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Attached is the right information and analysis on Pinewood Derby cars. You may post it with attribution. by Clifford W. Lazar My first car design came in second. Then I learned the shape of the race track. My second car design finished first. The competing fathers were aerospace engineers and mathematicians. My opponents' cars were tested in TRW's wind tunnels.
The cars are held in place, before the start, by a two-tanged vertical fork that is pivoted forward and away from the front of the cars, until the fork tangs are below the respective medians. The tangs move through two slots in the respective medians.
Air Drag Is a Minor Factor
Major Factors: Rolling Resistance and Angular Momentum
Axles
Angular Momentum I placed the fish weights evenly in two pairs of holes drilled in the front and back of the car. This created a barbell effect, maximizing the angular momentum. My car wanted to go straight.
Winning the Race Before It Started My car was shaped like a landing barge--a funny sight to see a landing barge beating the Formula One racers. The landing barge shape meant that when the tang of the starting fork had moved 10 degrees my car was already moving and ahead of the low-slung car, next to it. At 45 degrees my car was already three-quarters of an inch ahead of the opponent. Some of the heats were only won by three-quarters of an inch. The other guy must have done a good job with his wheels and angular momentum. Still, he lost because the beast will beat the beauty...if the physics is right. Copyright © 1997, by Clifford W.Lazar [ How it Started | Next Follow Up ] |
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