An educator who makes learning interesting AND fun. Well done, sir.
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
Many thanks!
@jimhabsfan Жыл бұрын
@@PaulKassabian : You're very welcome. I wish I had teachers like you when I was in school, which was about 100 years ago. 😂
@kaboom-zf2bl Жыл бұрын
@@PaulKassabian nice reuse of the Ottawa University materials science lab final exam project ... you missed having them do a full failure analysis on the end result as well ... back when I did this at Ottawa University in 1987 the report was 1000 pages long and the bridge I built carried 573lbs of weight before a miniature knot in the wood gave way ... more was learned from that project by everyone INCLUDING the professor that he kept at it until 92 or 3 ... . Balsa and string at 5lbs total bridge weight ... pre tensioned for 500lbs ..
@dangeary2134 Жыл бұрын
@@PaulKassabian I wonder if you would entertain having anyone that has watched these, and has not had formal engineering to submit a design for one of your student teams to build? Simply put, the team should choose a bridge out of a “pot,” and make it according to the spec given. I would do this AFTER this competition, and as a bonus point to their score if they choose well.
@AbsurdOod Жыл бұрын
@@PaulKassabian hi, Sir. I would just like you to know how much I admire your giggles when the bridges are about to collapse. Proves that you're emotionally invested in your craft. To my memory, my best tutors has always been those who truthfully enjoy the subject they're teaching. I'm sure many of your students will remember you and your lessons for the rest of their lives. Hope this comment reaches you; thanks for the video!
@zorbl8463 Жыл бұрын
This would be super interesting to see students try at the first class and again at the last class to see their progress :)
@BruderSenf Жыл бұрын
that would be very fun and interesting, "pure" gut feeling at the start and then see what happens after you added the knowledge to it. love the idea
@DavidDeblaere Жыл бұрын
We had this type of excercise in programming class in college. "write a program that finds all prime numbers between 0 and let's say 100.000 as fast as possible". 3 times a year you made this excercise. Everytime you find something to improve in your code or algorythm.
@damageincorporatedmetal43v737 ай бұрын
Zach cared about production, that's when Mr. Kasperski left...
@damageincorporatedmetal43v737 ай бұрын
Maam I have to say, your Dad had it rite. Zach was wrong, now just imagine. A 1/4 of a million Dollars to replace what he' F[EXPLICIT]ed up for you. You'r name, name your family...
@JenMarco5 ай бұрын
That’s what I love! Then you know you learned something
@joeqiu88 Жыл бұрын
Dear Mr. Paul Kassabian, I had the privilege of being part of this class, which to me, has been one of the most rewarding experiences provided by GSD. I express my gratitude for your efforts in creating such an engaging and productive learning process. Thank you.
@edwardjarvis3442 Жыл бұрын
interesting, what do you do now?
@twintek1099 Жыл бұрын
congrats on being in harvard
@brianbreen2499 Жыл бұрын
Lol nerd
@jonathansturgisjs Жыл бұрын
Must kinda suck to know the most rewarding part of your experience there resulted in a quick free to view youtube video showing that you can do at home for about $100 with extremely simple explanations.
@yauya Жыл бұрын
@@jonathansturgisjs ???
@TimothyR.Heistand7 ай бұрын
I don't know what I love more... how excited the students get or how excited the teacher gets. This is how education should be done!!
@markharrisllb Жыл бұрын
KZbin amazes me how it shows me things I never knew I was interested in. A phenomenal teacher and I imagine every student is proud to have studied under you.
@MohsinExperiments Жыл бұрын
They use the data of the other users that watch similar videos for recommendations. And this is my most favorite thing on the internet.
@cognoscitivos Жыл бұрын
Same shit! Im from chile psicopedagogo ajajaj and look im here
@zzzetsulive Жыл бұрын
low learning curve tbh yes this is a project that is fun but clearly if you are of the mind of "what will fail" then you can almost make the teachers run out of weight
@isar3707 Жыл бұрын
Paul my father was a bridge engineer and worked his whole life building and maintaining structures. Your passion, enthusiasm and attention to detail reminds me very much of him. Wonderful teaching and great to see some engineering passion. Thank you.
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
That’s very kind of you to share that…thank you…
@AquarianSoulTimeTraveler5 ай бұрын
@@PaulKassabianthe one thing I like about spaghetti and glue is that it is even structural strength all the way through and you're not going to have some wood that's stronger than other wood making someone structure appear stronger than it actually is architecturally...
@sauvageaustudios Жыл бұрын
I remember doing this in high school in my architectural engineering and design class. My little balsa wood bridge held 176lbs before giving out! Great fun and an awesome learning experience!
@JustinBrockel Жыл бұрын
One of my very treasured memories in school as well. Loved the bridge design project.
@jacketnipple Жыл бұрын
I could stand on it xD
@agnidas5816 Жыл бұрын
yeah ... highschool kids did better than people at HARVARD...
