dorkpunch
New Member
- Joined
- Feb 26, 2015
- Messages
- 1
- Reaction score
- 1
Yup. I know. Doesn't get more out of the loop than living outside of a podunk little town in South East Idaho, but we love it here and plan on sticking around.
Brief introduction before I start posting some of the engines I've built and asking questions about a couple more I'm playing with ideas for.
Currently I have the best job in the world- I teach grades 7 & 8 "elective" classes, including Tech and Design, Metals, and Small Engine repair. We get to play with rockets, planes, catapults, 3D printers, cars, boats, submarines, plants, science-y stuff, sheet metal, welders, and of course all kinds of small engines!
In one of the classes I teach, I have my students build a VERY simple but heavy duty wobbler engine that runs on compressed air. The cool part about it- its built with a drill press and a welder. No machining required!
I've been playing with engines since I was knee-high to a grasshopper and still love to. The older the better- its always fun to crank up an 80 yr old hit and miss engine for my students and explain to them how such a simple device changed the course of history and industrialized the world.
Anyways, can't wait to dig into all of the incredible builds here and share a few of my own!
Brief introduction before I start posting some of the engines I've built and asking questions about a couple more I'm playing with ideas for.
Currently I have the best job in the world- I teach grades 7 & 8 "elective" classes, including Tech and Design, Metals, and Small Engine repair. We get to play with rockets, planes, catapults, 3D printers, cars, boats, submarines, plants, science-y stuff, sheet metal, welders, and of course all kinds of small engines!
In one of the classes I teach, I have my students build a VERY simple but heavy duty wobbler engine that runs on compressed air. The cool part about it- its built with a drill press and a welder. No machining required!
I've been playing with engines since I was knee-high to a grasshopper and still love to. The older the better- its always fun to crank up an 80 yr old hit and miss engine for my students and explain to them how such a simple device changed the course of history and industrialized the world.
Anyways, can't wait to dig into all of the incredible builds here and share a few of my own!