My boat held 100 washers and in round two 288 pennies
My tin foil boat was pretty easy to make. It held 100 washers and 288 pennies, I decided to make it nice and big so there is enough room for the pennies to spread out so it could hold more.
Dinghy boats
Deck Boats
Bowrider boats
Catamaran boats
cuddy cabins
centre console
houseboats
trawler boats
cabin cruiser boats
drift boat
sailboat
bass boat
pontoon
sloop
yacht
canoe
schooner
narrow boat
kayak
raft
walkaround
runabout
skiff
steamboat
skip jack
Using Tinkercad Isabella, Abbie, Izzy, Riley and I all made a pretty simple 3D boat. We wanted it to be pretty simple instead of having too much on it. Instead of having it be really heavy and overwhelming.
During this process, I learned that the larger and more space the boat has the more it can hold and the harder it would sink. When there is more space then you can spread things out and not have the more weight. The boats are usually better when they have more space.
The standard my project tends to is Computational thinker. You have to think about the possible outcomes to what and how you make your boat. You also have to think about how your making your boat and what will help it not sink and stay up.
A challenge I overcame on this project was making the boat fit the dimensions that were given. I was able to do this by just fixing the boat and making it look how it was supposed to. We also got someone to check it.
Given a chance to do this again, I would change how we made our boat and how it looks. The reason why would be because I would like our boat to look more like a boat then just a square. It might just work better.
This project connects to carriers in 3D printing or design. You could design boats or buildings with these skills. You could also use these skills in 3D printing parts used for machines or medical stuff.
Our boat held 264 pennies