@thwartificer Жыл бұрын
@@agnidas5816Kids bridge could've had a shorter span
@btsmochimi79248 ай бұрын
Classes like these are life changing. It changes your perspective about learning mechanics. I wish i had u as a teacher sir😢
@bobrikerik Жыл бұрын
The Poly Bridge 4 graphics look insane. And the replay comes with a custom commentary so you know what to improve.
@GERALD_Featureworx Жыл бұрын
I participated in one of these exercises back in college (35 years ago). Our span was to be roughly 18”. Material efficiency was the goal, so I made mine very light. The weight being used were bricks. Knowing the size the brick, my design used the first brick as a structural element. We ran out of bricks and the bridge never broke. A fun memory. Nice video. 👍🏻
@tonymai8125 Жыл бұрын
@gerald_featureworx @GERALD_Featureworx
@SoloRenegade Жыл бұрын
there is NO substitute for hands-on application and learning. Engineering colleges are failing miserably at this of late. This is a perfect example of how learning should be done. Hands-on application, with a little trial and error. Let them test their ideas, take notes, and try again. Couple this with classroom learning and you have a winning combination. So much wasted opportunity in engineering colleges to really give students a truly great education with little extra effort.
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
Thanks! It really made a difference with, as you noted, the coupling with classroom learning...it's like concrete plus reinforcement...better together!
@wolli25 Жыл бұрын
A lot of colleges participate in student steel bridge competition and concrete canoe. kzbin.info/www/bejne/mIDPpWipobuVeM0
@ceerstar851 Жыл бұрын
I love how he's just as excited as I am watching the video, yet he was already for it. That's real passion right there.
@oneperspective8601 Жыл бұрын
I am an undergrad Structural student. Your students are so lucky. I wish I could have you as a teacher
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
Very kind - thanks!
@sabrekai8706 Жыл бұрын
Now that reminds me of the college I went to between 1973-1976. It was ALL hands on. 2 years of forestry, we were in the bush just as much as in the class, learning by doing. 1 year of welding and fabricating, skills I've used my entire working life. Keep doing it this way, we need people who THINK instead of parroting the party line they are being indoctrinated with. Those young people are having a blast, putting what they learned into actual use.
@Fubeman Жыл бұрын
Just an outside admirer here. I have to say, professor Kassabian reminds me so much of my physics professor. Someone who truly cares about the subject, his students and their overall engagement with the material and makes it all fun at the same time. Well done! Even though I am a graphic designer, I am always interested in all engineering subjects. And I f I had someone like YOU back in the day, I really think I would have become an engineer just because of the way you teach. Well done sire! Well done.
@gbsbill Жыл бұрын
That was amazing to watch as a spectator, I can only imagine the problem solving and learning plus team building that took place to get to the test of all 13 bridges. Thank you for taking the time to record this and let all of us participate.
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
You're welcome!
@edgedg Жыл бұрын
This. Great student project, but tripple the value for recording and uploading, with commentary.
@firecloud77 Жыл бұрын
The problem with weights on top is that balance becomes a factor. The weight should be in a basket that is hanging from the center point of the bridge deck.
@elebeu Жыл бұрын
Yes, it's amazing that the one to carry the most weight was the only one that wasn't subjected to twisting forces. Some of the others may have done much better if a portion of the weight had been suspended below in buckets as it was on bridge 13.
@conceptinterface Жыл бұрын
The first one would have done even better if the loading had been vertical. Some bridges received loading that was much more vertical than others. Suspended weight would have been a more accurate test of relative load bearing.
@tristanmoller9498 Жыл бұрын
I thought designing with that fact in mind was part of the point.
@Tohellem Жыл бұрын
@@tristanmoller9498 , such a situation is not possible in reality.
@conorstewart2214 Жыл бұрын
@@Tohellem there are plenty of twisting forces that a bridge encounters, from having more weight on one side of the deck to wind pushing on sections above or below the deck.
@FutureEon Жыл бұрын
🎓✨ Mr. Paul Cassabian, I want to express my sincere appreciation for the incredible learning experience you provided through this class. It was truly a privilege to be a part of it. Your dedication and effort in creating an engaging and productive learning process are commendable. Thank you for enriching our knowledge and inspiring us to reach new heights. Grateful for this opportunity! 🙏🏼🌟📚
@billgrundie8478 Жыл бұрын
Paul, you are a fabulous educator! So good to see the enthusiasm and interest of the students. They are clearly getting a very special education.
@ReeveProductions Жыл бұрын
It would be amazing to start a class with a two week build like this, then finish it with another two week build to let the students demonstrate what they’ve learned.
@robsalvv5853 Жыл бұрын
We did something similar in my civil eng class 35yrs ago, with a fixed amount of balsa wood for each team to span a 400mm gap. Fascinating to see the much more elaborate designs in the video.
@anuardelcastillo2627 Жыл бұрын
Old school teaching is way way more fun and a richer learning experience than digital world. Great to see it up to date again!
@1NightInParisOfficial Жыл бұрын
This is not old school, look at all the materials being used for such project
@anuardelcastillo2627 Жыл бұрын
@@1NightInParisOfficial string or cable and wood... Whats new on that?
