---
product_id: 47993433
title: "The LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Laboratory"
price: "£21.31"
currency: GBP
in_stock: false
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/47993433-the-lego-mindstorms-ev3-laboratory
store_origin: GB
region: United Kingdom
---

# stepwise learning curve 5 programmable robots mechanical & software engineering The LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Laboratory

**Price:** £21.31
**Availability:** ❌ Out of Stock

## Summary

> 🤖 Unlock the future of STEM with LEGO EV3 — where play meets professional-grade robotics!

## Quick Answers

- **What is this?** The LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Laboratory
- **How much does it cost?** £21.31 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Currently out of stock
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.co.uk](https://www.desertcart.co.uk/products/47993433-the-lego-mindstorms-ev3-laboratory)

## Best For

- Customers looking for quality international products

## Why This Product

- Free international shipping included
- Worldwide delivery with tracking
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## Key Features

- • **Math Meets Fun:** Explore practical math applications like trigonometry and measurement noise in an engaging, kid-friendly way.
- • **Beyond Instructions:** Learn design principles and software architecture patterns that empower creative problem-solving.
- • **Build & Program Real Robots:** Master robotics with 5 hands-on LEGO EV3 models that bring coding to life.
- • **Progressive Learning Journey:** From basics to advanced programming concepts like arrays and PID control, designed for smooth skill growth.
- • **Engineering Insights Included:** Understand torque, friction, and structural integrity—not just building, but why it works.

## Overview

The LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Laboratory book offers a comprehensive, pedagogically sound guide to building and programming five distinct robots using the EV3 kit. It combines mechanical engineering fundamentals, progressive programming lessons, and real-world math applications to engage young learners and aspiring engineers alike. Ideal for those seeking a deep understanding of robotics beyond simple assembly, this book fosters critical thinking and hands-on experimentation.

## Description

Buy The LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Laboratory: Build, Program, and Experiment with Five Wicked Cool Robots! Illustrated by Benedettelli, Daniele (ISBN: 9781593275334) from desertcart's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders.

