LKN wrote:Balsa Man or SLM:
Here are my thoughts:
I build my rectangular bases to meet with the testing surface with a 5cm x 20.1cm gap between legs.
I would be a bit anxious if my rectangular tower had a width of 5cm. I feel it is too narrow for such a tall structure. Unless you have successfully tested a tower with a similar width, I suggest you start from a more conservative position. I’ve advised my team to use a width of around 9 cm as the starting point. After you have generated some data, you can then start narrowing the width.
The legs are rectangular 1/16 x 1/4 with a "centerlined" lamination piece and bracing that uses two glueing surfaces for the bracing to inside of the legs. I am currently bracing with medium density, about .40g 36" sticks balsa in-between the legs. With your past experience, is this too thick? Can I go lower on the cross section for this bracing?
My guess is that these dimensions don't give you a near "optimum" design for the legs. But, I may be wrong. What is the average weight of a leg?
...would the bracing, although diagonal with no horizontal ladders, be under compression as well as tension? From what I have been following, if the bracing would be under some form of compression the cross section and density is much more vital rather than if the bracing was under tension.
Let’s assume each pair of adjacent legs defines a trapezoidal area bounded, on the top and bottom by horizontal members, and the area is filled with horizontal and/or diagonal bracings.

Furthermore, the trapezoid is subjected to vertical (or almost vertical) loads at the two top vertices causing its bottom to stretch and top to shrink, as shown below.

This deformation of the entire trapezoid affects the members within it. Some of the members are going to be compressed and some will be elongated. Common sense suggests that members in the top part of the trapezoid are compressed and those in the bottom part are stretched. This observation, of course, is not very accurate, but does convey the idea that some of the members (mainly in the top part) are in compression and some of the members (mainly in the bottom part) are in tension. This is prior to the reign of buckling.
When the axial force in the legs (the sides of the trapezoid) gets too large, buckling starts to take form. At this point the sides (legs) start bending inward excessively compressing the bracings in between them. The net force in each of these bracings, therefore, equals to the force in the member due to the applied load + the compression force due to buckling. If a member was in compression initially, then the buckling effect makes it worse (more compression). Otherwise, depending on the magnitude of the two interacting forces (tension + compression), the member may end up being compressed slightly or remain in tension. Without knowing the exact geometry of the base and the bracing pattern, I am hesitant to suggest which diagonals will be in tension and which ones will be in compression.
You are correct, because of buckling, compression members generally need more attention than tension members.
I am currently bracing with medium density, about .40g 36" sticks balsa in-between the legs.
In our experience, medium density 36”-long balsa sticks that weigh around 0.40 g are adequate for bracings. That is what we used last year. The only way to know if you can get away with lighter sticks is testing!
At 16.5cm high on the base, the legs of the base have narrowed a gap that can support 1/16 x 1/16 chimney legs that are 2.8 cm apart where they connect to the base. From the 2.8 cm space between chimney legs, the chimney is 53cm long, making the tower 69.5 cm. At the top, the space between chimney legs has narrowed to 2.5 cm.
I feel your starting point for the size of the chimney (2.8 x 2.8 to 2.5 x 2.5) may not produce the result you are looking for. For me, this would be the “optimum” size, not the initial one, assuming no testing has taken place yet.
How much "tapering" would be needed to be "secure" on a 70cm tower? Does the overall tower stability have an exponential relationship with the distance tapered in the legs?
As you correctly stated, this year the height of the tower could pose stability problems. Instability here means undesirable movement of the tower, which in this case primarily means its sidesway, the leaning of the tower to the left or right. This could happen because:
(1) The tower was not built straight to begin with,
(2) The load of the sand bucket is not aligned with the tower’s centerline (eccentric loading),
(3) The platform itself is not level,
(4) The bucket starts swinging,
(5) Any combination of 1 through 4.
Let’s say, due to one of the above factors, the chimney wants to lean to the right, as shown below.

This means the long vertical member (labeled A) wants to turn clockwise a bit going from a perfectly vertical position to an inclined (right-leaning) position. By making the chimney tapered, you are, in effect, orienting A in a left-leaning position making it more difficult for the load to cause sidesway.

Here, the load has to do more work to cause the same amount of deformation. That, in a nutshell, is why tapering a tower adds to its stability.
Obviously, the more tapered the chimney, the better. But, I don’t see an exponential relationship between stability and the angle of inward inclination of the chimney. Furthermore, there are practical limitations to consider. Everything else equal, your teammate’s chimney ends up being more tapered (stable) than yours, but that does not mean yours wouldn’t be effective. The only way to know for sure is to build and test.
It would be interested to see a performance comparison (in terms of weight and load capacity) between the two towers.