@HumanSagaVault Жыл бұрын
This is the kind of professor that you would want to learn from, Good job Mr K! we enjoy your videos so much, more!!
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
Thanks! 😃
@breebrat56 Жыл бұрын
Soo cool seeing how past and present bridges get planned, tested, and refined! 😊❤
@cristinatroccoliwilliams1389 Жыл бұрын
As a high school educator we have made spaghetti bridges. I have used timber before also. Spaghetti is generally used due to financial and or time constraints. The students are amazed that spaghetti can hold so much weight. It’s a great project, regardless of material, though I would want senior students, like those studying architecture to be using materials closer to those which bridges are made of. It’s interesting to discuss with students shock loading, UDL..etc. great video. Would be interesting to know what constraints you gave the students.
@JonPrevost Жыл бұрын
Harvard doesn't think much about the financial constraints. I'm in agreement that spaghetti is a good tool for younger folk. I remember a summer camp activity at the local community college that used glue and index cards to make a bridge. Lots of corrugation :)
@MegaLokopo Жыл бұрын
One sheet of paper and one foot of tape is an interesting constraint for most projects.
@dazhuoxie9157 Жыл бұрын
Why not use popsicle sticks? A wonky bridge I made couple years ago held 400lbs+ while weighing 350g or so, it was one of the most memorable and impressive things we did at school
@TheVindicitive Жыл бұрын
Sounds like a pointless thing to teach 🙄
@allangibson84946 ай бұрын
Spaghetti is a very good analog of concrete. They have almost exactly the same bulk modulus. It would be more accurate however if fine steel wire reinforcing was added…
@watchguy7986 Жыл бұрын
I love this! In highschool my absolute favorite class was drafting, all T squares and velum. We did a bridge every year and if you got to around 850 e factor you were doing pretty good. They were small and the best ones were relatively simple and light. He lets and my partner do a suspension bridge, nothing like this though. We pulled from the bottom and had a share built into the bridge that accepted the tray pulling down and put weights on the tray.
@sleepmanual37187 ай бұрын
bro, why did this come into my recommended after the Baltimore bridge collapse though... 💀💀KZbin is got a sick sense of humor tho
@almaguapa-sailboatliveaboa440 Жыл бұрын
I was IT teacher for 6yrs and had students do their own projects with a common goal. It was just amazing to see and feel the enthusiasm by everyone, except one that wasn’t really into IT.
@HermanWillems6 ай бұрын
Well their job will be: "Hello IT, have you tried turning it off and on again?" :) just kidding.
@T25de Жыл бұрын
4:38 I just caught the huge grin on my face as you’re talking about how the students are interested. This is a great looking class Well done sir!
@caballero_kev Жыл бұрын
I cant believe that I've watched all of your videos and I barely recognized that additively manufactured part that you have at the background! What a masterpiece!
@aaaduccs6667 Жыл бұрын
This is so cool! Teachers that love what they do makes everything better and fun 💗 I can’t wait to see how far these students go in the future
@cyclotronbxl Жыл бұрын
It’s not a matter of knowledge, but a matter of experiences. But if you look only at knowledge, you will find a lot of better university than Harvard, even in USA. To know who they are, just watch where the big ingeneering compagnies get their new recrutes.
@Abcdexf Жыл бұрын
So nice for them to actually be creative and do their own design. When I had this class in university we had to recreate a moving model of a bridge that actually collapsed and recreate the the conditions that led to its collapse. If your bridge didn’t collapse or collapsed the wrong way you failed the class, while the professor was asking questions about the forces involved and theories behind the collapse. Some people got some really weird bridge collapse cases that were very difficult to recreate.
@apple543457 ай бұрын
KZbin watchers suddenly clicking a lot more bridge related content than normal and the algorithm recognizes the uptick and recommends videos accordingly.
@sleepmanual37187 ай бұрын
Bro, I thought it was just me
@terrymcchesney383 Жыл бұрын
Outstanding.....your observation of the intrigue and engagement of everyone in the class, and all cheering for success....as good as it gets
@ExtinctionHazard Жыл бұрын
I’ve never watched anything remotely similar to this but I’m pretty happy it got recommend! Enjoyed watching it and I really love how enthusiastic you are about your craft and students!! You are awesome much respect!!
@thovanhuynh16979 ай бұрын
"I am Vietnamese, and I wish my country offered such education. Thank you very much; I will continue to follow and learn a lot from you! I hope you produce many more videos like this!"
@antardas48307 ай бұрын
Me getting this video in my feed after the Baltimore bridge collapse!
@ironteacup25696 ай бұрын
The discussions about it is what makes this the best
@toddsmith829 Жыл бұрын
My high school physics teacher had us do a similar project. We each got the same materials and how to build a bridge spanning 12 in. That was very educational and Unforgettable experience and made the study of Science and physics so much more interesting!
