Part numbers The LEGO Group uses two numbers: a Design ID (4 or 5 digits) that codes for the shape of the part and an Element ID ( Element ID - Bricks McGee
: If you are looking for a LEGO brick, standard IDs are strictly numeric. For example, a "Brick 2 x 4" might have a Design ID of 3001, but a unique 7-digit Element ID like 4299245 for a specific color.
It looks like you might be referring to a specific item or component code. While "42592mp4" doesn't match a standard LEGO piece (which usually have 4–7 digit numeric IDs), it does appear in a few other contexts:
Part numbers The LEGO Group uses two numbers: a Design ID (4 or 5 digits) that codes for the shape of the part and an Element ID ( Element ID - Bricks McGee
: If you are looking for a LEGO brick, standard IDs are strictly numeric. For example, a "Brick 2 x 4" might have a Design ID of 3001, but a unique 7-digit Element ID like 4299245 for a specific color.
It looks like you might be referring to a specific item or component code. While "42592mp4" doesn't match a standard LEGO piece (which usually have 4–7 digit numeric IDs), it does appear in a few other contexts: