can see all the things you mentioned. And I also believe this would be a MOC worthy of the headlines of http://www.classic-pirates.com Quote
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