YouTuber Akiyuki Brick Channel has created some of the wildest Technic LEGO builds we’ve ever seen. The Japanese LEGO engineer (and artist?) has in the past made massive rollercoasters and working ...
If Edison were alive today, he might be into LEGOs. Japanese LEGO wiz Akiyuki created a jaw-dropping Great Ball Contraption — a.k.a. GBC. Akiyuki’s invention transports up to 500 miniature balls over ...
This 8 minute YouTube video will without doubt make you look at LEGO in a whole new light. The Rube-Goldberg style system consists of twenty individual Great Ball Contraption (GBC) modules, ...
Designer Akiyuki has created a large-scale Lego contraption in his living room. The machine was designed to transport hundreds of small balls across 101ft at an average rate of one ball per second.
Looking at this 17-stage Great Ball Contraption makes us think that [Skiyuky] should be working in industrial automation. The build, which has been assembled from an untold volume of LEGO parts, moves ...
We are continually amazed by the things people do with LEGO and Technics, especially those that require incredible engineering skill. There’s an entire community based around building Great Ball ...
Aug. 8 (UPI) --A group of Dutch and Danish artists used Lego components to break the Guinness World Record for the largest great ball contraption. Dutch artists Maico Arts and Ben Jonkman teamed with ...
Madness. This. Is. MADNESS! Its creator calls this machine the Lego Great Ball Contraption. I don’t know what to call it. Gjhiqjmvcdzz. Askjgsprgnyasdkfnipjreg. Thqruwm—-I’ve no words to describe the ...
Some of the best Lego GBCs leave you wondering if the laws of physics are being bent or broken, and that’s the case with Akiyuki Brick Channel’s contraption. It features five spinning off-axis rings ...
Forget about Rube Goldberg machines and that dusty Mouse Trap board game. The Lego "Great Ball Contraption" makes you a believer in bricks, baby. Crave contributor Christopher MacManus regularly ...
YouTuber Akiyuki Brick Channel has created some of the wildest Technic LEGO builds we’ve ever seen. The Japanese LEGO engineer (and artist?) has in the past made massive rollercoasters and working ...