Well, you've convinced me. Only the highest quality product come from Lego. What idiot would buy something as unreliable as a car? I know for a fact that legos are far more sophisticated than my automatic transmission. That's why, when I was 4, I bought my first micrometer. You know, to make sure the legos were up to specs. You certainly wouldn't need that for your spark plugs.
You jest, but yes, the literal square does indeed have tight tolerances. If the tolerances were not tight, the small differences would add up over course of successive block connections and bricks would eventually cease to line up closely enough to fit together properly.
I'm not referring to the quality of the toys, I'm referring the quality of the human being playing with them.
Either way:
Lego is literally precision engineered to tolerances smaller than many parts of your car.
"the literal square has tight tolerances"
Well, you've convinced me. Only the highest quality product come from Lego. What idiot would buy something as unreliable as a car? I know for a fact that legos are far more sophisticated than my automatic transmission. That's why, when I was 4, I bought my first micrometer. You know, to make sure the legos were up to specs. You certainly wouldn't need that for your spark plugs.
You jest, but yes, the literal square does indeed have tight tolerances. If the tolerances were not tight, the small differences would add up over course of successive block connections and bricks would eventually cease to line up closely enough to fit together properly.