LEGO SNOT: Modern Elements for Stud Reversal and Sideways Building

SNOT Week continues as we dive into the pool of SNOT and look at some more modern elements for sideways LEGO building. We’re SNOT even kidding—these techniques are a LEGO superpower!


In the series so far, I’ve covered some of the most common SNOT elements and techniques for how to use them. But many new SNOT elements have been introduced to the LEGO system since then, so I think it’s time to make an update on some of the more interesting elements released during the last few years.

So let’s begin looking at some of the modern elements with the most SNOT potential.


New SNOT Elements

SNOT Blaster

  • Design Number: 44709

  • Name: Minifigure, Weapon Gun, Blaster with Studs on Sides, Bottom, and Front.

  • Year Released: 2019

 

This minifigure accessory was first released in LEGO Overwatch but has appeared in many other themes since then. I’m always on the lookout for new SNOT parts, so this blaster caught my eye immediately. It has a total of four studs on equally as many sides. That, combined with how small/thin it is, makes it very useful for sted reversal techniques. It happens to be precisely 1.5 plates thick which is a property it shares with some other minifigure tools.  

Minifigure tools share some interesting features

1.5 plate thickness

Square SNOT configuration using blasters

It’s not very often you need a 1.5 plate distance but when it happens you now know which element to use. Maybe you would like to secure technics bricks in a configuration like this sometime:

connecting two technic bricks bottom to bottom

The SNOT blaster has also been used in some official LEGO sets as a way to invert building directions, such as in the LEGO Architecture 21057 Singapore to connect two sides of a tower.


Centered SNOT Bracket

  • Design Number: 41682

  • Name: Bracket 2 x 2 - 1 x 2 Centered

  • Year Released: 2019

First released in the Minecraft BigFig sets, this element was a welcome surprise! I don’t think any of us had ever thought about getting an element like this. I really like this part and often use it in my builds due to its unique geometry and structural stability. One of the most useful features of the centered SNOT bracket is for transitions between stud directions. Like this:

Smooth transition

But an even more useful feature is how you can use it for seamless stud reversal:

Stud reversal

As an example, here is a little bench that you could build using the stud reversal technique:

A bench and a trashcan designed with the new bracket


Monkie Kid Hilt

  • Design Number: 66909

  • Name: Minifigure, Weapon Hilt Smooth Extended

  • Year Released: 2020

2020 brought us a new LEGO theme, Monkie Kid, and with it came this new hilt. Why is this significant? The old lightsaber hilt is also basically a bar with two studs in each end, but it has a weird length that makes it hard to use. This new element though is more “in system”:

These dimensions might be useful if you ever need to attach bricks but don’t have the room for regular SNOT bricks.


Super SNOT

  • Design Number: 67329

  • Name: Brick, Modified 1 x 2 x 1 2/3 with Studs on Side and Ends.

  • Year Released: 2020

This element showed up in the first wave of Super Mario collectible figures—we are already up to Series Six! The designers needed to build small figures with studs outwards in every direction and this part made that easy. I honestly haven’t found that many uses for it so far. It would be super useful if you could place them oriented bottom-to-bottom in a SNOT construction, like in the photo below, but that is not recommended because it actually puts the elements under a lot of stress.

nope

However if you place four of them together at 90-degree angles, it works really well and you get this 4x4 base with studs on all four sides and a smooth underside. Maybe that can be of some use?

4x4 square assembly

A small circular base with a lot of connection points


Thin Inverted Bracket

  • Design Number: 73825

  • Name: Bracket 1 x 1 - 1 x 2 Inverted

  • Year Released: 2021

A year later, when it was time for some new Super Mario sets again, this very useful bracket showed up which was half of the larger version that has been around for two decades since 2002. If you’ve read the entire SNOT Series on BrickNerd, I think you already know why LEGO builders like brackets so much, but here are some examples to freshen up your memory:

Same dimensions as a 1x2 brick

Smooth transition between slope and tile

Useful Stud reversal


Thin Bracket

  • Design Number: 79389

  • Name: Bracket 1 x 1 - 1 x 2 

  • Year Released: 2021

Later that same year, this element was inevitably released which hangs down and is just as useful as its counterpart.

Same dimensions as a 1x2 brick

1/2 plate transitions

Stud reversal


Mirrored BrickHeadz SNOT

  • Design Number: 80796

  • Name: Brick, Modified 1 x 2 x 1 2/3 with Studs on Sides

  • Year Released: 2022 

Only ever released in a single (!) Monkie Kid set, this fascinating SNOT part should be useful if you need to build something that is only 1 stud thick. It only comes in trans-orange which makes its usefulness somewhat limited, though it is better to have the option if you need it.