@johnsaborido Жыл бұрын
I'm from Seville but have lived in the UK for more than a decade. I thought it looked like el puente del Alamillo, but I never imagined you were going to mention it. It made my day. 😊 Who would want to learn with a professor like you!? ❤
@francisco_.sousa_ Жыл бұрын
I wouldn't fail this, I got my degree from Poly Bridge
@pengujedi45597 ай бұрын
Yeah same I think I peaked at like #36 in the world in poly bridge 2. Most of my bridges were not bridges though
@novy11986 ай бұрын
@@pengujedi4559 ye thats the main issue of poly bridge player lol, most bridges arent even bridges
@pengujedi45596 ай бұрын
@novy1198 that's why i was good at it i just yeeted the car. Didn't bother with bridges
@404-Err0r Жыл бұрын
Amazing. I remember doing this as an assignment in my design and technology class in year 12, our teacher scored us on the weight our bridges held before failure against the weight of the bridge itself to determine the best build. It was a super fun assignment and this video really brought back my memories. Thank you for sharing this. 👍
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
You're welcome!
@danmorris8714 Жыл бұрын
I remember doing something similar to this in my Highschool physics class. We had to span a 1-foot distance between two desks using only plastic straws to make the bridge. I remember making a crisscross arched bridge that held up very well, it was a fun time trying to think of a bridge that would work.
@boltonky Жыл бұрын
Two things i took away from this its interesting to see how the forces are applied to the bridge and how failures can happen more due to twisting also that the center point is the weakest on lots of the structures. Which leads me to more questions and thoughts...def love this sort of thing :)
@profiskipinternational4402 Жыл бұрын
4 decades ago i was student in engineering. Beautiful to see the young generation in times of 3D virtuality, coding, CAD, fluid dynamics and A.I. doing some handcraftsmanship in construction. The physical experience engraves much derper in the learning process than just sitting front computer screens where smart 3rd party software is going the anslysis of steess loads. Tks for sharing
@shawnfromportland Жыл бұрын
i did a 1/10th scale version of this in highschool once and it was probably the most enjoyable thing i ever did in all my school years
@jellenp6 ай бұрын
I’m tardy to the comments but wanted to point out to all the critics here, regardless of what anyone thinks was missing in the design of the experiment, specified requirements or detailed expectations, etc., the primary points to take away are these (at least some of them): absolutely beautiful learning happened, all teams had to contend with the same problem and requirements as well as the same intrinsic difficulties, all teams had considerable latitude in which to design and explore, teams of students shared their intellectual strengths gaining patience and insight in how to do so successfully and finally, everyone will be mulling over the outcome of their experiment for a very long time, entertaining such thoughts as “Wonder how we could have…” and “I bet if I’d…” and “Why didn’t we…”. This was a gorgeous experiment. Well done. ~from a fellow teacher. (P.S. The brain loves to learn when it is highly engaged.)
@1519Spring Жыл бұрын
I'm interested in a chart of how each bridge did on the three criteria: beauty, weight held, material efficiency.
@gregoryesman9442 Жыл бұрын
Should add number of pieces too. System reliability is a very important component
@acywei Жыл бұрын
These are engineers, not architects, function over form, how it should be. xP
@matthewxavier8067 Жыл бұрын
@@acyweiThat’s when I was the most annoyed when he was talking about looks, all I care about is functionality. It’s not art, it’s a structure designed to hold heavy loads while being as cheep as possible.
@professionalelectronics3158 Жыл бұрын
I would recommend AGAINST putting non-functional judging into something that's strictly an engineering discipline. Do you know why STEM isn't a buzzword anymore? They diluted it to "STEAM" by adding "Arts" to it. Then later on they killed it with "STREAM" by adding "Reading." This is also the difference between Japanese and American automotive engineering. Americans usually start with aesthetics first and the shoehorn the engineering into it, while most Japanese manufacturers over-engineer the mechanics first, and then add the aesthetics later.
@Cuuniyevo Жыл бұрын
@@matthewxavier8067 Some bridges have stood for centuries, or even millennia. Over that time, many of those bridges have become tied to the cultural identity of the city or nation they were built in. Obviously, function and safety are more important to their purpose in transportation rather than as an artpiece, but form has value too. Think of how many people will cross it, or see it from a distance during the time it is in use. Do you want them to feel it is a necessary eyesore, or should they feel appreciation, awe, respect, etc.?
@iceman79757 ай бұрын
Excellent demonstration,stimulates the mind more that studying it of a textbook.
@NonEuclideanTacoCannon Жыл бұрын
We did this in 7th grade science class, except our building material was newspaper. I absolutely dominated. The trick was rolling the newspaper from corner to corner, as tightly as possible. Some of the other designs were smart, but they rolled the paper into floppy hollow tubes instead of tight rigid sticks, and thus didn't stand a chance. I would have loved the opportunity to extend my model bridge building domination to Harvard, and indeed, around the world, but alas I am a poor.
@agnidas5816 Жыл бұрын
you are better off without harvard. Teach yourself programming.
@hariman7727 Жыл бұрын
@@agnidas5816or any of the trades.
