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Building Simple Machines: Plant Quencher

Resource for Grades 3-8

WGBH: Zoom
Building Simple Machines: Plant Quencher

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Video

Running Time: 1m 15s
Size: 3.8 MB

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Source: ZOOM


Resource Produced by:

WGBH Educational Foundation

Collection Developed by:

WGBH Educational Foundation

Collection Credits

Collection Funded by:

National Science Foundation

How difficult can it be to water a plant? Pretty difficult when your objective is to build the most complicated machine possible to complete this simple task. In this video segment from ZOOM, Jillian demonstrates the use of ramps, wheels, pulleys, and other simple machines to construct her "plant quencher."

Alternate Media Available:

Building Simple Machines: Plant Quencher (Audio Description) (Video)

open Background Essay

Generally speaking, machines are devices that make work easier or quicker, or, in some cases, possible at all. For example, an electric mixer makes the "laborious" job of mixing cake batter a lot less strenuous. Automobiles, too, make getting across town easier and quicker than walking. But machines don't have to be as complex as kitchen appliances or cars. Many other simpler devices also qualify as machines. A knife, for example, is a type of machine. So are screwdrivers, pulleys, bottle openers, baseball bats, screws, and countless other items people use without ever thinking of them as machines.

Some machines make tasks easier by providing what's called a mechanical advantage, reducing the amount of force you need to apply to achieve a particular amount of work. A crowbar, for example, makes prying a lid off of a box easier because it increases the amount of force being applied and changes the direction of the force; when you push down on the crowbar, the crowbar pushes up on the box lid with a greater force than you apply. Other machines -- a large gear on a bicycle, for example -- actually require a tremendous amount of input force to operate. In return, these machines can make a process go faster than it would without the machine.

Complex machines combine several -- sometimes many -- simple machines to carry out a single objective. In general, as with simple machines, most complex machines are designed to make tasks easier. A typical can opener, for example, employs at least four simple machines to make opening a can of soup a breeze. However, one peculiar type of complex machine strives to do the opposite.

Commonly referred to as Rube Goldberg machines, these devices make the simplest tasks unbelievably complex. In contests around the country, inventors go out of their way to solve problems, like sharpening a pencil, watering a plant, or pouring a glass of milk, in the most complicated and creative ways possible. Contestants are usually required to build at least 20 steps into their machines, but the more steps the better. Such complexity, of course, requires a lot of testing, both of the individual simple machines and of their interactions with one another.

open Discussion Questions

  • Describe two steps in this machine that rely on the force of gravity.
  • Do any of the steps in the machine involve a lever, a pulley, or an inclined plane? Describe how they work.
  • Do you think that Jillian got each step in the machine to work properly the first time she tried it? Can you imagine her design process? What do you think she had to do to get all the steps to work right?
  • Can you design a machine that will water a plant while you are sitting in a chair across the room? How many steps would your machine have? Draw a diagram of your machine.

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