Engineer & FreyaVale
Engineer Engineer
So you’re thinking about building a bridge out of scraps? I’ve been drafting a collapsible frame that’s lighter than a car wheel and can support a falling rock. Want to see the design?
FreyaVale FreyaVale
Sure, throw the plans at me, but I’m more into grabbing a log and a rope than a whole blueprint. Show me the junk you’ve got.
Engineer Engineer
Here’s what I’ve got: a set of three 3‑inch diameter steel rods, each 12 inches long, with one end threaded for a bolt and the other end left plain. I’ll also need a 2‑inch wide rubber strap to act as a tension cable, and a 4‑inch square wooden beam, 18 inches long. Screw the rods into the beam at 6‑inch intervals to form a truss frame; use the strap to tie the top of the truss to the middle of the beam, tightening with a wooden clamp. The log can serve as a simple support base; place it under the middle of the beam. Tie the rope to the ends of the beam and secure it to the ground or another log. That’s the basic load‑distribution plan: the steel truss handles tension, the rubber strap provides adjustability, and the log gives the bridge a stable foundation. Build it, test the tension, and tweak the angle until the load stays steady.