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pic: Our machine is too fast...
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Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
Did somebody put a bullet through that windshield?? Maybe you should consider the neighborhood before setting up a robotics shop...;)
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Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
this is deffinatly a fake, theres no way a foam ball can shatter a windshield that badly. the root of the impact is way smaller than the size of a poof ball. nice try, funny lol
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Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
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Duh? |
Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
doesnt say much about that aiming capability haha
next try. brick wall. |
Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
I know a poof ball can't do that.. but who says that is not a metal ball painted like a poof ball?
Plus our new robotics shop is the schools old auto shop that closed down last year because people were breaking the cars that we worked on... this is one of the victims that sayed. But now our huge auto shop is our new huge robotics shop. :D |
Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
lol, that is hilarious.
I can't believe people actually post saying why this might not be possible. But it is funny. |
Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
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Before anyone volunteers too quickly, I would remind you about the group of professional engineers that adamantly proclaimed that there was absolutely no way that a piece of lightweight foam could ever punch a gaping hole in a carbon-carbon reinforced panel on the leading edge of a wing. I am not bringing this up to be maudlin. Rather, it is done to illustrate the point that we need to be very, very careful when making blanket statements. As engineers, we should understand that physical phenomena are typically bounded by certain parameters of performance. When we make assertions regarding those phenomena, it must be done in the context of the parameters relevant at the time. We must take care care when discussing these phenomena not to make statements such as "event X is always true" when what we really mean is "event X is always true when condition Y is true, otherwise it isn't." Otherwise, imprecision and inaccuracy will inexorably find their way into our communications. When that happens, we run the risk of losing the trust of the public and being perceived as an error-prone, lackadaisical profession. -dave |
Remember the 3rd law...
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Can a box of tissues decapitate someone? Dave, you beat me too it. :p Wetzel |
Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
unfortunately that windshield is characteristic of what happens if you dont wear your seat belt.
That may not be what happened to this car, but when it happens thats about where your face hits :c( |
Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
Oh come on! You've got to be kidding! There is no way in this world that a foam ball did that damage. When the people came to rip up the car and sell it (for scrap, by the way this car is on it's way to death row, we need to rip it up and sell the parts) we had to take a sledgehammer to it (breaking the windshield) and it did little damage of a small little hole and a huge crater. Plus there are other cracks in other places.
P.S. - no "KenWittlief" nobody was in the car and no one was hurt during the "destruction", but ya I bet you can seriously get killed if you don't have your seat belt on and you will create a larger hole than that and probably fly throught the windshield. |
Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
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Wetzel |
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Re: Remember the 3rd law...
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I wanted to laugh when I first heard about this. How could that color wheel (on lightweight cardboard, maybe 18 inches dia., max.) hurt anyone? Well, before lunch some girls were throwing it like a Frisbee, and it hit our teacher in the head edgewise. When I showed up for class after lunch, we were told she was still lying down in the nurse's office, feeling faint. I bet it could have decapitated her, if it had enough velocity and hit her in the neck. |
Re: pic: Our machine is too fast...
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Acceleration is the rate at which an object changes its velocity, so the compression will lower the acceleration by some amount. By slowing the ball over an extra 2 inches, you have a smaller acceleration. With a smaller acceleration you have a lower force. All that means is you need a higher starting velocity. :D Wetzel PS: If someone who has taken actual physics rather than physics of a body in an accident and can explain it better please do. |
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