Irish LEGO User Group
LEGO Discussion => Everything Else => Topic started by: Tom a.k.a. eastawat on December 22, 2020, 12:46 pm
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Here's a categorised list of online resources. Please feel free to add any more resources to this list below and I'll merge them into the main list.
Buying and selling LEGO
- Official LEGO website and shop (https://www.lego.com/en-ie)
- Bricklink - collection of worldwide LEGO sellers with new and used parts and sets (https://www.bricklink.com/v2/main.page)
- Brickowl - an alternative to Bricklink (https://www.brickowl.com/)
- Brickcat - a price tracker for LEGO in Irish shops (https://www.brickcat.com/)
- Brick Economy - projections on the value of LEGO sets (https://www.brickeconomy.com/)
- Keepa (not LEGO-specific) - a price-tracking browser extension for Amazon (https://keepa.com/#!)
- Brickstock - Bricklink store inventory software (https://brickstock.patrickbrans.com/)
- Brick Freedom - Bricklink store inventory and order tracking tool (https://brickfreedom.com/)
Reference guides
- Brickset - set guide, reviews, forums (https://brickset.com/)
- New Elementary - Blog of newly released LEGO parts (https://www.newelementary.com/)
Custom instructions
- Rebrickable - hosts custom instructions and can inventory your collection (https://rebrickable.com/home/)
Part organisation
- Brick Architect - website of Tom Alphin with very popular printable labels for Lego sorting (https://brickarchitect.com/)
Photo and file hosting
- Flickr (not LEGO-specific) - photo hosting used by many LEGO enthusiasts (https://www.flickr.com/)
- Brickshelf - very old LEGO photo- and file-hosting site (https://brickshelf.com/)
- Bricksafe - newer LEGO photo- and file-hosting site (https://bricksafe.com/)
Lego CAD software
- Stud.io - LEGO CAD software from Bricklink (https://www.bricklink.com/v3/studio/download.page)
- LDraw - Older suite of CAD tools, upon which stud.io parts library is based (https://www.ldraw.org/)
- Mecabricks - browser-based LEGO CAD software (https://www.mecabricks.com/)
Worldwide LEGO communities
- Eurobricks - worldwide LEGO forum (https://www.eurobricks.com/forum/)
- r/LEGO - LEGO on Reddit (https://www.reddit.com/r/lego/)
Custom LEGO-compatible parts
- S Brick - Bluetooth receiver for Technic motors (http://https:sbrick.com)
- Buwizz - system of batteries, remote controllers and motors for Technic (http://https:buwizz.com)
- Big Ben Bricks - injection molded train wheels in a wide range of sizes and colours (http://www.bigbenbricks.com/)
- Circuit Cubes - miniature motors and battery boxes ideally suited to trains (https://circuitcubes.com/)
- HA Bricks - injection molded train wheels, tracks with wider selection of curve radii, other custom train parts (https://www.habricks.com/product-categorie/tracks/)
- TrixBrix - train tracks with even wider selection of radii and various crossovers/points/switches (https://trixbrix.eu/)
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I use here and brickset -wake-up call, that I keep snoozing, I've got a lot of toys not for playing with! I'm intrigued by rebrickable to inventory what you've got. I guess as I don't smash up the sets only modify slightly it doesn't matter what I've got
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I smash up (almost) everything and still don't bother with that feature of rebrickable!
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You sound like my nephew-7 ! There's a lot of lego related stuff where no actual lego might be needed -virtual bricks ,now that would be welcome here
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I keep all my sets as sets ... in zip lock bags or built in the attic and my MOC LEGO completely separate. Now where’s my Kragle gone 😉
Great list Tom. Thnaks
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I'm working towards full sorting so sets I want to rebuild wouldn't be too hard to find the parts for, but as far as MOCs are concerned the whole collection is fair game!
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Bricklink fishing but carrot of WIN a set hooked me ,not a user by any means so I'm not hopeful of a win ....but I'm hoping like the surveys I fill out for the lego sets
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Thanks Tom,
I started to catalogue on rebrickable initially to see what MOCs I had the parts in my collection to be able to build and also for sets I've missed to see what I might be missing part wise to enable me to build and so on.
As my collection got bigger it also became useful for keeping track just in case I ever had to replace anything God forbid something was to happen in the house. However, in the event of a catastrophe most of our collections would not be covered under general home contents insurance as far as I know. I don't know if anyone has ever looked into insuring their Lego, may be worth a thread. I contacted a broker in Galway and never heard back so must try a few more maybe further afield.
If anyone is interested in labels for their part storage Tom Alphin (brick architect) does some great ones for the most common parts, adding new ones every month or 2. You do need a Brother label printer that you can hook up to a PC to use them but they are very good. He has a lot of other interesting stuff like part colour studies and a guide for making the most of purchases (haven't got to that one yet).
This is the site anyway https://brickarchitect.com .....why I replied in the first place :-)
All the best
Seán
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Oh yeah those labels are very popular, I'll add them to the list!
I too would be interested in insurance... I've heard from someone in the past that an insurer they tried asked for a list of sets they own for the insurance... that wouldn't suit for me at all, nor for many here I imagine, much more of my collection is in loose parts than sets!
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It's a pretty tedious job cataloguing parts alright. I think once I get to the end of the current bulk lot I'll be sticking to sets for a while. Much less time consuming to keep a tally on.