Just curious, how does Lego go about production of the actual pieces?
Once the molds have been made they can crank out as many pieces as they need. The only decision is colors and quantities of each.
I also imagine they have numerous molds of the same pieces so they can run multiples simultaneously as well in different manufacturing plants.
The logistics of how many of one piece, what colors, how many different piece types that need to be made (on a continual basis) is quite fascinating when you think about it.
How much surplus brick stock is in inventory at any given time ?
Then there is the sorting and the bagging and the packaging.
The actual machined molds that are used to make the pieces are the most expensive part (injection plastic molds ain't cheap folks). I'm curious if their molds have been paid for by now? Once this tooling is made they have it and can make bricks in the future so pieces really never 'go away'. All that needs to be done is bring the mold out of storage and start using it. (unless it gets damaged or excessively worn through use......which is very unlikely).
thoughts anyone?
You can post now and register later.
If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.
Just curious, how does Lego go about production of the actual pieces? Once the molds have been made they can crank out as many pieces as they need. The only decision is colors and quantities of each. I also imagine they have numerous molds of the same pieces so they can run multiples simultaneously as well in different manufacturing plants. The logistics of how many of one piece, what colors, how many different piece types that need to be made (on a continual basis) is quite fascinating when you think about it. How much surplus brick stock is in inventory at any given time ? Then there is the sorting and the bagging and the packaging. The actual machined molds that are used to make the pieces are the most expensive part (injection plastic molds ain't cheap folks). I'm curious if their molds have been paid for by now? Once this tooling is made they have it and can make bricks in the future so pieces really never 'go away'. All that needs to be done is bring the mold out of storage and start using it. (unless it gets damaged or excessively worn through use......which is very unlikely). thoughts anyone?