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In lugnet.loc.uk, George Haberberger writes:
> Reading your letter, I think you should send it, my remarks are better
> suited for an undergraduate class, or perhaps a high level high school class.
>
> I don't have any Civil Engineering background (other than that which would
> have been common to my degree) but I'm still not totally sold on bricks for
> modeling construction. Techniq would work very well for kids for modelling
> mechanics, and the gears should work very well, too.
I have now sent the letter. I didn't change it that much and it's still
very long but I wanted to get it out there before I got cold feet about
sending it at all!
The text was:
"Dear Sir
I would like to take the opportunity to respond to Christopher Wards letter
(NCE 28 June) and his comments regarding the relative merits of Meccano and
Lego. I can only assume that Mr Ward is unaware of the elements available
in Legos Technic and Dacta product lines, particularly the Technic beam and
connector pin or axle system which enables large trusses to be built very
quickly. A full reference guide to the elements available in Technic can be
found at Jim Hughes excellent website Technica
http://w3.one.net/~hughesj/technica/technica.html
I am a member of the online Lego community Lugnet (www.lugnet.com). Mr
Wards letter has led to some interesting discussions among the worlds Lego
enthusiasts (which you can read starting here:
http://news.lugnet.com/loc/uk/?n=6806 ) and we would like to offer some
examples of the functionality of Lego.
I am unsure whether Mr Ward was advocating Meccano as a structural or a
mechanical engineering modelling tool so Ill address the Civils issues
first. I was taught that there are four main materials used in
construction: Timber, Concrete, Masonry and Steel. Clearly neither system
would be good for modelling timber construction, concrete is similarly
beyond either. Lego is far better at masonry because its basic elements are
bricks and I would strongly contend that there is little to choose between
the two as far as modelling steel construction is concerned. Pictures of
Lego structures which demonstrate this can be found at
www.lugnet.com/~469/projects/archbr (Ross Crawfords arch bridge) and
http://tanyatj.home.texas.net/tjscreations/creations/bridge_straight/
(Thomas Averys bridges).
As far as mechanical engineering is concerned Meccano may have had an
advantage prior to the late 1970s but these days Lego has a much wider range
of gears and other mechanical elements than Meccano, including
differentials, shock absorbers, pneumatic pumps and cylinders, gearboxes,
cams and flexible drive shafts. Examples of models which show good use of
mechanical principles are Jennifer Clarks trucks and construction machinery
(www.telepresence.strath.ac.uk/jen/lego/) and Dennis Bosmans mobile cranes:
(www.geocities.com/MotorCity/Highway/2290/bmnr04.html).
Lego also has an educational theme called Dacta, which is only available to
educational establishments (though if anyone is interested it can be bought
at Legoland or by mail order from www.pitsco-legodacta.com). Dacta includes
solar cells, capacitors and other electronic and mechanical parts along with
teaching guides and other support to use Lego in the classroom. I do not
believe anything so comprehensive has ever been provided by Meccano.
In an educational environment Lego has distinct advantages, firstly and most
importantly it is quick to put together and take apart and secondly it is
easier for a child to pick up the idioms necessary for successful
construction. (Professor Fred Martin of MIT has written a useful guide which
explains these: ftp://cherupakha.media.mit.edu/pub/people/fredm/artoflego.pdf).
For these reasons I feel that Lego is a better educational tool than Meccano.
To summarise I am a Civil Engineer in large measure thanks to Lego and I
cannot allow such a slight to the Toy of the 20th Century to go unchallenged.
Simon Bennett (G)"
I hope that it reflects most people's comments and you are all happy with it.
Psi
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In lugnet.loc.uk, Simon Bennett writes:
<snip>
> I have now sent the letter. I didn't change it that much and it's still
> very long but I wanted to get it out there before I got cold feet about
> sending it at all!
<snip>
You rock. Very nicely done. I think I speak for a number of people when I
say "thanks for doing this, well done!"
++Lar
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In lugnet.loc.uk, Simon Bennett writes:
> In lugnet.loc.uk, George Haberberger writes:
> > Reading your letter, I think you should send it, my remarks are better
> > suited for an undergraduate class, or perhaps a high level high school class.
> >
> > I don't have any Civil Engineering background (other than that which would
> > have been common to my degree) but I'm still not totally sold on bricks for
> > modeling construction. Techniq would work very well for kids for modelling
> > mechanics, and the gears should work very well, too.
>
> I have now sent the letter. I didn't change it that much and it's still
> very long but I wanted to get it out there before I got cold feet about
> sending it at all!
>
> The text was:
[text snipped]
> I hope that it reflects most people's comments and you are all happy with it.
Well, I didn't comment yet in this thread, because I'm not an engineer or a
teacher (though I did start in engineering at uni), and I hadn't really thought
much about it. I did have one small Meccano set when I was a kid, but it didn't
take me long to lose all those darn nuts & bolts, so I never really did
anything with it.
But having read your letter, I think it does a pretty good comparison. I
wonder, though how "juniorisation" is going to affect that comparison, and what
(if anything) Meccano is planning in the way of new directions? Best keep on
your toes, TLC!!!
(Oh, and it's pretty cool to get a mention in such an auspicious letter,
thanks!)
ROSCO
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In lugnet.loc.uk, Larry Pieniazek writes:
> You rock. Very nicely done. I think I speak for a number of people when I
> say "thanks for doing this, well done!"
