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 Off-Topic / Geek / 3488
  Re: Physics/Materials geek question
 
(...) Concrete 2.4-ish and so are most non-ore rocks sandstone etc (Gieck 7th ed) (...) That was an offhand worst deformation with minimum attachments guess. You may need only 5 as 80% of the V will be lost by then anyway. (...) You got it, that (...) (23 years ago, 5-Jan-02, to lugnet.off-topic.geek)
 
  Re: Physics/Materials geek question
 
I've figured out a better way - if the data entry guy stays *in* a truck all day, he has less to worry about.... ties up that truck though. I'm still going to build a catapult though. Going to test it on household materials first... I imagine I can (...) (23 years ago, 6-Jan-02, to lugnet.off-topic.geek)
 
  Re: Physics/Materials geek question
 
(...) A gravity-powered catapult is called a trebuchet. This site is a good place to start: (URL) are lots of links to other sites with plans, etc. I made a small one last summer, with a beam ~50cm long. It can fling a ~10g rock over 50m. Much fun! (...) (23 years ago, 7-Jan-02, to lugnet.off-topic.geek)
 
  Re: Physics/Materials geek question
 
(...) <snip my new summer project ;) > Trebuchet is also my favorite MS font. I just got done designing a flyer for a conference using this for the logo. Now I know where the name comes from. thanks! -chris (23 years ago, 8-Jan-02, to lugnet.off-topic.geek)
 
  Re: Physics/Materials geek question
 
K.K. Quah has designed a Lego trebuchet. (URL) (23 years ago, 9-Jan-02, to lugnet.off-topic.geek)

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