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Egg Drop
My Kindergarten son has to do an egg drop. No more than 7" x 7" square, simple design.
I have two ideas: 1. Marsh mellows, not too tightly packed and likely covering the outside of the container as well. 2. Suspension in pantyhose inside of container allowing movement, but not enough to touch sides. Anyone have any that worked? Simple design no parachutes? |
Re: Egg Drop
Seems like a 7"x7" box filled with packing "peanuts" around the egg would work.
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ya beat me to it!!
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Thanks guys. Only worry about the jello is the mess, 80 degrees expected on drop day. I'm sure my kids teacher will love a drippy box.
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hahaha...we're not talkin' 'bout making Lime jello, bro!!!
Knox unflavored Gelatin. Just use less water...voila! :banger |
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Jello sounds good. What about the foaming insultation stuff. Get a box hang egg in center of box. Then take 2 plastic bags one on each side and spray in insta-fill cut off enough to make it 7*7. After it lands tear open box pull apart the 2 bags and cross you fingers.
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Re: Egg Drop
use half inch soft foam on the interior surface of the box.. then a hammock like contraption to hold the egg, and rubber bands attached to that.
In fact. you can run to the store and get an egg container people use when backpacking. http://www.topsportsupplies.com/mage...oghpic511a.jpg Then cut out one egg container.. drill holes.. attach rubber bands to it... and figure out a way to mount it to the box. Make sure you have rubber bands attached to all 3 axis, to dampen the blow from all angles... then if it strikes the edge of the box.. the half inch foam should protect it. :tu |
Re: Egg Drop
Is he allowed to experiment at home before the "official" drop?
Sounds like a fun couple hours with your son trying different ideas. Put the jello in ziploc freezer bags... Do you have a infant in the house? Pampers should absorb the shock.. Tempur-Pedic foam is NASA approved..:D |
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I'm thinking retro rockets. It may not work but would be lots of fun.
P.s. All the ideas here sound better to me. |
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I had to do one of these as a kid with toothpicks and glue, nothing else.
The key to a successful drop is having some part of the assembly that will crush. collapse, or compress freely and gently upon impact (I used weak glue joints on the outer structure of mine). The best thing is to design an internal "egg carrier" and then place it in something that will absorb the impact easily. First thing that comes to mind though is a 7x7 wad of bubble wrap :) |
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Can he hard boil the egg first? Check the rules and see if this is not allowed.:D
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Not to be a party pooper here but isn't HE supposed to design the thing? I mean as a teacher ( yeah I am) the kids are supposed to think and get creative. Ok, stepping off soap box now.
BTW, your kids teacher will hate the knox mess even if it has no sugar. lol Trust me on this one. ;) |
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Way back in the day I won my egg drop at my school. I don't really remember what I did other than I used toilet paper. But back then it was a brand new idea and there were no rules to the game so mine might have been the size of a basketball for all I remember.
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Re: Egg Drop
Popcorn is key. Dropped my egg from 15 ft with a good stuffing of popcorn in the box, and it cradles it just fine. Just make sure the egg is surrounded on all sides...
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