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What's the part number of this LEGO element?


How do I identify a Lego part?Part identificationWhat is this “patent pending” part?Need help with part identification… can't find part numberCan someone please identify this round dome part for us?Please help identify this LEGO set with large black curved elements with orange stickersWhat is this element ID?What is this 2×8 plate slotted, rectangular studs and a hole in the middle?Can you identify this handle-like LEGO piece?Please help me identify this yellow part with four arms and an axle holePlease help identify this set & figures






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margin-bottom:0;

.everyonelovesstackoverflowposition:absolute;height:1px;width:1px;opacity:0;top:0;left:0;pointer-events:none;








12

















enter image description here



Can anybody help me identify this part? Thanks.










share|improve this question























  • 1





    Following the instructions bricks.stackexchange.com/questions/154/… and without any info (is it new? old?) nor having it in hand (turn around and read number): Go to e.g. Rebrickable, there do search with restrictions: 1/ has appeared in white, 2/ exclude printed parts. Now you get too many results ("1000" = maxed out); so split time in sets that give less than 1000 results (1945--1995, 1995--2001, 2001--2005, ... some 8/9 setc), then leaf through the 9--10pages each gives... So by chance, it appears on page 8 (of 9) for the 1945--1995 search... pff.

    – user3445853
    Oct 15 at 14:12











  • OK the above can be sharper (no need to overlap years, so 1945--1995, 1996--...), and faster using the Categories (I'd guess: "Panels", "Angled plates", ... the correct choice "Transportation" I wouldn't have guessed but it contains so any that I'd included it)... Maybe Brickowl is easier; you'd want multi-category-select for one search.

    – user3445853
    Oct 15 at 14:15

















12

















enter image description here



Can anybody help me identify this part? Thanks.










share|improve this question























  • 1





    Following the instructions bricks.stackexchange.com/questions/154/… and without any info (is it new? old?) nor having it in hand (turn around and read number): Go to e.g. Rebrickable, there do search with restrictions: 1/ has appeared in white, 2/ exclude printed parts. Now you get too many results ("1000" = maxed out); so split time in sets that give less than 1000 results (1945--1995, 1995--2001, 2001--2005, ... some 8/9 setc), then leaf through the 9--10pages each gives... So by chance, it appears on page 8 (of 9) for the 1945--1995 search... pff.

    – user3445853
    Oct 15 at 14:12











  • OK the above can be sharper (no need to overlap years, so 1945--1995, 1996--...), and faster using the Categories (I'd guess: "Panels", "Angled plates", ... the correct choice "Transportation" I wouldn't have guessed but it contains so any that I'd included it)... Maybe Brickowl is easier; you'd want multi-category-select for one search.

    – user3445853
    Oct 15 at 14:15













12












12








12








enter image description here



Can anybody help me identify this part? Thanks.










share|improve this question

















enter image description here



Can anybody help me identify this part? Thanks.







part-identification






share|improve this question
















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Oct 14 at 8:19









Joubarc

18.6k2 gold badges55 silver badges122 bronze badges




18.6k2 gold badges55 silver badges122 bronze badges










asked Oct 14 at 7:55









peetrepeetre

631 silver badge4 bronze badges




631 silver badge4 bronze badges










  • 1





    Following the instructions bricks.stackexchange.com/questions/154/… and without any info (is it new? old?) nor having it in hand (turn around and read number): Go to e.g. Rebrickable, there do search with restrictions: 1/ has appeared in white, 2/ exclude printed parts. Now you get too many results ("1000" = maxed out); so split time in sets that give less than 1000 results (1945--1995, 1995--2001, 2001--2005, ... some 8/9 setc), then leaf through the 9--10pages each gives... So by chance, it appears on page 8 (of 9) for the 1945--1995 search... pff.

    – user3445853
    Oct 15 at 14:12











  • OK the above can be sharper (no need to overlap years, so 1945--1995, 1996--...), and faster using the Categories (I'd guess: "Panels", "Angled plates", ... the correct choice "Transportation" I wouldn't have guessed but it contains so any that I'd included it)... Maybe Brickowl is easier; you'd want multi-category-select for one search.

