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#1
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please help me! its an egg drop contest
so i saw other threads in here about an egg drop but i need help because my supplies are more limited. I have only 2 sheets of newspaper and as much scotch tape as i want. i can only put the scotch tape on the newspaper and the egg can not be smuthered and hidden. its dropping from about 20 m and i have to do it in the morning so there will be more wind :[
any suggestions on structure or design? would be very grateful !! ty ![]() |
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#2
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
Full sheets of newspaper? I think they would make a good parachute.
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#3
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
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#4
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
yeah thats what i was thinking but what type of basket? would a cone or square or what be the best? also should i have a hole in the parachute?
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#5
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
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#6
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
I will try to explain the way I did it in my engineering class, I was given the same material (2 sheets of newspaper) and 12" tape (not as much as I want). Professor asked me to create one without a parachute.
I made a "cone" out of one sheet of newspaper (like a rocket). Then I used the 2nd newspaper (cut them in pieces and made balls which I called "foam around the egg") to make a shell for the egg, so it doesn't break. The point of this was for the sharpest corner (if you are looking at a V ... you want the bottom of V to drop first) to touch the ground first. The egg was safely covered somewhere in the middle of the V. Once it hit the ground, of course the bottom of V shape messed up. But the egg was fine. I dropped it 3 times, once from 3rd floor, once from 4th floor, and once from 5th floor (not to mention with the same egg). It was a success. Since then, I never felt the urge to use parachute anymore. Good luck with your project. I hope I was able to help even a bit (I hope you understood what I was trying to explain). If you need any help, please don't hesitate to send me a message on chiefdelphi or Aim. Quote:
Quote:
Last edited by Arefin Bari : 08-09-2005 at 23:31. |
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#7
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
I stand corrected--this is news to me.
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#8
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
Hmm...I'm now tempted to try to organize an egg drop contest for the Silicon Valley Regional...
Edit: I just remembered that SJSU's ISE department has an "egg deceleration" contest. Link to PDF in upper right corner. The regional is held in the SJSU event center. But the department's competition is in November apparently... Maybe I can pull some strings. Well, maybe not seeing as I don't know any important people... Last edited by sciguy125 : 08-09-2005 at 23:51. |
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#9
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
I've done two, both not as successful as I'd prefer. But at least I know what I did wrong.
One of the sheets has to be a parachute. This is non-negotiable for success--there's no way to do it without slowing down the egg. The other sheet will have to be the basket--I'd imagine a quarter-sheet basket, wrapped like a cone, connected to the corners of the chute would work, with the other 3/4 sheet used for some light padding. (Tear strips and crumple.) These are just thoughts--make sure you test your design as best you can beforehand. It seems to do wonders to work the bugs out. |
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#10
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
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Works everytime... try it, i won my middle school's egg-drop competition with that design back in the day. Although i used a sheet of computer paper. Test it out Tom Last edited by Tom Schindler : 09-09-2005 at 02:46. |
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#11
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
I love the cone method it works if you do it right, just make sure it falls Nose down.
Here are my tips, [*]You don't need a parachute!!! It's a waste of materials and usualy doesn't have enough space to form and be affective. At least in my experinces, and I've done about 20 full drops (with egg). [*]Make sure you have as many compressable materials as you can, they absorb energy, and thats what you want! Arefin's crubled bits of paper method is perfect for your solution. Use as much left over tape as you can to crumble up too. [*]Do what ever you can to create a shape that will take the impact well [*]Don't have a rigid structure!!! It'll absorb less energy well have fun, thats what they are there for |
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#12
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
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In the rules, does it prevent you from using the unlimited amount of tape as a "rope" attached to the newspaper containing the egg? If not, then just lower the whole assembly as slowly as you'd like until it is resting on the ground. This completely bypasses the dropping part of the test, and in turn, removes some of the fun. But, if it works then the goal is met (kind of like a purely defensive robot). Now if you want to stick to the intent of the game, go with the cone. ![]() |
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#13
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
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If you feel like using a LOT of tape, make the newspaper into a large hollow ball and fill it with wads of tape, egg at the middle. The same concept seems to have worked on Mars... Wetzel |
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#14
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Re: please help me! its an egg drop contest
When I did this project in 6th grade, I didn't use a parachute because I observed that most of them didn't slow down the fall of the egg sufficiently enough (although I am sure there are instances in which this method would work).
Instead, I used a box in which I suspended the egg with rubber bands. First I wrapped the egg in foam and bubble wrap, then found a very large cardboard box. I then got a whole bunch of rubber bands and taped them all over the egg - and then taped the other ends to the inside of the box - suspending it as if it were a bug caught in a spiders web. The rubber band method worked quite well - it survived a 3-story fall. It made a very loud sound when it hit the pavement, but the rubber bands absorbed enough of the shock to keep the egg intact. If any of this doesn't make sense, let me know and I will explain it better. Good luck! -- Jaine |
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