The clutch in the concrete mixer is actually useful. Imagine this scenario: The distribution gearbox is in the position so that the wheels and the barrel are connected. If you move the truck by grabbing it from the barrel, the clutch will activate.
@@Unbrickme I know that it's the worst place to grab 😅 but probably Lego tested the truck with several groups of kids and some of them actually moved the truck by grabbing the barrel
You forgot the best deal: I see the smaller €12 sets go for €8 or €9, sometimes a 3 for 2 combo deal. That is a lot of fun for a very reasonable price.
Hi Unbrickme! Thanks for these informations! I love long time ago the race jet but unfortunately don't have yet. I will buy definitely because the overall look is fantastic and designed by Markus Kosmann. One suggestion for next video:background informations about Lego Technic designers. Nice content as usual!
There were actually two LEGO tracked vehicles with shock absorbers before the Transformation vehicle. The tracked loader as you mentioned, and the Extreme Adventure set 42069 from 2017. That set also had rubber inserts for the tracks. Btw, do you like that set?
@@explosivetoiletat69water will help clean our some sand or dust out of the gears. Sanitizer will probably increase friction to be honest. It dries fast and leaves some of its material behind. I suppose you can use oil, but it will be incredibly hard to get it off. So my recommendation to reduce friction is to disassemble the mechanisms, put the pieces in a bin, wash them thoroughly with water, let them dry, then reassemble
hey Unbrickme when u said the grey version of the Air race jet it would look like a military jet because IT IS well not really its really similar to the F-35B which is a VTOL variant of the 5th generation stealth fighter F-35
@@Unbrickme wow i can't for that, i expecting you making review in the Forest ,that's for the John Deer, And for the Mars Rover i expect you go to planet MARS for the review 🤣🤣🤣
Great vid, as always. But -- the proper name for the "propellers" on helicopters (e.g. on the Airbus) is "rotors". Main rotor, tail rotor. A minor nit for sure, but as a former helicopter pilot it stood out for me. It also drives me nuts when people call helicopters "choppers", but that's a different discussion. ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE--9-Te-DPbSE.html