There are many hidden details and LEGO techniques to appreciate about LEGO Speed Champions
If you hadn’t noticed, one set from the recently-launched LEGO Speed Champions Formula 1 collection raced ahead of all others in popularity –
1 – The livery
Beyond the romanticism and iconography of the F1 team and beyond that the Ferrari brand as a whole, the most immediate appeal to
Interestingly, the design – based on the 2024 season car – is a mix between stickers, printed parts and just coloured parts – one small section of the yellow line running along the body of the car is actually the side edge to a 1x2 yellow bracket piece.
2 – Internal features
There is a wonderful delicacy to the design of a Formula 1 car, and the same can be said for a LEGO Formula 1 car – remove just a few pieces of bodywork and you are immediately into the internal workings of the vehicle in a way that can only give you new appreciation and understanding.
For a real F1 car, that would be in marvelling at how the engine works, or how the radiators and cooling system are folded into just the right shape. In a LEGO equivalent, it’s about unearthing what bizarre composition of pieces is seemingly able to hold the whole thing together.
3 – Sometimes complicated, sometimes simple
Part of what makes
The side-pods and engine cover in particular were unique to the 2024 Ferrari, from their general shape through to how they swept along the back of the car and created these unique lines of black and red. That shaping and design is wonderfully caught in miniature form across
It is also captured through a mix of intricate parts usage and simple ideas. There’s a wonderful balance between the two if you look at the complexity of a lot of that side-pod design and how it’s simply finished off with a hinge piece and large red slope, making for perhaps the biggest single LEGO piece to be used across any of the 10 LEGO Speed Champions F1 sets released this year.
4 – Upside-down…floor
We thought we were familiar with SNOT techniques. Taking the direction of building in any way but up (so, Studs Not On Top), SNOT techniques are always fun when they show up in a LEGO set, offering quite literally another way of building.
When it comes to how such an approach was implemented in
5 – Loose fittings, tight spaces
You wouldn’t know it to look at it, but the rear wing to
At the same time, the roll hoop and engine intake area set directly behind the driver’s head is made up of a small, equally intricate but entirely loose-sitting structure that two door pieces hold in place. In a LEGO set full of twists and turns, this was perhaps the most unexpected surprise, yet one that works so well we can’t imagine any other way of building it.
Ultimately,
Whilst
This set was provided for review by the LEGO Group.
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