I see it as at any point of the cross section of the bridge, the event supervisor must be able to measure the bridge and get a measurement >= 5 cm. Which means at any point the ES decides to measure it must be 5 cm wide.dholdgreve wrote:I think we may actually be over-simplifying it... Going to a more narrow design with a UOR (Useless Out-Rigger) seems to dictate that the loading block be placed on top the bridge. I believe this may force the design to include many more diagonal braces in the Z plane to stabilize it, as opposed to placing the loading block within the bridge supported off the bottom chord. This design virtually forces the bridge to exceed the 5 CM requirement, and may utilize the solid edge planes of the loading block as stabilizing diaphragms in lieu of the Z axis braces... just a thought... I still see no ambiguity in the way the rules are written... At some point, at some elevation along the entire span of the bridge it must measure 5 cm wide. Not the entire bridge... just one horizontal dimension of the cross section of the bridge. High, low, or in between... That part seems very simple.
Designs B/C
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Re: Designs B/C
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Re: Designs B/C
dholdgreve wrote: I still see no ambiguity in the way the rules are written... At some point, at some elevation along the entire span of the bridge it must measure 5 cm wide. Not the entire bridge... just one horizontal dimension of the cross section of the bridge. High, low, or in between... That part seems very simple.
Agreed.
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Re: Designs B/C
I believe if that were the intent, they would have added as statement something to the effect of "...at any point of the event coordinator's choosing..." As stated, as long as any one horizontal dimension point within any given cross section meets thew 5 CM requirement, you're golden!chinesesushi wrote:
I see it as at any point of the cross section of the bridge, the event supervisor must be able to measure the bridge and get a measurement >= 5 cm. Which means at any point the ES decides to measure it must be 5 cm wide.
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Re: Designs B/C
Yes, but if you have a cube shape, and the two bottom pieces are 5cm apart, then could you just consolidate the top beams to just one beam?
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Re: Designs B/C
I suppose you could, depending on your design... By consolidating the top beams into a single beam, I would think it might force the bottom chords to be further apart that actually required, because you would need a distance of 5 cm wide at a height of 2 cm above bottom chord... with the top distance being around 1 CM wide... and an assumed overall height of 7 CM, you can imagine how that would force the bottom to be substantially wider than 5 CM... Not necessarily a problem... unless you plan on bearing on the bottom chords instead of cross bracing running perpendicular to the bottom chord.bearasmith wrote:Yes, but if you have a cube shape, and the two bottom pieces are 5cm apart, then could you just consolidate the top beams to just one beam?
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Northmont Science Olympiad
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"For the betterment of Science"
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Re: Designs B/C
This is probably VERY noobish question, but it didn't give a picture as to what it's supposed to look like. Is it an elevated bridge or what? Do not know. Is it possible for one of you guys to add a few pics of a basic model?
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Re: Designs B/C
The simplest way would be to buy the DVD from the SO Store.
PS, it does not show the winner or the runner up bridges.
PS, it does not show the winner or the runner up bridges.
Re: Designs B/C
What do you think the best type of wood for this event would be the best. Additionally I was gonna use super glue, but what brand or type of super glue is the best?
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Re: Designs B/C
I'm pretty sure most people use balsa. My team uses epoxy, but I'm sure gorilla glue and super glue could work.taimur18 wrote:What do you think the best type of wood for this event would be the best. Additionally I was gonna use super glue, but what brand or type of super glue is the best?
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Re: Designs B/C
Ok thank you. If I do use balsa would you recommend any specific type, like high density, low density, etc?azuritemalachite wrote:I'm pretty sure most people use balsa. My team uses epoxy, but I'm sure gorilla glue and super glue could work.taimur18 wrote:What do you think the best type of wood for this event would be the best. Additionally I was gonna use super glue, but what brand or type of super glue is the best?