@NeilMohammad Жыл бұрын
A professor like you sir, would really allow learning to extend to the next level. Teaching like this would really help students understand the concepts and create a fun learning environment. I know theories and all are important but truth be told, it is boring if it can't be seen applied. So, Thank you sir for your methods of teaching.
@JK-ft4kx Жыл бұрын
We did something like this in Grade 5 with glue and toothpicks. Obviously not at the same span or weights but it was one of the most memorable projects of my school years. Glad to see this video!
@chrismerklin8460 Жыл бұрын
Yes! Toothpicks and wood glue are great for this contest. It has to be a particular brand and type of toothpick for an even playing field. Span a 12” gap and of course the weight should be hanging underneath from a specific sized block of wood that is placed into/onto the bridge. Sand can be used to fill a bucket hanging underneath. I participated in this at my elementary school’s science fair in the 80’s.
@NANDOFFDataRecovery Жыл бұрын
I remember this exercise in the first year of high school science in the USA. We only had to span a 12 inch gap. But our bridges were only made from supplied matchsticks wood glue and string. Definitely one of my most enjoyed school memories. One team got caught cheating by hiding steel wire into the design. It still failed before mine which was purely the native ingredients :-) Great fun. I enjoyed reliving the memory watching this video. Thanks for sharing Paul.
@jakeMontejo3272 Жыл бұрын
4am YT recommendations after searching for beef patty reviews?
@The_Bean_Head_Men Жыл бұрын
This is what content on KZbin should be like, it's so good you can't help but subscribe because the content is incredible. I really enjoyed this, cheers.
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
Glad you enjoyed it!
@shockingguy Жыл бұрын
That was really fun to watch, now what would be a lot of fun is to get as many of the students back together at some point like 10 years out of school and into their real world and have a similar competition that would be an excellent follow on video and honestly you should really do that I just think how much fun you guys would have for that weekend Well done, as a contractor, an electrician and someone who used to maintain 20 story building I wish all engineers spent two years in the field doing some work instead of coming out of school with no practical experience, I get that there are trade-offs its risk versus cost or whatever but when guys like me have to fix stuff that people build week sometimes really want to scream at that person who put this piece of equipment in her room and there’s no way to get it out without blowing a hole and getting a crane Well Done 👏👏👏👏
@clivewilliams3661 Жыл бұрын
When I was at the School of Architecture in Leicester, UK in 1970's we had this exact same class challenge albeit without the aesthetic element. The bridges were built of drinking straws, cardboard and balsa wood with some achieving remarkable load carrying capabilities, but then to the students although not the structural engineering tutor, it was not surprising as most of the structures had rigid wire reinforcement buried and hidden within the members! It was only when one of the bridges failed under an impossible load that the reinforcement was revealed. We all learnt many lessons beyond the initial 'build a structure over a span' that taxed our ingenuity and as student Architects how we could improve the structural capability without overt and noticeable structural effort - priceless.
@rlmpproductions Жыл бұрын
This is absolutely amazing! I never even knew this was possible.
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
Glad you liked it!
@gruffsbadmojo Жыл бұрын
This is how you learn hands on try fail try again . Seems as everyone was involved and talking about outcomes. Bravo.
@gregfleming3475 Жыл бұрын
Really fun class. I would have liked to see a standardized way of applying weights -- the bridge that did the best had weights hanging from the bottom, which stabilized the structure. Most of the bridges actually failed because the center of gravity of the bridge was raised high above the base, meaning any small misalignment in weight caused the bridge to flip.
@lluhu Жыл бұрын
Exactly
@Gomez561 Жыл бұрын
Architecture grad here studying for licensing exams and your videos are so fun and educational. Thank you :)
@gaveintothedarkness Жыл бұрын
5:11 up until this moment, I thought your students were having a laugh and submitted a plank of wood.
@amelkinelliott77116 ай бұрын
Pun intended?
@theahm9290 Жыл бұрын
I just love the good vibes and the enthusiasm that I see on your face and the students faces. Unfortunately, since I live in the Middle East I didn’t experience none of that.. I did a major in Highway and Bridge engineering for for years, and haven’t seen a teacher made such an effort nor were the students engaged in the classes..The atmospheres were simply toxic. I really like what you guys have. I wish I had the chance to experience it, this is making me sad but at the same time. I’m really happy for you guys.
@rex8255 Жыл бұрын
I love contests like this! I mean, they all took the same class, and yet came up with such different ideas (speaks well of their teacher, to. Like they GOT it, didn't just copy something. That first bridge? I've NEVER seen cables under a bridge like that! NOTE: I also noticed that it didn't actually break, just twisted off it's anchors.
@KabelkowyJoe Жыл бұрын
Maybe becaus it would be difficult to build?
@honestvalley9 Жыл бұрын
Thank you Sir for bringing the competitors’ hearts very close to many who associate with the discipline and shear fun.
