Filed under:
Motorsports,
Toys/Games
We have enough
Lego fans on the
Autoblog team that, were cars wiped off the face of the Earth tomorrow, our fall-back plan would be to launch
Legoblog: We Obsessively Cover The Lego Industry. So a full-size Ferrari F1 car made entirely out of Lego bricks is something that's sure to catch our attention.
Unveiled yesterday by
Ferrari drivers
Fernando Alonso and
Felipe Massa in Australia ahead of the season-opening Melbourne Grand Prix, this 1:1 scale model of the team's 2011 Ferrari F150 Italia car is a highly accurate recreation of the real thing. While Ferrari hasn't released too many details about it (a brick count would be nice), we do know that the car has real Pirelli race tires and a seat that can actually accommodate a driver. Once buckled in, though, everything within arms reach is made of Lego, including the complicated F1 steering wheel.
The Lego F1 car is part of a promotion between Ferrari and Shell that's been going on for some time. In some places of the world (not the US, though), if you stop at a Shell station and refuel, you can purchase these
special mini Ferrari Lego kits that feature six of the Italian brand's greatest creations: the F40, 458 Italia, FXX, 250 GT Berlinetta, the Scuderia Ferrari Truck and even a pint-sized version of this F150 Italia. Or you could just
buy the full set on eBay, which features a mark up in price worthy of the Ferrari name.
Continue reading Lego Ferrari Formula 1 car unveiled in Australia
Lego Ferrari Formula 1 car unveiled in Australia originally appeared on
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