This is a mousetrap car. They’re common for competitions in high school physics classes Just like the egg drop challenge or building toothpick bridges. The goal is to build a car that travels the furthest or goes the Fastest, but in either case the only power provided to move the car is from a single mousetrap. So today I’m going to show you how to win first place by building some cars with the World-record holder.
Then we’re gonna go to the West Coast Championships to see all these principles in action, and wait don’t leave! I know that 99.7% of you have never, nor will ever make one of these, but I will break down in simple terms how I know this car will go twice as far as this one, and then I’ll prove it. And then we’ll discuss why you see these DVD wheels so often, but do they work? And why do some winning cars have wheels that look like this? But before we fly all the way out the Texas to meet the world record holder, I need to lay the foundation for the one overarching fundamental physics principle behind the mousetrap car.
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