Review: A must buy. - There are a lot of Lego NXT books out there, and I own a few of them. This book is by far the best I have purchased (I read it cover to cover in a single sitting the day I received it), but it will not please everyone. Why? Let me explain. I am not an automatic fan of everything Lego. I don't collect sets, and I don't furiously build everything I stumble upon. I bought the NXT 2.0 kit with the sole purpose of educating my kids, just as I bought real fossil sets, kumon math books, small and not so small microscopes, etc... Call me a sucker for anything that claims, with a reasonable grounding in reality, to be technically and scientifically educational. Sadly, I was probably a bit over-optimistic: a 6 years old boy and a 3 years old girl are not a good audience for a robotic kit. Now that they are a few years older, I decided to try again, with the same goal - entertaining education - and an EV3 kit. It is from that perspective that I will judge this book. The book begins with a good and brief introduction to the EV3 kit pieces and their names. Unlike some of the other NXT 2.0 books I own, this part is not an overly verbose page filler. Mentions of structures and frictions are a hint of things to come. Chapter 2 and 3 introduce the mandatory base platform and the visual block programming. This is probably the weakest part of the book: while they are excellent and have to be there if only for the users who will only buy one book, I can't help thinking it deprives us from a bit more of what follows, which is even better. Chapter 4, 5 and 6 dive deeper into programming and the first application. Interesting experiments are suggested, not randomly but in the framework of a logical pedagogical approach. Chapter 7, "The math behind the magic" floored me, because I didn't expect it. It could have said something like "the robot doesn't perform greatly, but hey, its only Lego and real robots performed better" No, like an invisible hand guiding us through experiments, it quietly introduces the notion of measurement noise. A fundamental notion that touches so many things in our modern science and technology, that our kids could eventually encounter during their secondary studies if they have a good math or science teacher, is presented in a way that a 12 years old boy can understand! And followed up by experiments that lead to immediate practical improvements in the robot's behavior. Chapter 8 is a cookbook of Lego recipes that addresses structural integrity, friction, typical machine parts. It is goal oriented: do you want strength? A lot of friction or none? This is again a place where I have seen other books (and Lego's own instructions) fail: they give you building instructions but don't tell you why the model is being build that way. Here, your get a good primer on common mechanisms and structural issues. After reading it, you won't think in terms of "I put a beam here because the instructions say so" but you'll know the reason why you are doing it "I put a beam here because I want to improve the rigidity of that important piece". Again, fundamental issues of mechanical engineering insidiously pushed into the brains of our kids (and I like that!) The rest of the book follows a regular pattern. Build a robot, experiment a bit, improve, experiment more, think. It touches essential programming concepts (the notion of variable, arrays, logic etc....), fundamental software architecture patterns (state machines!) in a style that is never boring or paternalistic. A bit of math is used here and there but nothing (except maybe the basic use of trigonometry) that a 12 years old couldn't understand. The added bonus, of course, is that kids realize that the math they learn at school is useful in the real world. To summarize: this book marvelously introduces kids to fundamental scientific, engineering and software programming concepts. Its flow and pedagogical approach is so smooth that kids aren't bored and don't even realize they are taught those things (which is a very, very good thing with kids - try to force them study polygons properties by rote because polygons are important). Now, for the caveat: The only audience that could be a bit disappointed is the type of audience that wants to build spectacular robots for the fun of it, or because they find the Lego build process mindlessly relaxing. The robots in the book aren't fancy or truly spectacular. For the adult who wants to build solid robots and learn sound building and design techniques: an excellent book. For my purpose: the almost perfect book. (I find something like Bricx to be ultimately better than the standard visual development environment and its quirks)
Review: An amazing book - This book shows what can be done with an EV3 kit. The learning curve is progressive and I would advise people to go through it step by step and in the end the rewards are well worth it. The mechanical aspects of the models are well explained (torque, speed, differential, structures Tec it's all there). As far as the programming side is concerned, this book will guide you through from basic techniques to more advanced programming and control techniques (arrays, logic ,PID control). Well done Danny.

## Features

- New Store Stock

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | 1,214,328 in Books ( See Top 100 in Books ) 719 in Electronics & Telecommunications Engineering 972 in Models & Model-Making 1,389 in Computer Information Systems |
| Customer Reviews | 4.4 out of 5 stars 230 Reviews |

## Images

![The LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Laboratory - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/71Zxkxt7c0L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ A must buy.
*by P***E on 27 November 2013*

