{"id":10375,"date":"2015-05-21T11:47:25","date_gmt":"2015-05-21T01:47:25","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/legoeng.local\/?p=10375"},"modified":"2016-01-06T16:27:26","modified_gmt":"2016-01-06T05:27:26","slug":"regular-old-lego-engineering-and-some-accidental-learning","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/legoeng.local\/regular-old-lego-engineering-and-some-accidental-learning\/","title":{"rendered":"Regular, old, LEGO Engineering (and some accidental learning)"},"content":{"rendered":"
<\/a>We homeschool. Unschool primarily, or hackschool, if you like. Our son, Lex, will turn thirteen this summer and has spent his life following his own interests, learning from the world around him and creating his own experiences (sometimes with facilitation and guidance from us). He has learned (as have we, on this journey) that if you are resourceful you can teach yourself an awful lot, or find a mentor or tutorial out there somewhere.<\/p>\n The Internet is a homeschooler’s best friend! So when Lex decided he wanted to take his love of LEGO building beyond the basic assembly of kits or minor modifications to existing sets, he got online, asked for help, and began to wow his friends with his redesigns of fire trucks, ambulances and basic construction trucks. But when he wanted to take that even a step further with moving parts and more complexity, he learned that what he was looking at was, in effect, Engineering. Structural and Mechanical Engineering. So off we went – in search of books, websites, workshops online and off. But what did we find? Not much. He could learn about gear ratios, yes. LEGO Education has stuff on pneumatics. But a search for Engineering always turned up Robotics. We’d shake our heads. No, that’s not it. Not Robotics — Engineering<\/em>. Regular, old, engineering.<\/p>\n So where does that leave an engaged, curious, creative, inventive LEGO-building homeschooler when he wants to do more than what’s in the box and offered as a class? When he wants to embark upon his biggest, most challenging build yet? I think it’s better if you hear it from him. He is, after all, the Master Builder (at least, he’s in-the-making).<\/p>\n Melissa<\/em><\/p>\n <\/a>I want to try building a Liebher crawler crane which is used for major construction projects and heavy lifting.\u00a0 I’ve seen them in pictures — real and LEGO — and I thought that it would be really fun, but I’ve never really been able to figure it out.<\/p>\n There are a lot of challenges because I’ve never done anything this big before.\u00a0 I will have to work out things like rigging in order for the main mast to stay up and be able to lift, so I’d need things like bars going down to the support structure on the base.\u00a0 The main section of the mast consists of a winch and pulley.\u00a0 It also needs the ability to be able to hold a luffing or fly jib which both need winches and cables to stay and to move.\u00a0\u00a0 I also have to take into consideration counterweights on the track base, and size and balance.<\/p>\n
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