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Re: VIDEO: 932 Drive Practice!
That is yet to be revealed...
Nah, we don't have enough weight below 120 to add much to the hand. We figure there's not much of an advantage to being able to pick it up in the middle of a straightaway, since you're going to have to carry the ball past a turn to get to the next overpass anyhow.
Instead of adding a third finger or something at the last minute, we're practicing driving to be able to pick up the ball against the wall consistantly. We were going to design a third finger to the hand about two weeks ago, but we realized we don't have the spare weight to sacrifice for it, especially so far out on the hand. We'll see how that decision fares on gameday.
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Team 932:
2008 Oklahoma City Xerox Creativity Award
2008 Oklahoma City Autodesk Visualization Award
2008 St. Louis Chairman's Award winner
Home of the 2008 St. Louis Woodie Flowers mentor
2007 Kansas City Engineering Inspiration winner
2006 Lone Star Regional Finalist alliance member
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A mathmatician, a physicist, and an engineer were all given a red rubber ball and told to find the volume.
The mathmatician carefully measured the diameter and evaluated a triple integral.
The physicist filled a beaker with water, put the ball in the water, and measured the total displacement.
The engineer looked up the model and serial numbers in his red-rubber-ball table.
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