@cristianstoica4544 Жыл бұрын
Looks like a lot of fun! In terms of stability testing the last one cheated a lot with the buckets on the sides and with a lower center of gravity. The moment of rotation is favored by the adition of the buckets. I think this is what allowed it to fail structurally and not on stability. Some of the others might have resisted just as well.
@xonx209 Жыл бұрын
I was going to say something similar. I'm surprise the teacher didn't notice this or point it out. Not that good a teacher IMO.
@EelcoWind Жыл бұрын
I was looking for this comment. I wonder how the other would've fared with the side buckets method.
@23lkjdfjsdlfj Жыл бұрын
All of the students could have thought of the idea and used buckets, but only one group did - so kudos to their creativity. It's weird that a number of comments and responses imagined the worst case, then magically convinced themselves it was true, and then felt the need to publicly state their thoughts.
@EelcoWind Жыл бұрын
@@23lkjdfjsdlfj Speaking of weird, it is weird of you to magically convinced yourself that the people you commented on don't realize that and then felt the need to publicly state this. Of course the students thought of this, if not when loading on their bridge, then at least when they saw the other students do this. But if you're testing a scale model of a bridge, you're trying to simulate the actual thing, so not a high center of gravity for the load as occurs when stacked. The professor could've pointed this out as well, or prohibited the last team from loading with a lower COG. Given the amount of discussion this probably has been talked about, so my guess is that the students agreed this was fine and were just curious about the result. Hence these comments and the wonder of how the other bridges would've fared with a lower COG.
@Irishfan7 ай бұрын
I enjoyed this video! It reminded me of my own college experience at the Purdue University School of Engineering and Technology at Indianapolis. I was in a double degree program that awarded an Associate of Science in Civil Engineering Technology and a Bachelor of Science in Construction Technology. We took structural design classes in that program, part of which we took two classes at the same time, Strength of Materials and Materials testing. The second class acted as a lab for the first. As a semester project we were given four small pieces of lumber and were told to use them to make a beam we would test, then right a report on the test. It was expected the beams would fail when the load would push the beam past the maximum to bending moment it could handle. My group had the only beam that didn't fail due to bending, but it failed due to shear. Our beam was the only I-beam shape in the competition. One group made a beam that was larger in depth than all the rest, making it two pieces of lumber thick and tall. The other two groups made box beams. In theory, the I beam should have supported the most load before failing. The beam with the large depth supported the most load before failure, but it was pointed out that the depth would have been limited in actual practice. We were not permitted to cut the pieces of lumber, so the I-beam had on extra thick flange. Had we been able to cut that extra piece, we could have used it as stiffeners to help with that shear. That was a fun project and the most fun class I took in college.
@johnstrawb3521 Жыл бұрын
Great contest ideas and prizes, Paul. ---For these courses it's far better to require a single, detailed model at the finish. I've seen too many Construction Technology / Structures courses overwhelm students to the point where the 'prize' is merely finishing the course and surviving it. They learn almost nothing as a result.
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
Good thoughts...and I agree!
@Just1kOoL Жыл бұрын
This is absolutely amazing! This is what we need in college and high school to make things interesting for everyone. Awesome and congrats to being so awesome!
@dr-hero Жыл бұрын
I want to see him play Poly bridge.
@chris12981006 ай бұрын
I like how fun this looks and how everyone cheers and smiles when they see how it collapses and how they can learn from it
@TheLondonForever00 Жыл бұрын
I can definitely say I would have loved to have studied under paul, he's such a fun teacher. What a great class.
@kaboom-zf2bl Жыл бұрын
I did this at Ottawa U back in 87 ... the ORIGINAL first class of bridge busting ... got a nice b+ for the final report on the failure ... and had the leftover bridge for 5 years at home too ... (573lbs for a 5 lbs bridge made of Balsa and string)
@TheLondonForever00 Жыл бұрын
@@kaboom-zf2bl Wow, that's some going!
@kaboom-zf2bl Жыл бұрын
@@TheLondonForever00 yeah and I wasnt first ... gt beat by 4 others ... the best took the weight of the teacher ... plus another 35 lbs ...
@moosekeeto5 ай бұрын
This was one of the most fun things I did in college. We had to span more like 20 feet and you were supposed to be able to walk across. Mine weighed around 40 lbs and we ran out of weight at 1,500 lbs plus nine people with only about 2 or 3 inches of deflection. It could also float (not sure why you would need this) because the filler between the wood board deck and nylon suspension ropes was made of styrofoam panels. When the ropes were pretensioned, the deck bowed up so it was clear ahead of time it needed a little stiffening. It was so satisfying. I think a lot of engineering students haven't built things with a lot of basic materials, so it may not be intuitively obvious how things will behave and what will and won't work.
@fortuner123 Жыл бұрын
I'm surprised at the low standard of design of these bridges considering the level of the students. I've done this in secondary schools with 16 year old and they have come up with some impressive designs. I am particularly surprised at the cable designs that were obviously in compression. What on earth were the students thinking!
@jeffreyyoung4104 Жыл бұрын
They copied an existing design that was anchored and weighted differently. Every design in use, has a certain way of working, and if you don't utilize the design as it was intended, it may fail due to the difference.
