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Re: pic: Wood Coast Drive
Quote:
Originally Posted by carpedav000
Polycarbonate is (IMO) much more suited to take impact than plywood is, hence me asking the question in the first place.
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Plywood's not bad at impacts; it's springy and returns to shape when metal dents. Until our safety captain forbade it, I demonstrated that by hitting our demo swerve module with a hammer. We also ran over our prototype drivetrain with a car, with only minor damage.
We also use wood since it's so fast to make; we get turnaround times less than half an hour on our laser, while we'd have to cut Lexan by hand.
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2012 Utah Regional Rookie All-Star
2013 Phoenix Regional Judge's Award for "design process and prototyping"
2014 Hub City Regional Quality Award, Arizona Regional Excellence in Engineering Award
2015 Arizona East Regional Creativity Award, Winner
2016 Arizona North Regional Finalist, Arizona West Excellence in Engineering Award, Finalist
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