There are a lot of Lego NXT books out there, and I own a few of them. This book is by far the best I have purchased (I read it cover to cover in a single sitting the day I received it), but it will not please everyone. Why? Let me explain. I am not an automatic fan of everything Lego. I don't collect sets, and I don't furiously build everything I stumble upon. I bought the NXT 2.0 kit with the sole purpose of educating my kids, just as I bought real fossil sets, kumon math books, small and not so small microscopes, etc... Call me a sucker for anything that claims, with a reasonable grounding in reality, to be technically and scientifically educational. Sadly, I was probably a bit over-optimistic: a 6 years old boy and a 3 years old girl are not a good audience for a robotic kit. Now that they are a few years older, I decided to try again, with the same goal - entertaining education - and an EV3 kit. It is from that perspective that I will judge this book. The book begins with a good and brief introduction to the EV3 kit pieces and their names. Unlike some of the other NXT 2.0 books I own, this part is not an overly verbose page filler. Mentions of structures and frictions are a hint of things to come. Chapter 2 and 3 introduce the mandatory base platform and the visual block programming. This is probably the weakest part of the book: while they are excellent and have to be there if only for the users who will only buy one book, I can't help thinking it deprives us from a bit more of what follows, which is even better. Chapter 4, 5 and 6 dive deeper into programming and the first application. Interesting experiments are suggested, not randomly but in the framework of a logical pedagogical approach. Chapter 7, "The math behind the magic" floored me, because I didn't expect it. It could have said something like "the robot doesn't perform greatly, but hey, its only Lego and real robots performed better" No, like an invisible hand guiding us through experiments, it quietly introduces the notion of measurement noise. A fundamental notion that touches so many things in our modern science and technology, that our kids could eventually encounter during their secondary studies if they have a good math or science teacher, is presented in a way that a 12 years old boy can understand! And followed up by experiments that lead to immediate practical improvements in the robot's behavior. Chapter 8 is a cookbook of Lego recipes that addresses structural integrity, friction, typical machine parts. It is goal oriented: do you want strength? A lot of friction or none? This is again a place where I have seen other books (and Lego's own instructions) fail: they give you building instructions but don't tell you why the model is being build that way. Here, your get a good primer on common mechanisms and structural issues. After reading it, you won't think in terms of "I put a beam here because the instructions say so" but you'll know the reason why you are doing it "I put a beam here because I want to improve the rigidity of that important piece". Again, fundamental issues of mechanical engineering insidiously pushed into the brains of our kids (and I like that!) The rest of the book follows a regular pattern. Build a robot, experiment a bit, improve, experiment more, think. It touches essential programming concepts (the notion of variable, arrays, logic etc....), fundamental software architecture patterns (state machines!) in a style that is never boring or paternalistic. A bit of math is used here and there but nothing (except maybe the basic use of trigonometry) that a 12 years old couldn't understand. The added bonus, of course, is that kids realize that the math they learn at school is useful in the real world. To summarize: this book marvelously introduces kids to fundamental scientific, engineering and software programming concepts. Its flow and pedagogical approach is so smooth that kids aren't bored and don't even realize they are taught those things (which is a very, very good thing with kids - try to force them study polygons properties by rote because polygons are important). Now, for the caveat: The only audience that could be a bit disappointed is the type of audience that wants to build spectacular robots for the fun of it, or because they find the Lego build process mindlessly relaxing. The robots in the book aren't fancy or truly spectacular. For the adult who wants to build solid robots and learn sound building and design techniques: an excellent book. For my purpose: the almost perfect book. (I find something like Bricx to be ultimately better than the standard visual development environment and its quirks)

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ An amazing book
*by T***P on 7 December 2017*

This book shows what can be done with an EV3 kit. The learning curve is progressive and I would advise people to go through it step by step and in the end the rewards are well worth it. The mechanical aspects of the models are well explained (torque, speed, differential, structures Tec it's all there). As far as the programming side is concerned, this book will guide you through from basic techniques to more advanced programming and control techniques (arrays, logic ,PID control). Well done Danny.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ Great book if you want to learn LEGO EV3 in depth
*by R***N on 28 March 2014*

This is a great book for really learning how to program the ev3 in depth. There is also a wealth of detail on constructional techniques, which are illustrated in the excellent models described in the book with full constructional details. My only problem was that with a couple of the models SENTIN3L and T-R3X particularly I found them to be a bit unstable, and they could fall over. I think this was because I used rechargeable NiMh battery cells which are quite heavy in the eV3 brick. I asked the author on his web site (quick response) and he had used the rechargeable pack that LEGO supply as an extra (it is standard with the Educational set but not the retail one) and I think this is lighter, altering the centre of gravity of the model. This is why I give it 4 rather than 5 stars. Notwithstanding, this is an excellent book and a must if you are really serious about getting to grips with the potential of the ev3 system. The analysis of steering geometry and the programming to allow for it in the steerable SUP3r CAR is superb! I bought the Kindle addition which worked well if you have a second monitor on your PC on which to display it, with the LEGO program on the main monitor.

## Frequently Bought Together

- The LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Laboratory: Build, Program, and Experiment with Five Wicked Cool Robots
- The LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Discovery Book: A Beginner's Guide to Building and Programming Robots
- The Art of LEGO MINDSTORMS EV3 Programming (Full Color)

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*Product available on Desertcart United Kingdom*
*Store origin: GB*
*Last updated: 2026-05-16*