2x2 studs


Centered SNOT

  • Design Number: 86876

  • Name: Brick, Modified 1 x 2 with Stud on Side 

  • Year Released: 2022

Minecraft once again brought us a new SNOT element that no one expected: a centered SNOT stud on a 1x2 brick. This has been a part that in the past many builders have created using a Technic brick with a half-pin insterted, though this new element makes that technique less “illegal”.

I personally don't find this element very useful. It is basically a jumper SNOT brick so it is nice to have if you want to SNOT with half a stud offset. That has been possible since the 70s if you use the Technic brick technique. Nevertheless, the SNOT brick family is now complete (or is it?).

(Please let me know if there are some unique SNOT techniques using this element that I’m totally ignorant about.)

1/2 stud offset SNOT

Transistions between slopes


Swivel SNOT

  • Design Number: 3386

  • Name: Brick, Round 1 x 1 x 2/3 Half Circle Extended with Side Stud

  • Year Released: 2023

This small NOT element was a total surprise! Last year, such a small SNOT brick was introduced as an April Fools joke, when unexpectedly it was released in the Speed Champions product line a few months ago. This two-plate high element has similar properties compared to other two-plate high SNOT elements:

Twoa plate high SNOT elements

And when we use these type of elements we get a 1/2 plate gap which makes it very useful for stacking with regular SNOT bricks:

Stacking

I try not to complain when we get new SNOT parts, but for me, it would have been a lot more useful without the rounded back. I get that this feature makes it possible to place at any angle you want, but I have found myself in many situations where I would have needed an element with a square footprint more than a rounded one. I suppose the rounded back was to help distinguish the part from the new 2-plate tall “blates” of the same size.

Since we now have a SNOT element with a rounded back we might as well explore how to use that feature. Let’s try other elements with that same shape, like the tooth tile and the 1x4 curved “loaf” slope. Here is an example:

Example of use with other rounded elements


SNOT With Non-SNOT Elements

We’ve looked at some useful new SNOT elements, but what else is possible for stud reversal? I want to highlight some other useful LEGO parts from recent years that might be more helpful than you expect. I use them a lot in my builds and they also have some SNOT uses although they might not fit that category at first glance.

AxLE Brick

  • Design Number: 73230

  • Name: Technic, Brick 1 x 1 with Axle Hole

  • Year Released: 2021

We’ve had the 1x2 brick with axle hole for several years now but the 1x1 is more useful for SNOTting in my opinion. Sometimes if you want a really rigid SNOT connection then a Technic axle might do the job.

Fixed SNOT with technic axle. Antistud connections with Inkwells


Technic Friction Half-Pin

  • Design Number: 89678

  • Name: Technic, Pin 1/2 with Friction Ridges

  • Year Released: 2022

I can’t believe how obvious this element seems yet it took 45 years of LEGO Technic element design to realize we needed a half-pin with friction! The regular half-pin has long been used by builders to attach elements sideways. But the frictionless design has mostly made these builds a bit flimsy and fragile. Now we can position technic elements in fixed angles in a way that was impossible before. Like this:

Angled SNOT

You can also use it for joints with other technic elements, like this:

Friction joints


Bar and Blate

Lastly I want to highlight two new elements at the same time (because they work so well together).

  • Design Number: 86996

  • Name: Brick, Modified 1 x 1 x 2/3 with Open Stud

  • Year Released: 2022

  • Design Number: 78258

  • Name: Bar 2L with Stop Ring

  • Year Released: 2021

The two-plate high brick (which some are calling a “blate”) with a hollow stud is useful in many ways. Firstly, the fact that it is two plates high makes it useful for me because when you build SNOT you often need to stack two plates for correct spacing and this element makes that process easier and better looking overall (no more stacking 1x1 plates, yay!).

Stacking

But the best feature of this element is the hollow stud which makes it very useful for stud reversal in small spaces. This is where the 2L bar comes in handy as well:

Stud reversal with 2L bar

You can also use the 2L bar with other hollow stud elements with similar result depending on the situation. 


That is my update on elements that can be used for SNOT released in recent years. I hope you found some ideas that you can use in your builds. Please let me know what you think or if I missed some obvious elements or techniques in the comments. Until then, have fun with your SNOT!

Best of BrickNerd - Article originally published June 5, 2023.


What other modern LEGO elements have SNOT potential? Leave your thoughts in the comments below.

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