Mousetraps, plastic cups, duck tape, marbles, wheels, books and dominos. These were the objects Fresno State̢۪s mechanical engineering 143 class used to build their own Rube Goldberg machines Thursday evening.
A Rube Goldberg machine is an over engineered apparatus that is built to perform a simple task in a very eccentric fashion.
Some simple task examples would be to fold a napkin, screw a lid on ajar or turn on a radio without human intervention.
The students let their marbles go – literally. Many of the students used marbles to push other objects in the apparatus so that it would succeed in its task.
Professor Raul Rai, Ph.D., a first year engineering professor, told his students that their machine must perform its task in 20 steps.
“The students had to draw from different mechanisms I have taught in class,â€Â he said. “It was pretty exciting.â€Â
Each machine had to complete a full cycle in no more than nine minutes, which includes, a first run to complete the task, a complete reset and a second run. Students scrambled after their first runs.
“It looks simple, but it’s a lot of hard work,â€Â Shawn Osier, a junior, said.
For a month Osier and his group worked on their machine.
“We kept it simple and it paid off in the end, “ he said.
Mauro Berdjo, a junior, and his group took four days to just build their apparatus.
“For our machine a switch forces a ball through these various contraptions, which forces water to be poured in this cup,â€Â he said.
Rai explained that this project was important for them to gain hands-on experience.
“I can tell my students really put a lot of work into it,â€Â he said.