Construct an Egg Drop Device with 10 Straws and Cardboard

AI Thread Summary
The discussion revolves around creating an egg drop device using 10 straws, an 8x8 cardboard piece, and tape, with the goal of protecting an egg from a fall of 10 to 15 feet. Participants emphasize the importance of designing crumple zones to absorb impact, drawing on past experiences where similar devices successfully prevented egg breakage. Suggestions include researching resources from Science Olympiad for additional tips and techniques. The conversation highlights the significance of impact absorption in ensuring the egg's safety during the drop. Overall, the focus is on innovative design strategies to achieve a successful egg drop project.
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Egg Drop Device!

I have to create an Egg Dropping Device for my Physics class using these materials:

10 straws

8 x 8 cardboard piece

cellotapes (to attach the joints and nothing else!)

The egg must survive a fall of about... 10 ~ 15 feet I assume...

Please feel free to post your kind advices! :smile:
 
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The idea expressed in this experiment is all about easing the impact. My last year's physics class tried to break an egg JUST by throwing it. Everyone got a turn to throw the ball and it NEVER cracked. How you ask? Well, we were throwing the egg at a bed cover. Two people were holding it and no matter how hard you threw the egg, it would not crack, because the sheets absorbed the impact. I hope this helps you out. For your project, I would suggent crumple zones to absorb the impact. Also, watch this...the're so cute!

http://students.ed.uiuc.edu/freymuth/490i/egghints.htm

http://students.ed.uiuc.edu/freymuth/490i/eggdropvideo.htm
 
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I have to create an Egg Dropping Device for my Physics class using these materials:

10 straws

8 x 8 cardboard piece

cellotapes (to attach the joints and nothing else!)

The egg must survive a fall of about... 10 ~ 15 feet I assume...

Please feel free to post your kind advices!

It isn't that difficult, I was in Science Olympiad for two years as a freshman and sophomore in high school and we had to do this as an event. Occasionally the egg would break but we usually managed to keep it in one piece :smile:
 
Oh and it is possible that the science olympiad website has some suggestions but it has been too long for me to remember (its probably something easy like scienceolympiad.com) you can try searching google.
 
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