@CnCW453 Жыл бұрын
Those cables are typically under tension, but they didn’t account for the movement of the anchor points (towers) which in real life often have cables on the other side of the tower holding it up.
@ericpowell3354 ай бұрын
Yep more focused on form over function. They think the cable-stayed bridges are aesthetically pleasing but not thinking of how the bridge actually works.
@TexasEngineer7 ай бұрын
I participated in the Alumni competition at the University of Houston model span contest. These were small balsa wood packages that you could only use what was in the package. Walter, very innovative transmission tower designer caused them to have to rewrite the rules. The new rule was: You can only use glue on the joints. Walter had sliced the wood into fine sheets and glued it back together. He created plywood with no weak ends and the dried glue was stronger than wood. Other things he did to walk away with the win: They could not prevent his best of all. He baked the model in the oven on low heat to dry the wood/glue. Everyone found out that kiln dried wood is much stronger than air dried wood. He sanded the shape to eliminate any excess weight. You have to consider shear in your wood design.
@wolli25 Жыл бұрын
The majority of the load on a bridge is due to self weight, it can be as high as 85% and more of the total load for cable-supported long-span bridges like those mimicked here. Therefore a more realistic loading would be for the majority of the load to be distributed over the full length of the bridge and a smaller concentrated load or better a distributed load applied over a portion of the bridge. With a concentrated load alone the beam still has a lot of work to do in flexure and the cables don't help as much.
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
Thanks Gregor and you're absolutely right on bridges of course. I know we titled it "model bridges" but it was essentially a beam contest and, most importantly, one where the students learned about beam/spanning behavior. They also knew all of them would be loaded until collapse and that could be done at our discretion/fun! Thanks again.
@dwee44 Жыл бұрын
I remember doing that in college and just not caring about the job, do the work, get a middle grade, graduate and that's it. Now that i'm a mechanical engineer, i really wish i paid attention to this kind of fun projects ! Congrats !
@Raph_254 Жыл бұрын
Excellent content as always Mr Paul..wish we had exposure to such practical structures classes here in kenya🇰🇪
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
I'm glad the videos are helpful!
@peterrose5373 Жыл бұрын
What's stopping you?
@jimf671 Жыл бұрын
We did something similar at Napier (Engineering, Mechanical and Production) in the 70s. We each got a sheet of balsa wood, a tube of glue and a craft knife and we had to span a small gap. Individual effort rather than teams and they were judged simply on weight bearing. My triangular hollow section came second and the winner used a truss design. That was one of the most useful engineering learning experiences ever (along with the bending of the cut and brazed 10mm square bar). I sometimes wish younger engineers did more with balsa wood and less with Ansys because it taught a certain intuition about material efficiency!
@Seven-Seas-of-Baba-O-Riley7 ай бұрын
Until it broke, I thought that second one was just a 2 by 4.
@samlawrence46706 ай бұрын
Which would have held the weight with ease.
@hgbugalou Жыл бұрын
My dad and I created a bridge from toothpicks for a school project with similar rules but a little smaller scale (about 18 inches long) when I was younger in 5th grade. We went with a glue lamenant design. We made a mold for the columns and trusses and on build day in class the strategy was to cut the tips off the toothpicks coat it in elmers glue then put it in the mold layer by layer interlocking the toothpicks in over lapping layers. We made two of these structures then made the deck just laying glue covered toothpicks across the two trusses with a special 'I' like beam in the middle between truses holding them together under the deck. At 160 lbs we ran out of weight and our bridge was the only survivor. My group won 1st on aesthetics, 1st on weight held (by over 100 lbs 😂), 2nd in cost efficiency, and first over all. We took it home to test it to failure with more weight and it made it to 230 lbs! Great memories with that.
@Omid-P26 Жыл бұрын
I would love to see more of it and would also be great to understand the different forces on the different area and how they could be improved… I definitely studied the wrong subject back at the University 😂❤
@StuartHollingsead Жыл бұрын
my class did this freshman year. But the span was 18 inches. The supplies were 100 straws, and 10 feet of kite string. Challenge was a fork. Option one, how many bricks can you support given the materials. Option 2, how little materials can you use to support 1 brick. My team won option one. We ran out of bricks and started using textbooks on top. 16 bricks plus 3 textbooks and it toppled. The key was prestressing the bridge into an arched form. We also put smaller straws inside larger straws and used a hot paperclip to punch holes through welding them together every half inch or so. But the best part by far was the team that held up a brick across 18 inches with 6 straws and no kite string. They formed 2 triangles that pinched the brick as its weight settled down. Thus its own weight held it in place. Absolutely genius IMHO.
@catherinemarsh5453 Жыл бұрын
I am not a student or into building but I really enjoyed this video. Stumbled across it by accident.
@slawimenet Жыл бұрын
Son... This idea is a splendid one... These young designers, architects and engineers get to see what outcome may be in a real world... IF and WHEN they do this job right or wrong... Either way?... Experience of this sort is irreplaceable and it will help them in real world... Great job!... Good luck to all of them... and Thank you for teachings.
