Here's an idea that I haven't seen yet.

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This is a challenge for the creative team, but who would you use for a judge? The challenge would be to have the teams begin with a furnished frame, triangular, square, or rectangular, of square steel tubing, and have the teams build the biggest( or maybe to required big dimentions) moving, and driveable by a team member, contraption that they can get mounted and balanced on the frame in ten hours. The contest would be to get the machines to go along a track or road that gets progressively rougher (washboard style, beginning like speed bumps and getting progressively worse, ending like parking lot bumpers or telephone poles across the track ), until one machine falls over, or apart or can't go any longer. Each team would start with, say, 100 points, and points be deducted for each item falling off, and maybe award points to the team that can go longest or reach goals on the road fastest. Another twist for this one would be to limit the amount of power that they can use but unlimited would be really enjoyable to watch on TV. Points could also be awarded for the longest, widest, or tallest (or combination of the three dimentions) machine made. The "Art Attack" team could have a field day with this one, and maybe some of them could be the experts for this, as it is similar to their kinetic sculptures. It would require a special place to have the contest, and maybe a way to get the machines from the yard to the place. Another angle would be to make them build them where they will fold up or parts unbolt to legally fit on a truck for transport to the site, making the challenge even tougher. Sort of like "Transformer" toys on steroids. The driver would likely need to be inside a crash cage (furnished?) to be protected from the machine should it suddenly self destruct. Hopefully the inventive group of people that post on this board can hammer this into something that can be done. It's not like anything that I have seen suggested so far. It's all off the cuff thinking, so have fun with it.

-- Waddy Thompson (cthomp3851@aol.com), February 27, 2001

Answers

It would have to be a tracked vehicle for the progressive obstacle course- that would be a great challenge in itself! (And would require some heavy "seeding" in the yard.) Still, I think this would be Art Attack's game to lose.

-- Chip Haynes (ehaynes@co.pinellas.fl.us), March 29, 2001.

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