400,000 bricks. 22,000 hours. 26 LEGO specialists. Two drivers. Meet LEGO’s latest project — crafting 10 fully-functional, life-size Formula 1 cars that the field will drive during the parade laps for ...
But what about an F1 race car? I mean, Lego already sells small versions of each team’s cars, but could you build a life-size version that you can actually drive on the circuit? It turns out you can.
The Lego Technic series makes toy sets of supercars to be built at home. Lego also made a life-size, functional Koenigsegg ...
LEGO took centre stage ahead of the Miami Grand Prix when all 20 drivers take part in the drivers’ parade – in fully-drivable LEGO cars. Earlier this year, Motorsport.com visited one of the company’s ...
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Verstappen says LEGO’s F1 cars make drivers look like ‘clowns.’ LEGO is hoping fans love them
The company is following up a viral hit from last year by reimagining what made it delight fans in the first place.
Most F1 cars can reach speeds of well over 200 mph, but the newest automobiles in the F1 stable go much, much slower. Built from 400,000 Lego pieces, the life-size Lego cars can drive 12 mph—not bad ...
Formula One’s driver parade for the 2025 Miami Grand Prix will surely go down as one of the most memorable in the sport’s recent history. Ahead of Sunday’s race, the drivers swapped the flatbed truck ...
Danish toymaker Lego has experimented with life-size cars before, but the new Lego Koenigsegg Sadair's Spear is the fastest one yet. While it may not be as fast as the real-life $5 million hypercar it ...
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