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I'm guessing that back in the day it all came in one bag?

When I built Titantic last year (first Lego I'd done in maybe 30 years) it was split out over dozens of small bags, and all the parts you'd need for one section would be in that one bag with no more than, say, 200 pieces in it. Often there's be a smaller bag inside for holding the 1x1 stuff.

So I built the whole thing with two tupperware containers..one decent size square "bowl" and s much smaller one for the tiny stuff.

Killed a month off and on putting that thing together. I was recovering from foot surgery so stuck in bed.

Luckily, the Titanic actually builds as 6 sections, with 3 pairs that join more or less permanently, while there are then a couple of pins and rods that hold the whole thing together (along with a rather clever tensioning gear... the main lines are there as strings, and do hang in a true catenary. )

So each of the 6 sections I basically built on a hardback book.

A few build pics:

https://imgur.com/a/yqHR3m4

Made for a very doable build, even given pretty hefty physical limitations.



I tend to remember multiple bags, but I don't remember seeing the numbered bags where you only opened one at a time until I bought a few sets as an adult. That seems like a relatively modern thing.

Anyway like I said, we definitely always built the kit per the instructions first, it's just that the impulse to keep a TIE fighter a TIE fighter was never stronger than the impulse to build something new.




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