Building a brighter tomorrow with LEGO® bricks

Scarlet Mayhem

Studless, smooth, and sleek, this racer, known as “Scarlet Mayhem,” was the winner of the first annual Earth to Mars race, which tests a ship’s performance in atmosphere, interplanetary, and reentry situations. The two-man crew take turns flying the craft, similar to the Le Mans car race.


Click photo to view on Flickr ↗Full album on Flickr ↗
Studless, smooth, and sleek, this racer, known as "Scarlet Mayhem," was the winner of the first annual Earth to Mars race, which tests a ship's performance in atmosphere, interplanetary, and reentry situations.  The two-man crew take turns flying the craft, similar to the Le Mans car race.

Studless, smooth, and sleek, this racer, known as "Scarlet Mayhem," was the winner of the first annual Earth to Mars race, which tests a ship's performance in atmosphere, interplanetary, and reentry situations. The two-man crew take turns flying the craft, similar to the Le Mans car race.

The scoops on the tops of the wings provide air for the engines when running inside the atmosphere in scramjet mode. It has a lot of SNOT details – the bottom of the fuselage is mounted studs-down, and covered in tiles and slopes so that no studs or undersides of bricks are showing. The wings are studs-out, made of bricks, and the only conventional part of the ship is the wingtips which do show their undersides. Because of the studs-down bottom, there are no studs inside on the floor for the minifigs to sit on (to add a studs-up floor would require the roof to be higher, ruining the lines, or removing too much interior space for the minifigs). As a result, the minifigs are sitting on 2×4 plate “sleds” which slide into the ship and sit loosely. The cockpit canopy is hinged on the sides.

This model was built mainly using parts from the Enzo Ferrari 1:17 set, borrowing parts from Prehistoric Power and Speedboat sets. Why such a limited source of parts? I’m on vacation in the east coast away from my LEGO collection, but I bought the above sets at the LEGO store during BrickFest 2006.

It’s a little strange to be building LEGO away from home, and with an unfamiliar and reduced palette. Still, I got a lot of great new parts which I look forward to combining with my collection at home when I return.


Click photo to view on Flickr ↗Album on Flickr ↗
Scarlet Mayhem: SNOT Details Scarlet Mayhem: Roof Removed Scarlet Mayhem: Cockpit interior Scarlet Mayhem: Interior
Scarlet Mayhem: Minifigs and controls Scarlet Mayhem: Cockpit Doors Open Scarlet Mayhem: Cockpit with Minifig Scarlet Mayhem: Smooth Bottom
Scarlet Mayhem: Front View Scarlet Mayhem: Top Rear View Scarlet Mayhem Scarlet Mayhem in Pieces
Scarlet Mayhem: SNOT DetailsScarlet Mayhem: Roof RemovedScarlet Mayhem: Cockpit interiorScarlet Mayhem: InteriorScarlet Mayhem: Minifigs and controlsScarlet Mayhem: Cockpit Doors OpenScarlet Mayhem: Cockpit with MinifigScarlet Mayhem: Smooth BottomScarlet Mayhem: Front ViewScarlet Mayhem: Top Rear ViewScarlet MayhemScarlet Mayhem in Pieces

Update: I have also posted pictures of this model on Brickshelf.
Update: I also posted about this on Lugnet and Classic-Space.com.

4 thoughts on “Scarlet Mayhem”

  1. Very nice! Smooth, flowing lines that form a believable looking design. Sleek, streamlined and…well, a bunch of other words that I can’t think of right now! Great work!

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