@tonywolfe9513 Жыл бұрын
I like how the professor giggled like a child when the last one cracked and failed. What a wonder to maintain one 's curiosity.
@juliob1080 Жыл бұрын
The model bridge testing project is what made me want to get into the engineering field. I would have loved your class.
@CorporateZombi Жыл бұрын
I was frightened for their toes! Speaking as someone who managed to drop a weight on their foot and smash a toe! Do you recall which bridges won the popular vote and efficiency prizes?
@PaulKassabian Жыл бұрын
Yup...we had lots of checks at start and throughout to look after toes! I think it was Bridge #4 that won "best looking" and Bridge #13 (the last one) won the other two awards which was lovely to see!
@JustinBrockel Жыл бұрын
Interesting! Judging from video alone, I would not have guessed that bridge number four would have been the winner for best looking. As it was beautiful, I thought others would have taken this award.
@TrainTruck Жыл бұрын
I remember doing this back in middle school workshop class, we did use mostly pencil size long wood to build the bridges. But instead of sand weight test we use a compactor pressure test where we put them in a wheel turning compactor to see how long they can take before breaking. Also if I remember, there was some before that if you're bridge was best there was, your bridge drawing would be saved for future ones to use.
@ferozahmet195 Жыл бұрын
They should make an engineer verse architect competition! As a bridge engineer this was great fun to watch.
@vollschwamm7447 Жыл бұрын
He seems like the kind of teacher to literally be the one you have the best memory of.
@djaydeved Жыл бұрын
i dont plan to be an engineer, but this, this is what education SHOULD be. well done. absoloutly amazing.
@brunospfc8511 Жыл бұрын
Why is Matt Walsh in the attendence ?
@indigenoussober4076 ай бұрын
It’s his dorky brother, Michael 😂
@Jthk48556 ай бұрын
Yea
@mrfatrata70386 ай бұрын
What timestamp
@mrfatrata70386 ай бұрын
Wait no I meant which person
@1NightInParisOfficial Жыл бұрын
This is how teachers should be. Allowing the students to express their curosity in the field, outside of writing notes.
@yongyea4147 Жыл бұрын
My toothpick bridge broke at 486 pounds. It still holds the school record to this day.
@Azsunes Жыл бұрын
Remember making bridges back in grade 7, we used Popsicle sticks, same glue and had a weight limit. Was a lot of fun and made me think back to it. My bridge failed around 120 lbs which was on the higher end of the class. He rented a hydraulic press that displayed how many lbs were being pushed on the metal rods that were used to apply weight. We did it after a month spent on learning how bridges work.
@billj5645 Жыл бұрын
Your tests looked like a lot of fun, we did similar tests in my college days using a testing machine and balsa wood pieces. Each entrant got a kit with the same pieces of balsa and the same glue and had to build a model out of only those materials to fit a certain testing and loading arrangement. I'm sorry but the bridges at 7:40 and 9:29 should have been immediate fails. The students were recreating something that they had seen done without understanding how it worked and how to make their models work the same way. The towers were not participating in carrying loads, they were just additional mass and complication for no reason. This doesn't help to enhance MIT's reputation. I saw a similar thing done in a Mythbusters episode where they modeled a suspension bridge without understanding how a suspension bridge worked and how the cables needed to be anchored at the ends. I think your loading unfairly penalized some of the designs in that you had the center of gravity of load quite a bit higher than the "roadway" so this tested the torsional stiffness as much as anything.
@trashy1541 Жыл бұрын
Thanks, I was looking for someone pointing this out. The Towers can just pivot freely with no anchoring. I wonder why even the Prof. thinks it‘s a sound idea.
@crationis Жыл бұрын
I hope he doesn't really believe what he says when he talks about the rigidity of the anchor for the 7:40 bridge
@Krupster_architect Жыл бұрын
As an architecture student at the University of Cincinnati in 1970, we did virtually the same experiment but with a restriction of max 1/2 sq inch cross section of any element in the structure. Then we were required to walk across the bridge! Mine worked quite well. Point being, this isn't unique to Harvard! It was our final freshman project! What Fun for sure 😃
@Survivalguy7 ай бұрын
I wish I had you as a teacher. We would have gotten along well. I only have a 9th grade education but don't let that fool you. I succeeded in life regardless thanks to being a really fast learner. I retired and I am 46. I was a stair builder mostly. I built anything. I would have love to try my 9th grade brain against those Harvard kids. I have always just understood how things work. Keep up the good work sir.
@2testtest2 Жыл бұрын
We did a project similar to this in Uni. Material we were handed out were ~5x5mm "beams" of wood, and short stands of ~0.5mm steel wire to bind it all together. Something I think would make this a much more valuable learning experience is if the students were told to design it and calculate the strength and mode of faliure before building and testing. Then there would be the fourth price for whoever came closest to their prediction (probably the group that by chace guessed the correct safetyfactor 😂).