View Full Version : Engineering students score with pumpkin
Ivan Seeking
Nov2-09, 10:58 PM
...In an engineering experiment gone awry, a pumpkin shot from a makeshift cannon aimed at two plywood targets about 50 yards away, instead catapulted more than 120 yards across Titan Stadium at Cal State Fullerton, crashing through the scoreboard...
http://www.ocregister.com/articles/pumpkin-students-engineering-2631958-center-science
Damn those dropped decimals.
Office_Shredder
Nov3-09, 12:27 AM
We were aiming for the plywood?
Oh.. right... we just overshot it. My bad
Moonbear
Nov3-09, 01:06 AM
:rofl: I love it! It's like Revenge of the Nerds all over again, finally getting even with the jocks and their fancy scoreboards while they had to make do with pumpkins and plywood. :biggrin:
Wow I remember back in the day making a potatoe launcher. A pumpkin launcher, now this could be a bit more interesting. :biggrin:
Chi Meson
Nov3-09, 06:34 AM
Wow I remember back in the day making a potatoe launcher. A pumpkin launcher, now this could be a bit more interesting. :biggrin:
Dan Qualye is amonge us!
1) That is one wimpy scoreboard if a pumpkin punched a hole in it.
http://www.dailytitan.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/pumpkin001-287x300.jpg
2) What a lousy shot. They just barely hit the scoreboard.
3) What an ingenious design! Having the firing mechanism raise the elevation by the precise angle required to hit the scoreboard, thereby providing a plausible "accidental" clause.
4) Dan Quayle was an engineer?
Saladsamurai
Nov3-09, 02:13 PM
1) That is one wimpy scoreboard if a pumpkin punched a hole in it.
http://www.dailytitan.com/wp-content/uploads/2009/10/pumpkin001-287x300.jpg
2) What a lousy shot. They just barely hit the scoreboard.
3) What an ingenious design! Having the firing mechanism raise the elevation by the precise angle required to hit the scoreboard, thereby providing a plausible "accidental" clause.
4) Dan Quayle was an engineer?
No. But he was a great spellere
Pattonias
Nov3-09, 02:21 PM
Student 1:" We just finished that cannon we talked about in the Engineering club last week!"
Student 2:"Really, you actually built it?"
Student 1:"Yeah, it wasn't as hard as it looked."
Student 2:"How far can it shoot?"
Student 1:"I don't know. We put up a backstop and target at about 50 yards to try it out."
Student 2: "What did the math say?"
Student 1:"We didn't think we really needed the math, whats the worst that can happen?"
Hopefully students involved will not work on any future Mars missions.
When I read the title of this thread, I thought some engineering students had done some inappropriate things to a pumpkin and got caught. I am slightly relieved...
I dont understand how it could have possibly gone 3-4 times farther then they expected. If you factor in the fact that it only went 150 yards because it hit a high object who knows how far it was actualy gona go. Must have been the same crew that demo'd a car in my highschool auto class...
I dont understand how it could have possibly gone 3-4 times farther then they expected. If you factor in the fact that it only went 150 yards because it hit a high object who knows how far it was actualy gona go. Must have been the same crew that demo'd a car in my highschool auto class...
My guess: either it hit about 2 feet lower than expected or this was the most pathetic engineering team in the competition. It is indeed possible to hit the bullseye with a perfect shot, as was demonstrated by the Society of Automotive Engineers in the 2008 competition.
An article previewing the event: http://calstate.fullerton.edu/news/2009/039-pumpkin-launch.html
Actually, I'm really disturbed having read the preview. I had no idea they were using pumpkins with faces on them! :cry:
Moonbear
Nov3-09, 06:12 PM
From the article:
"They had no idea how far it was going to go,'' Brush said. "You know, with engineering projects, they usually don't work out the first time."
:rofl: Might want to think twice before hiring engineers graduating from CSUF.
mgb_phys
Nov3-09, 08:02 PM
Another group just set a world record of 4600 feet!
http://www.deseretnews.com/photos/2027599.jpg
Hopefully students involved will not work on any future Mars missions.
Right...they would have to call it the Mars Saturn mission.
Another group just set a world record of 4600 feet!
http://www.deseretnews.com/photos/2027599.jpg
Considering that's the Big 10 team, I would expect their distance to be longer than advertised (by at least 10%).
Pattonias
Nov4-09, 09:45 AM
Right...they would have to call it the Mars Saturn mission.
That is hilarious.
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