Technic

Koenigsegg Sadair's Spear Steering Wheel

A tiny slice of hypercar cockpit that punches way above its piece count.

Brick Rated Score

3.8 out of 53.8/5

Set 40894 · 2026

Pieces228
Minifigsn/a
Year2026
Set number40894

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The verdict

I built this in one sitting and kept turning it over in my hands afterward, which is exactly what a good desk model should make you do.

It is not trying to be a car, it is trying to be one specific object done properly, and the rim, the spokes, and the little control details all read as deliberate rather than padded out. The honest caveat is that at 228 pieces this is a companion piece, not a headline build, so it lives or dies on whether you already love the full Sadair's Spear set it comes from. If you collect the flagship Technic supercars or you just like small, characterful display builds, this earns its spot on the shelf.

Best for: Technic supercar collectors who want the flagship set's cockpit detail as a standalone display piece

The full review

What it is

This one caught me off guard. I went in expecting a token accessory build, the kind of thing you assemble once and forget, but the steering wheel itself has real presence. The rim has a proper grip texture to it, the spokes are built up in layers instead of flat plates, and the control details in the center hub are the part that got me leaning in closer. It feels like LEGO's designers were told to shrink the cockpit experience of a hypercar down to something you can hold in one hand, and they actually pulled it off.

The catch

I will be straight with you about where this set sits. At 228 pieces it is over quickly, there is no tension-building midsection where the model suddenly clicks together into something bigger, because it was never trying to be that. It is a focused, single-object build, and if you come in wanting an afternoon project you will be disappointed in under an hour. It also leans hard on its connection to the full Sadair's Spear Technic set, this is a companion piece first and a standalone model second, so its value depends a lot on whether that context means anything to you.

Who it's for

Get this if you already love the Koenigsegg Sadair's Spear set and want its steering wheel as a piece of desk art, or if you are the kind of builder who genuinely enjoys small, dense, detail-first builds regardless of scale. Skip it if you want a set that stands entirely on its own, or if a short build session feels like a letdown rather than a treat. For the right person, this is a lovely little object. For everyone else, it is easy to pass over.

The parts story

What the build is actually like, and the pieces worth knowing about.

The build moves fast and stays focused the entire time. You are not assembling subsystems and then joining them, you are building one object in layers, working from the hub outward to the rim, which keeps the process feeling purposeful rather than repetitive. There is enough going on in the center console detailing that you slow down and pay attention rather than clicking through instructions on autopilot.

For the piece count, the standout moment is the control hub detailing, where smaller specialty pieces get pressed into service to suggest buttons and paddle-style controls rather than just gluing on stickers or printed tiles. The rim construction uses layered plates and technic connectors to build real thickness and grip texture into the wheel rather than leaving it flat, which is the kind of restraint that makes a small set feel considered instead of rushed.

Fun facts

  • 01The set is a companion build to LEGO's larger Koenigsegg Sadair's Spear Technic supercar, replicating the driver's steering wheel as a standalone display piece.
  • 02Koenigsegg is a Swedish hypercar manufacturer known for pushing extreme top speeds and unconventional engineering, themes LEGO Technic has leaned into with several of its supercar licenses.
  • 03Small companion accessory builds like this one follow a pattern LEGO Technic has used before with other supercar partners, giving fans of the flagship model a low-commitment way to add a second, display-only piece to the collection.

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