    – user3445853
    Oct 15 at 14:15












  • 1





    Following the instructions bricks.stackexchange.com/questions/154/… and without any info (is it new? old?) nor having it in hand (turn around and read number): Go to e.g. Rebrickable, there do search with restrictions: 1/ has appeared in white, 2/ exclude printed parts. Now you get too many results ("1000" = maxed out); so split time in sets that give less than 1000 results (1945--1995, 1995--2001, 2001--2005, ... some 8/9 setc), then leaf through the 9--10pages each gives... So by chance, it appears on page 8 (of 9) for the 1945--1995 search... pff.

    – user3445853
    Oct 15 at 14:12











  • OK the above can be sharper (no need to overlap years, so 1945--1995, 1996--...), and faster using the Categories (I'd guess: "Panels", "Angled plates", ... the correct choice "Transportation" I wouldn't have guessed but it contains so any that I'd included it)... Maybe Brickowl is easier; you'd want multi-category-select for one search.

    – user3445853
    Oct 15 at 14:15







1




1





Following the instructions bricks.stackexchange.com/questions/154/… and without any info (is it new? old?) nor having it in hand (turn around and read number): Go to e.g. Rebrickable, there do search with restrictions: 1/ has appeared in white, 2/ exclude printed parts. Now you get too many results ("1000" = maxed out); so split time in sets that give less than 1000 results (1945--1995, 1995--2001, 2001--2005, ... some 8/9 setc), then leaf through the 9--10pages each gives... So by chance, it appears on page 8 (of 9) for the 1945--1995 search... pff.

– user3445853
Oct 15 at 14:12





Following the instructions bricks.stackexchange.com/questions/154/… and without any info (is it new? old?) nor having it in hand (turn around and read number): Go to e.g. Rebrickable, there do search with restrictions: 1/ has appeared in white, 2/ exclude printed parts. Now you get too many results ("1000" = maxed out); so split time in sets that give less than 1000 results (1945--1995, 1995--2001, 2001--2005, ... some 8/9 setc), then leaf through the 9--10pages each gives... So by chance, it appears on page 8 (of 9) for the 1945--1995 search... pff.

– user3445853
Oct 15 at 14:12













OK the above can be sharper (no need to overlap years, so 1945--1995, 1996--...), and faster using the Categories (I'd guess: "Panels", "Angled plates", ... the correct choice "Transportation" I wouldn't have guessed but it contains so any that I'd included it)... Maybe Brickowl is easier; you'd want multi-category-select for one search.

– user3445853
Oct 15 at 14:15





OK the above can be sharper (no need to overlap years, so 1945--1995, 1996--...), and faster using the Categories (I'd guess: "Panels", "Angled plates", ... the correct choice "Transportation" I wouldn't have guessed but it contains so any that I'd included it)... Maybe Brickowl is easier; you'd want multi-category-select for one search.

– user3445853
Oct 15 at 14:15










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















28


















That's a rather old part (50 years, actually) used mainly for tipper buckets in trains or trucks, you can see it in this train for example:



enter image description here



Its part ID is 3145.






share|improve this answer























  • 1





    Thank you very much.

    – peetre
    Oct 14 at 10:56











  • I'm really interested to know how you did to find that. That's impressive! I'm not a Lego expert at all, but reading the comments of user3445853 it seemed really difficult.

    – Michaël Polla
    Oct 15 at 19:03











  • Well, my first LEGO train, 171 had two in red, so with that info it was rather straightforward. Aside from that, there's a question on the subject with a very good answer but let's face it, sometimes it's just a matter of remembering the part at all.

    – Joubarc
    Oct 15 at 19:25












Your Answer








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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









28


















That's a rather old part (50 years, actually) used mainly for tipper buckets in trains or trucks, you can see it in this train for example:



enter image description here



Its part ID is 3145.






share|improve this answer























  • 1





    Thank you very much.

