View Full Version : pic: mousetrap car
Aren_Hill
02-12-2006, 15:55
[cdm-description=photo]25966[/cdm-description]
Nice.
We also have to make a mousetrap car for the physics olympics. My friend and I are doing a collaboration and we're making that, a joule car, the toothpick bridge, and a rube goldberg. I might also do the paper tower and the slow bicycle race.
We're also using pulleys to get the maximum distance out of it, since the competition is for distance.
Do you have to go for maximum speed, and what materials have you considered for the axles?
Aren_Hill
02-12-2006, 16:30
the ranking criteria is the highest # of total distance divided by time it took to complete the first 5 meters. as far as axles go i don't really know steel is to heavy even that miniscule amount. but other things might bend. i'll probably end up with some sort of plastic.that way the only metal things are bearings and the wheels.
my theory for the grade is be in a quick acceleration gear for the first 5 meters then "shift" to a hard long pull for the rest of the trial. that way i'll end up with a fast car that goes aways.
Brandon Holley
02-12-2006, 16:54
pretty sweet...just make sure when you do the "gearing" of your car that its not so much as to not allow the car to move....it requires some trial and error
Does anyone else find it amusing how we spend six weeks designing a 130+ pound robot, and then in school we're assigned to create a little mousetrap car? :rolleyes:
Nice, for our mousetrap and joule car, we're actually using carbon fiber axles. Balsa wood body because it's easy to work with and cheap. Our grading is easier. It just has to travel 5 m, and then the competition is for distance after that.
We were considering using a CVT, but a regular pulley would allow it to travel farther and it's easier to lathe. We don't need to pay too close of attention to it when winding it. Are you going to use string, or some kind of belt?
Aren_Hill
02-12-2006, 17:47
it'll be string and i may use carbon fiber for the axles that sounds like a good idea. pulleys would cause alot of unnecessary drag. it'll be fishingline
colin340
02-12-2006, 21:45
the ranking criteria is the highest # of total distance divided by time it took to complete the first 5 meters. as far as axles go i don't really know steel is to heavy even that miniscule amount. but other things might bend. i'll probably end up with some sort of plastic.that way the only metal things are bearings and the wheels.
my theory for the grade is be in a quick acceleration gear for the first 5 meters then "shift" to a hard long pull for the rest of the trial. that way i'll end up with a fast car that goes aways.
this works very well it gave me a 1/3 better distans this let me own rees
as for gearin i just put a cone on the drive shath the move the line to along to (programing) the car
JoeXIII'007
03-12-2006, 00:53
Does anyone else find it amusing how we spend six weeks designing a 130+ pound robot, and then in school we're assigned to create a little mousetrap car? :rolleyes:
yes... minus programming, minus electrical, minus crate requirement (unless you guys got the project asssigned with a size maximum), minus sponsorship (unless you really don't have the scrap in your garage or a KNEX set or something of that sort), minus the need for an r&D group, minus basically the team... yeah... its amusing to build a little mousetrap car after being in FIRST, but its FUN!
Rickertsen2
03-12-2006, 16:34
I'm soo sick of mousetrap powered anything. Right now i'm working on a 4"x6"8" mousetrap powered car for a class that has to drive up a ramp, maneuver over a 6" gap, press a button on one of the walls of the gap, drive down another ramp and stop on a line at the bottom.
Btw. I don't know if its legal in your competition, but if you take the mousetrap apart and just use the spring, you can extract alot more energy from it because you can rotate it further. The stock setup goes only 180 degrees. I've found that they will go at least a full rotation without yeilding. That gives you 4x the available potential energy.
efoote868
03-12-2006, 17:14
Very Cool!
Btw. I don't know if its legal in your competition, but if you take the mousetrap apart and just use the spring, you can extract alot more energy from it because you can rotate it further. The stock setup goes only 180 degrees. I've found that they will go at least a full rotation without yeilding. That gives you 4x the available potential energy.
I've found that when you use a mousetrap over and over, the U-bars that hold the spring in tend to pull out... ruining the mousetrap. If you could get a (legal) setup like that, you'd blow away the competition!
Jeremytice
03-12-2006, 20:05
Thats awsome man!
So, no one has mentioned one of the best mouse trap techniques ever...
Think about the force vector...and the direction the spring bar is traveling... and the direction the string is traveling.
For ease of design, you might want to keep the string perpindicular to the travel of the spring bar, so the force is transmitted to the string. Here's a little picture.
http://static.flickr.com/107/313491092_d55840497e.jpg?v=0
By the way - the CVT is an awesome idea. I did that for a mouse trap car in high school and it worked great! (We had to carry a can of pop on board.)
Good luck!!!
65_Xero_Huskie
05-12-2006, 00:20
what would be ironic, would to have a mouse actually ride on it :)
Hello Gear and (all who built a mousetrap-car),
I study mechanical engineering in the first semester and I have to bulid a mousetrap-car like you.
Perhaps you can give me a few informations about what have you done.
I tried to add you in AIM, but I had Problems with that.
So, can you please send me an E-Mail: ich_bin_mausi@lycos.de
Thanks @ all who want to help me!
Aren_Hill
11-05-2007, 21:43
i finished my car which ended up very similar to this and won the competition by going across our entire gym long ways and crossing the 5 meter mark in 2 seconds
yeah i made one is 8th grade make the bar on the mouse trap longer and spin the spring a few more times it helps alot
Scott Morgan
11-05-2007, 22:41
i finished my car which ended up very similar to this and won the competition by going across our entire gym long ways and crossing the 5 meter mark in 2 seconds
Do you have any pictures of the finished car?
We had to make a mouse trap ball launching mechanism that could shoot a ball of our choice onto a drum and bounce into a box. We could take the spring off the mousetrap, I was the only one to do that and ours could shoot the ball quite well.
I had to make one in gr9. I used cd's as wheels, lathed hubs for them, framing was aluminum angle with thin aluminum sheeting. it went 70 feet on the school floor
Earlier this year, I made an all wooden mousetrap car with the edges sanded down for the minimum amount of weight. Ball bearings throughout and just a 1spd pulley. Lathing down the wood I used for the pulley was a pain because it kept splintering. Carbon fiber shafts were pretty cheap and easy to get from my local hobby shop.
Got 1st for distance, since we didn't go for time, and went diagonally across the student center.
Here's the chassis, before final touches to get rid of the glue stains.
http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v408/StOnEfAn527/Mousetrap%20Car/angled2withoutwheels.jpg
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