>
> ++Lar
Cheers Larry, I've got a nice warm Lugnetty 'included' feeling now! All we
have to do now is just sit back and watch New Civil Engineer not publish it!
Psi
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In lugnet.loc.uk, Ross Crawford writes:
> Well, I didn't comment yet in this thread, because I'm not an engineer or a
> teacher (though I did start in engineering at uni), and I hadn't really thought
> much about it. I did have one small Meccano set when I was a kid, but it didn't
> take me long to lose all those darn nuts & bolts, so I never really did
> anything with it.
>
> But having read your letter, I think it does a pretty good comparison. I
> wonder, though how "juniorisation" is going to affect that comparison, and what
> (if anything) Meccano is planning in the way of new directions? Best keep on
> your toes, TLC!!!
>
> (Oh, and it's pretty cool to get a mention in such an auspicious letter,
> thanks!)
>
> ROSCO
Crikey ROSCO, all I did was write a letter, you built the bridge!
Psi
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In lugnet.loc.uk, Simon Bennett writes:
> I have now sent the letter. I didn't change it that much and it's still
> very long but I wanted to get it out there before I got cold feet about
> sending it at all!
That's great, Simon! I hope all of our comments and input were constructive
enough. Your final revision of the letter was not too long, hit some very
important points, and certainly made a good argument that Lego is a better
"building system".
It's now up to the reader to take advantage of the information presented in
the letter and really learn what Lego is about.
Let us know what happens and if you get any response.
thanks,
T. J.
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Steve wrote:
> My kid was raised on Lego *and* Meccano *and* Lincoln Logs *and* Knex
> *and* Construx *and* Girder-and-Panel *and* balsa-wood+glue *and*
> Anatomics
> (you build dinosaur skeletons from a bunch of 'bones' that snap together
> using ball-and-socket joints) *and* Wizzard Wandz *and* <some
> German system
> that lets you build full-sized climbing frames from two foot long sections
> of plastic pipework - and comes with a 1/10th scale version of
> all the parts
> so you can plan your work on a more reasonable scale!>.
>
> There have been *many* others.
>
> At age 10, he is just starting in on
> pressure-treated-lumber-and-coach-bolts,
> Linux, C++ programming and my wife's 1972 VW bug!
Ummm, can you adopt older (39 yrs) kids like myself? :-)
Cheers, Ralph
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"Ross Crawford" <rcrawford@csi.com> skrev i meddelandet
news:GG1utI.nE@lugnet.com...
> [...]
> I wonder, though how "juniorisation" is going to affect that comparison, and what
> (if anything) Meccano is planning in the way of new directions?
Meccano is also juniorizing, and putting out more "models" and less basic
sets.
--
Anders Isaksson, Sweden
BlockCAD: http://user.tninet.se/~hbh828t/proglego.htm
Gallery: http://user.tninet.se/~hbh828t/gallery/index.htm
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Subject:
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Re: New Civil Engineer letter
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Newsgroups:
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lugnet.robotics
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Date:
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Sat, 7 Jul 2001 03:44:07 GMT
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Original-From:
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Steve Baker <sjbaker1@airmail.net&IHateSpam&>
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Reply-To:
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sjbaker1@airmail&nomorespam&.net
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Viewed:
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1473 times
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Larry Pieniazek wrote:
>
> In lugnet.loc.uk, Simon Bennett writes:
>
> <snip>
>
> > I have now sent the letter. I didn't change it that much and it's still
> > very long but I wanted to get it out there before I got cold feet about
> > sending it at all!
>
> <snip>
>
> You rock. Very nicely done. I think I speak for a number of people when I
> say "thanks for doing this, well done!"
Yes - nicely said.
One difference that *is* significant from an educational standpoint (IMHO)
is the use of tools. Meccano really does require you to use a screwdriver
and spanner (aka wrench)...where Lego doesn't really require tools at all
(except maybe the brick separator). You might regard that as an advantage
*or* a disadvantage from an educational standpoint...I'm not sure which!
However, the way Lego eases a child gently through the 'stacking blocks'
phase through Duplo, Lego *bricks*, Technics and ultimately, Mindstorms is
unrivalled. There is no other system that can span from 1yr old to 99yrs+
with a single set of compatible components.
My kid was raised on Lego *and* Meccano *and* Lincoln Logs *and* Knex
*and* Construx *and* Girder-and-Panel *and* balsa-wood+glue *and* Anatomics
(you build dinosaur skeletons from a bunch of 'bones' that snap together
using ball-and-socket joints) *and* Wizzard Wandz *and* <some German system
that lets you build full-sized climbing frames from two foot long sections
of plastic pipework - and comes with a 1/10th scale version of all the parts
so you can plan your work on a more reasonable scale!>.
There have been *many* others.
At age 10, he is just starting in on pressure-treated-lumber-and-coach-bolts,
Linux, C++ programming and my wife's 1972 VW bug!
Lego is undoubtedly the most enduring and most flexible of those systems
- but they all have their place and to pick a *single* building system
for your kids would be to miss out on a wide range of experiences.
----------------------------- Steve Baker -------------------------------
HomeMail : <sjbaker1@airmail.net> WorkMail: <sjbaker@link.com>
HomePage : http://web2.airmail.net/sjbaker1
Projects : http://plib.sf.net http://tuxaqfh.sf.net http://tuxkart.sf.net
http://agtoys.sf.net http://prettypoly.sf.net
http://freeglut.sf.net http://toobular.sf.net
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