Toye Posted March 5, 2011 Posted March 5, 2011 Hi there, I'm a New Zealander and still relatively new to these forums, signed up several months ago. I've played with lego since I was a kid, probably about 3 or 4 years old. Played with it till about 12 or so and then I moved on to other things. Several months ago, now at 21 years, I received a flier advertising lego at steep discounts. Thought, what the heck - for nostalgia's sake, and went and bought several sets including Brickbeard's bounty for about $30 NZ ($20ish US) Well I haven't stopped buying and have now dropped probably about $500 NZ on new lego, mostly on city sets. The problem I have is that I want to get into building MOCs as I find the normal lego city sets and such too simple and basic to keep me interested for a long time. The only thing stopping me from making nice MOCs is that I have no idea how to keep track of what piece belongs to what set. I want to know this because I want to be able to rebuild these sets sometime in the future (hopefully with my kids :)) and the fact that bulk legos resale value drops a whole lot. So I'm wondering, is there any way to keep track of this? cheers tldr: Want to make MOCs but want to keep track of what pieces belong to each set - if possible, how? Quote
Siegfried Posted March 5, 2011 Posted March 5, 2011 Bricklink provides quite up-to-date inventories of most sets (for example) so providing you don't care about the exact pieces it's not hard to rebuild sets. Quote
streifen Posted March 5, 2011 Posted March 5, 2011 another way is to keep your instruction booklets (assuming you had intentions to "misplace" them). either way, if u want to build back the original, u will still need to break up your MOCs and identify piece by piece. Quote
dr_spock Posted March 5, 2011 Posted March 5, 2011 (edited) Peeron is also another source for sets parts inventory http://www.peeron.com/inv Edit: fixed spelling error. Edited March 5, 2011 by dr_spock Quote
Fuzzylegobricks Posted March 5, 2011 Posted March 5, 2011 In The Back of most instruction booklets there is a parts list and pictures of them. You could scan the page onto your computer or print them etc. so you will have a copy of the pieces. Maybe even laminate the page! *Fuzzy* Quote
meyerc13 Posted March 7, 2011 Posted March 7, 2011 I'll second the recommendation of bricklink. Last year my (at the time) 2 year old daughter destroyed my son's LEGO City. It was through inventory lists from Bricklink and the manuals that I was able to piece it all back together. Sometimes I would use the inventory and dig for parts until I had parts for a set assembled, checking off the parts on the inventory list as I went along. Other times I would pull certain colors that I knew went together (i.e. Orange was probably a tow truck or garbage truck... certain colors were clearly Atlantis or Space Police). Quote
bricked one Posted March 7, 2011 Posted March 7, 2011 just buys doubles, one for parts, the other to keep together Quote
SpacySmoke Posted March 8, 2011 Posted March 8, 2011 I say just jump in and start building! There's always Bricklink or Peeron to help you recreate your official sets. I was like you not too long ago and was very reluctant to dismantle my sets just for some parts I needed. But because of those resources, I was able to let go of that....plus, I did buy some doubles! Quote
CptMugwash Posted March 8, 2011 Posted March 8, 2011 Well, what I do for MOCs is order any parts I need off Bricklink, I go through looking to see what parts I need and ones that look cool and interesting, I think it's a bit cheaper then buying doubles just for parts. A few years ago I did fish around on peeron and found instructions for my old sets, haven't gotten around to rebuilding them yet but I will, eventually Quote
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