I wouldn't look at regionals resigns. Most either get sub-500 scores or get tiered.BilalHayat19 wrote:Does anybody know boomilever designs people create at regionals, states, and nationals?
Boomilever B/C
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Re: Boomilever B/C
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Re: Boomilever B/C
Lamination is when you layer pieces of wood on top of each other (often in opposing directions) to add extra strength (usually to a joint). For the distal end, I've found that actually laminating it is unnecessary. I usually just attach the tension to compression, then add a balsa piece on top and bottom of the connection point, but I don't add an extra layer on top.idislikeboomi wrote:Is there a good guide for how to laminate for boomilevers? I'm new to the event and am not familiar with the process of lamination in this context.jinhusong wrote:With Gorilla Glue, groove base for the tension stick and laminate.
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Re: Boomilever B/C
Hello,
I am doing Boomilever this year and I keep on seeing this wood used for the tension members. The wood looks almost like it is flimsy. Can anyone point me in the direction towards how to get my hands on this mysterious wood?
Thanks in advance.
I am doing Boomilever this year and I keep on seeing this wood used for the tension members. The wood looks almost like it is flimsy. Can anyone point me in the direction towards how to get my hands on this mysterious wood?
Thanks in advance.
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Re: Boomilever B/C
What wood are you referring to?embokim wrote:Hello,
I am doing Boomilever this year and I keep on seeing this wood used for the tension members. The wood looks almost like it is flimsy. Can anyone point me in the direction towards how to get my hands on this mysterious wood?
Thanks in advance.
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Re: Boomilever B/C
Nevermind, I realized I was just looking at the laminated portion of the distal end.
I was thinking...What would happen if you made the boomilever more narrow and just connect the tension members 5cm before the loading block area? Would it increase the twisting forces on the compression members too much to cancel out any mass benefits from the wood saved?
I was thinking...What would happen if you made the boomilever more narrow and just connect the tension members 5cm before the loading block area? Would it increase the twisting forces on the compression members too much to cancel out any mass benefits from the wood saved?
Happy to be here
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Re: Boomilever B/C
Nevermind, I realized I was just looking at the laminated portion of the distal end.
I was thinking...What would happen if you made the boomilever more narrow and just connect the tension members 5cm before the loading block area? Would it increase the twisting forces on the compression members too much to cancel out any mass benefits from the wood saved?
I was thinking...What would happen if you made the boomilever more narrow and just connect the tension members 5cm before the loading block area? Would it increase the twisting forces on the compression members too much to cancel out any mass benefits from the wood saved?
Happy to be here
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Re: Boomilever B/C
Bass wood?embokim wrote:Hello,
I am doing Boomilever this year and I keep on seeing this wood used for the tension members. The wood looks almost like it is flimsy. Can anyone point me in the direction towards how to get my hands on this mysterious wood?
Thanks in advance.
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Re: Boomilever B/C
Bass wood being flimsy doesn't sound right... I'm confused at what you're asking embokim...Unome wrote:Bass wood?embokim wrote:Hello,
I am doing Boomilever this year and I keep on seeing this wood used for the tension members. The wood looks almost like it is flimsy. Can anyone point me in the direction towards how to get my hands on this mysterious wood?
Thanks in advance.
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Re: Boomilever B/C
Pretty sure he meant a balsa sheet being used for lamination.MadCow2357 wrote:Bass wood being flimsy doesn't sound right... I'm confused at what you're asking embokim...Unome wrote:Bass wood?embokim wrote:Hello,
I am doing Boomilever this year and I keep on seeing this wood used for the tension members. The wood looks almost like it is flimsy. Can anyone point me in the direction towards how to get my hands on this mysterious wood?
Thanks in advance.
If you're just shortening the tension pieces, you'll save negligible mass. Much better to have them attached at the end so the end of your compression chords don't snap off.embokim wrote:Nevermind, I realized I was just looking at the laminated portion of the distal end.
I was thinking...What would happen if you made the boomilever more narrow and just connect the tension members 5cm before the loading block area? Would it increase the twisting forces on the compression members too much to cancel out any mass benefits from the wood saved?
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Re: Boomilever B/C
Making the distance between compression members short can save some weight. I saw some school still attach the tension members at the end but they raise a small platform for the loading block above the tension sticks from compression members.sciencecat42 wrote:Pretty sure he meant a balsa sheet being used for lamination.MadCow2357 wrote:Bass wood being flimsy doesn't sound right... I'm confused at what you're asking embokim...Unome wrote: Bass wood?
If you're just shortening the tension pieces, you'll save negligible mass. Much better to have them attached at the end so the end of your compression chords don't snap off.embokim wrote:Nevermind, I realized I was just looking at the laminated portion of the distal end.
I was thinking...What would happen if you made the boomilever more narrow and just connect the tension members 5cm before the loading block area? Would it increase the twisting forces on the compression members too much to cancel out any mass benefits from the wood saved?
Another example is the chimney compression style. Just connect as normal, the space is already over or close to 5 cm for the loading block.
Jinhu
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