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Monster Garage Video


Watch Ron Toms and a team of expert welders build a "special"
Delivery truck, with Jesse James and the Monster Garage!
The Challenge: Build a delivery van that can't be stopped!
The Rules: It must be built within 5 days, under a budget of $3000, and the finished machine must look stock.
The Plan: Equip the vehicle with a variety of catapults to hurl packages to their destinations.

In this video you will see Jesse James, motorcycle maniac and descendant of the famous outlaw of the old west, and a crew of welders and mechanics, including catapult expert Ron Toms, build a special delivery van equipped with air cannons, a ballista and a powerful trebuchet.

The show starts as Ron, Jesse and the design team come up with the plan. An air cannon will shoot newspapers, tubes and other small packages, while a ballista will shoot the medium sized packages. For the large heavy ones, a mighty trebuchet is selected for the task. But this is no ordinary trebuchet, this one is powered by a bank of huge springs!

$19.95
Our Price: $12.95
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    Price: $19.95
    Our Price: $12.95

    Minimum age: 3
    Availability: In stock.

    Buy Now or Add To Cart
    Item code: 93003

Notes:
Why should a kid
build a catapult?

Because the world needs good engineers and scientists, and because the kids who will grow up to become engineers and scientists need a way to get hands-on experience with physics, math and engineering.

In this age of 200-plus channels of TV, the Internet and computer games, kids are also spending far less time building tree houses, tinkering with engines, or designing downhill racers. We believe those are important skills to have. They help form the basis for good problem solving skills and an innate understanding of the real, physical world that you just can't get from a computer game, no matter how good its physics simulation software is.

Ballistic motion was one of the key players in the development of the science of physics. The word "engineer" even originated as the builders and designer of Siege Engines

Why is a budding engineering student expected to take a year or two of calculus in high school, but she isn't expected to have any real-world experience in building or working with machines and materials? Pencil and paper (or computer screens) are only one part of the learning experience. Where will she apply all of the stuff she learned in geometry and trig? Without physical projects to touch, feel and see, the lessons become abstract, their utility questionable.

A catapult project gives students a chance to see that science and engineering really can be fun, and it's a lot more than just numbers on paper. The real payoff for an engineer is in the field, where she can see and enjoy the results of her ingenuity. And it may seem counterintuitive, but engineering projects not only help kids learn math and science, they are also great at getting kids back outdoors, away from the massive over-exposure to video games, TV and the Internet.

Why all this interest in getting kids to study science and engineering? Because it's important to our society, and it's great mental cross training regardless of what field of work the kids eventually go into. Most people develop a sense for what they want to do in life while they are still in high school or even earlier. A catapult project is fun and interesting enough to inspire some kids to study the science behind how they work, and then go on to become the engineers and scientists of tomorrow.