The Lego Car Blog Elves are basically 6 year old children, and as such they love tractors, so you can imagine the excitement today when one of them found two tractors in the same picture. Steve5010 is the builder behind them, and he’s even included some hay bales for the tractors to lug around. See more by clicking the link above.
In Russia, Moon Lands on You!
This beautiful photo comes from Kei_Kei_Flic on Flickr. Depicting the Soviet-era Lunniy Korabl Lunar Module (and a cheery Russian cosmonaught) on the surface of Earth’s Moon, it’s sadly more fantasy than historic event.
The Russian KL Moon Lander never made it to the Moon. The N1 rocket designed to take it there started encountering problems following the death of its designer, and the project ended in spectacular fashion, with the largest artificial non-nuclear explosion in history.
Dust Lander
We’ve no idea who or what the Sirian Trade Authority is, but apparently they’re fans of robotic probes made from hubcaps and old ray guns. Halfbeak‘s Nice Parts Usage (NPU) can be seen on Flickr.
Classic Muscle

Camaro, ’70s style
American Muscle + LEGO = Epic. Who doesn’t like the Chevrolet Camaro? It’s been around for ages, with a recently updated model in showrooms this year. This one is a classic Camaro Z28, and it’s been built by Senator Chinchilla on MOCpages. It was suggested to us by one of our readers via the Feedback page – keep your suggestions coming!
Better than the Original!

31006 Alternative
The LEGO set 31006 is a nice on its own, but it also contains some useful parts. Many builders have used these to create another car/vehicle/thing, and this one impressed us the most.
This 31006-based Low-Rider by Peteris Sprogis is a mix of creative part usage and classic studs-up building. To see more of this dream car, click on the link above.
Technic Defender
There’s more to our title for this post than it may appear. You see, with the arrival of smooth Technic beams and smooth LEGO curves, which admittedly are far better suited to modern cars than the old square elements, something in Technic building has been lost.
Remko Kleinveld on MOCpages reclaims the old-school chunky studs-up building style with his beautifully constructed Land Rover Defender. And what better vehicle to build in an obsolete no-nonsense style than a Defender? Soon to be replaced by something sleeker, more efficient, but probably not as cool, it’s the perfect metaphor.
Build-a-Starfighter
Nathan DeCastro recently posted a breakdown of his fantastically smooth looking Duolos Starfighter. If you want to make your own version, or would simply like to expand your LEGO-building techniques, take a look at Nathan’s page via the link above.
Biplane Battle
A very excited Elf returned to TLCB Towers today. Excited because it was carrying two creations, and two creations means two meal tokens. So now we have a deservedly swollen Elf waddling round the building, and can bring you this pair of wonderful Great War airplanes designed and built by mrutek on Flickr. Handily for the unbiased nature of this post, each represents a side of the First World War; the Allies with an RAF Sopwith Camel and the Axis Powers with a Bomber Biplane, from the days when bombing involved dropping the explosive by hand out of the side of the plane. To see more of these fantastic creations click the link above.
Write for TLCB Update!
Set Reviewers and MOC Bloggers required!
Following our outreach for aspiring bloggers we will be adding to TLCB Team over the coming months. Thanks to those who have got in touch, and also to all of our readers who have suggested creations via the Feedback and Submission Suggestions page.
Please do keep your suggestions coming, and if you think you might be interested in writing for us, you can still drop us a comment via the aforementioned page and we’ll be in touch.
The first of our new writers has joined the Team and started blogging today! You can see the fruits of their work below.
TLCB Team
Big Italian Truck

Fiat 642 Maserati Transporter. Well, 98% of one.
If you follow the vehicle rules in the MOCpages group Classic Race Teams the results will always be good. Proof is here again…
This awesome Italian truck for Classic Race Teams, built by Lego Builder Jr., features the original Maserati colour scheme and some nice details and functions. It’s worth checking out on Flickr and MOCpages, and maybe you can help provide the pieces needed to finish it.
Micro-Scale Master
We don’t often blog two creations by the same builder in one week, but when they look like this we felt we couldn’t ignore them. oLaF-LM is the genius behind this minute refuse truck, which follows on from his spectacular articulated truck blogged earlier in the week. See more here.
Initial D
This innocuous Japanese hatchback is actually one of the most legendary drift cars ever made. Toyota’s AE86 shot to super-stardom at the hands of Keiichi Tsuchiya, and then many others, in the Initial D Drift Championship. Light, rear wheel drive, and endlessly tuneable, the AE86 was Japan’s Ford Escort and helped launch both Toyota and drifting into the consciousness of motor racing fans worldwide. AadenH recreates the legend on Flickr and at his MOCpage.
Drag Queens
The Lego Car Blog Elves continue their unending search for the best LEGO creations on the world wide web, and today one returned from a romp through Brickshelf with these. MOCer tango-zero has recreated some glorious drag bikes, the latest two of which you can see here. Above is a wonderful Harley Davidson Street Racer, whilst below is the baddest type of bike you can get; an insane Top Fuel Drag Racer. To see these and tango-zero’s other bikes, click his hyperlinked name above.
Quarian Envoy Ship
Jason Corlett on MOCpages recently uploaded an incredible spaceship. 4ft 2″ of incredible spaceship. Based on the Envoy Ships in Mass Effect 3, his version uses around 4,000 pieces and took 100 hours to construct. See the full gallery at his MOCpage here.
Tiny Truck
We don’t get many micro-scale MOCs coming into the office. Mostly this is because the Elves have tiny child-like brains and tend to find models with big wheels and racing stripes and suchlike. But one did return with this today; a magnificent articulated lorry in miniature. oLaF-LM has squeezed a remarkable amount of detail into his two-wide creation, right down to the legs for the trailer. See more on Flickr.