    – peetre
    Oct 14 at 10:56











  • I'm really interested to know how you did to find that. That's impressive! I'm not a Lego expert at all, but reading the comments of user3445853 it seemed really difficult.

    – Michaël Polla
    Oct 15 at 19:03











  • Well, my first LEGO train, 171 had two in red, so with that info it was rather straightforward. Aside from that, there's a question on the subject with a very good answer but let's face it, sometimes it's just a matter of remembering the part at all.

    – Joubarc
    Oct 15 at 19:25















28


















That's a rather old part (50 years, actually) used mainly for tipper buckets in trains or trucks, you can see it in this train for example:



enter image description here



Its part ID is 3145.






share|improve this answer























  • 1





    Thank you very much.

    – peetre
    Oct 14 at 10:56











  • I'm really interested to know how you did to find that. That's impressive! I'm not a Lego expert at all, but reading the comments of user3445853 it seemed really difficult.

    – Michaël Polla
    Oct 15 at 19:03











  • Well, my first LEGO train, 171 had two in red, so with that info it was rather straightforward. Aside from that, there's a question on the subject with a very good answer but let's face it, sometimes it's just a matter of remembering the part at all.

    – Joubarc
    Oct 15 at 19:25













28














28










28









That's a rather old part (50 years, actually) used mainly for tipper buckets in trains or trucks, you can see it in this train for example:



enter image description here



Its part ID is 3145.






share|improve this answer
















That's a rather old part (50 years, actually) used mainly for tipper buckets in trains or trucks, you can see it in this train for example:



enter image description here



Its part ID is 3145.







share|improve this answer















share|improve this answer




share|improve this answer








edited Oct 14 at 8:22

























answered Oct 14 at 8:16









JoubarcJoubarc

18.6k2 gold badges55 silver badges122 bronze badges




18.6k2 gold badges55 silver badges122 bronze badges










  • 1





    Thank you very much.

    – peetre
    Oct 14 at 10:56











  • I'm really interested to know how you did to find that. That's impressive! I'm not a Lego expert at all, but reading the comments of user3445853 it seemed really difficult.

    – Michaël Polla
    Oct 15 at 19:03











  • Well, my first LEGO train, 171 had two in red, so with that info it was rather straightforward. Aside from that, there's a question on the subject with a very good answer but let's face it, sometimes it's just a matter of remembering the part at all.

    – Joubarc
    Oct 15 at 19:25












  • 1





    Thank you very much.

    – peetre
    Oct 14 at 10:56











  • I'm really interested to know how you did to find that. That's impressive! I'm not a Lego expert at all, but reading the comments of user3445853 it seemed really difficult.

    – Michaël Polla
    Oct 15 at 19:03











  • Well, my first LEGO train, 171 had two in red, so with that info it was rather straightforward. Aside from that, there's a question on the subject with a very good answer but let's face it, sometimes it's just a matter of remembering the part at all.

    – Joubarc
    Oct 15 at 19:25







1




1





Thank you very much.

– peetre
Oct 14 at 10:56





Thank you very much.

– peetre
Oct 14 at 10:56













I'm really interested to know how you did to find that. That's impressive! I'm not a Lego expert at all, but reading the comments of user3445853 it seemed really difficult.

– Michaël Polla
Oct 15 at 19:03





I'm really interested to know how you did to find that. That's impressive! I'm not a Lego expert at all, but reading the comments of user3445853 it seemed really difficult.

– Michaël Polla
Oct 15 at 19:03













Well, my first LEGO train, 171 had two in red, so with that info it was rather straightforward. Aside from that, there's a question on the subject with a very good answer but let's face it, sometimes it's just a matter of remembering the part at all.

– Joubarc
Oct 15 at 19:25





Well, my first LEGO train, 171 had two in red, so with that info it was rather straightforward. Aside from that, there's a question on the subject with a very good answer but let's face it, sometimes it's just a matter of remembering the part at all.

– Joubarc
Oct 15 at 19:25


















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