Sign Task
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Re: Sign Task
It only sounds amazing until you're kept up til 4a.m. listening to them shower and argue... lol We went wild though when they won!austinfhs wrote:That's pretty amazing.
2009: Protein Modeling (4th) overall 7th
2010: Cell Bio (11), Write it Do it (10), overall 5th
2011: Disease (4), Microbe (10), Protein Modeling (5), Sounds of Music (2), overall 1st, nats 21
2012: Disease (4), Forestry (5), Microbe (-), Protein Modeling (6), Sounds of Music (7), TPS (7) overall 4th
2010: Cell Bio (11), Write it Do it (10), overall 5th
2011: Disease (4), Microbe (10), Protein Modeling (5), Sounds of Music (2), overall 1st, nats 21
2012: Disease (4), Forestry (5), Microbe (-), Protein Modeling (6), Sounds of Music (7), TPS (7) overall 4th
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Re: Sign Task
Congratulations to Northridge and all of those builders for coming up with the most incredible out-of-the-box design I have ever seen in Science Olympiad! Haha, when I was waiting for my sumobots time slot right after impounding, since mission was right next to sumobots, I saw this one team wheel in a cart with several huge jugs of water on it!! And at the time I was thinking "Whoa, that must be one pigeon of a cooling task!" How wrong I was...
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Re: Sign Task
By luck of the draw I didn't get to judge any of the balloon-in-water designs, but there were lots of pretty cool setups and custom balloons. It was a good, though super busy, day. Sorry if you were one of the teams that had to wait a while to be judged.
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Re: Sign Task
How does one make a custom balloon?
And @Northridge, what was the final volume of your balloon? Was it just a regular balloon or was it of special material?
And @Northridge, what was the final volume of your balloon? Was it just a regular balloon or was it of special material?
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Re: Sign Task
Literally.ichaelm wrote:Congratulations to Northridge and all of those builders for coming up with the most incredible out-of-the-box design I have ever seen in Science Olympiad!
I'm quite shocked that Northridge still won with a touch and a penalty. Guess that goes to show how good their device was.
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Re: Sign Task
Kudos to the teams who realized that the balloon was worth so many points (we had a few attempts at really large custom balloons, but they always leaked). I think that most of the teams who medaled at nationals did not run all 10 transfers. However, I can't help but think that the people who wrote the rules this year kind of failed. I don't think they intended to have Mission become a balloon construction competition (though the water rocket balloon is certainly some hard core engineering). The first day I got the rules I remember talking with DS about how concerned I was that the sign mass was valued so heavily, I don't understand how the rules committee did not catch this. Perhaps I am the only one who thinks it is wrong that a device medaled at nationals while having only the sand timer and a large balloon, but it seems to me that the rules for the event failed to correctly reward the intent of Mission Possible as an event.
When it comes to the future, there are three kinds of people: those who let it happen, those who make it happen, and those who wonder what happened.
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Re: Sign Task
We absolutely did think about this. In fact, we were expecting more people to take advantage of the balloon points. We thought that it was a subtle extra engineering challenge for teams who could easily complete the other tasks. Now, instead of just doing the tasks they would also attempt to minimize their volume so they could construct as large of a balloon as possible. However....we thought the water rocket/balloon thing wouldn't work, but as always, you students are more creative/ingenius than us. Serious kudos to any team that could figure out how to lift huge amounts of mass (either through water tanks or other techniques).Paradox21 wrote:Kudos to the teams who realized that the balloon was worth so many points (we had a few attempts at really large custom balloons, but they always leaked). I think that most of the teams who medaled at nationals did not run all 10 transfers. However, I can't help but think that the people who wrote the rules this year kind of failed. I don't think they intended to have Mission become a balloon construction competition (though the water rocket balloon is certainly some hard core engineering). The first day I got the rules I remember talking with DS about how concerned I was that the sign mass was valued so heavily, I don't understand how the rules committee did not catch this. Perhaps I am the only one who thinks it is wrong that a device medaled at nationals while having only the sand timer and a large balloon, but it seems to me that the rules for the event failed to correctly reward the intent of Mission Possible as an event.
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Re: Sign Task
I'll confirm we had EXTENSIVE discussions about this last summer and did it on purpose. We even did calculations based upon the max volume of the box and the density of helium vs. air to figure out the max weight possible. However the one place we 'failed' I guess was with regards to using momentum and just barely clearing the top of the box for a split second. I take responsibility for that since I argued that it wasn't technically possible and convinced others to not worry about it. Up until then we had been working on a version of the rules that talked about the balloon reaching a 'stable' state, but were really worried about slight bouncing and wind currents and such.chalker7 wrote:
We absolutely did think about this. In fact, we were expecting more people to take advantage of the balloon points. We thought that it was a subtle extra engineering challenge for teams who could easily complete the other tasks. Now, instead of just doing the tasks they would also attempt to minimize their volume so they could construct as large of a balloon as possible. However....we thought the water rocket/balloon thing wouldn't work, but as always, you students are more creative/ingenius than us. Serious kudos to any team that could figure out how to lift huge amounts of mass (either through water tanks or other techniques).
Regardless, it's not going to be the ending task for next year. Congrats to Northridge for pulling off an awesome last minute design. Your story truly epitomizes the essence of Science Olympiad.
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Re: Sign Task
I definitely understand that you wanted people to try to minimize the volume of their other tasks, but it appears that the balloon was so important that teams could cut out the majority of their transfers. The balloon became more important than the transfers. I would have thought that you would value the points in such a way (that is, make the sign worth fewer points per gram, perhaps 1 point per gram), so that the top scoring device would still have to fit all of the transfers in, but cram them in the smallest possible space. The winning team would be the team that could perform all the transfers perfectly, in the smallest space. Rather than making the largest balloon and omitting the transfers entirely.chalker7 wrote: We absolutely did think about this. In fact, we were expecting more people to take advantage of the balloon points. We thought that it was a subtle extra engineering challenge for teams who could easily complete the other tasks. Now, instead of just doing the tasks they would also attempt to minimize their volume so they could construct as large of a balloon as possible. However....we thought the water rocket/balloon thing wouldn't work, but as always, you students are more creative/ingenius than us. Serious kudos to any team that could figure out how to lift huge amounts of mass (either through water tanks or other techniques).
When it comes to the future, there are three kinds of people: those who let it happen, those who make it happen, and those who wonder what happened.