You sank my Craftsman-Ship: Cardboard boats battle for pool supremacy - Action News
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New Brunswick

You sank my Craftsman-Ship: Cardboard boats battle for pool supremacy

The phrase "whatever floats your boat" took on new meaning at the University of New Brunswick on Tuesday afternoon, where engineering students achieved the near-impossible feat of floating boats made of cardboard and duct tape.

Building seaworthy crafts out of not-so-seaworthy materials

Check out the cardboard boat races at UNB

8 years ago
Duration 1:08
'Seafaring' students set sail at the University of New Brunswick this afternoon.

The phrase "whatever floats your boat" took on new meaning at the University of New Brunswick on Tuesday afternoon, where engineering students achieved the near-impossible feat of floating boats made of cardboard and duct tape.

As a test of theiringenuityand teamwork, engineeringstudents finished their semester by building seaworthy crafts out of the not-so-seaworthy materials.

"Unfortunately, ourscollapsedright before the end," said second-year engineering student TaylorQuinlan. "So we were close."

Second-year engineering student Taylor Quinlan was a part of the design crew for "The Bluenose III," which sadly did not make the finish line. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

Professors captained their students' creations across the Lady Beaverbrook pool at the university's Fredericton campus as a part of a competitive relay race.

While some vessels held up admirably, other suffered frombalancing issues, structural defects, and less-than-adequatepaddles that contributed to their demise.

Despite the boats'comicalappearances,Quinlansays there's a lot of design that goes into making them durable enough to keepseveral hundred pounds afloat, using only a paper product as construction material.

"First we tested the cardboard to see how much it could withstand. And we alsobuilt a prototype. And tested it in the flume in the engineering building."

Engineering professors Bruce Wilson and Katy Haralampides captained the boats created by their students. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

With names like "Seal Team 6"and "Bluenose III" none of the boats escaped a watery grave at the end of thecompetition, as professorsstress tested them all to their limits. But one notable entry did manage to hold four adults beforeraucousbehavioursealed its fate.

"They werestructurally for the most part okay,"said Katy Haralampides, a professor in civil engineering at UNB. "Overall they floated the whole way."

In the end, all cardboard creations met a watery fate. (Shane Fowler/CBC)

"Teamwork skills,communication skills,analyzing,buoyancycalculations, stress and bending-momentcalculations," listedHaralampidesfrom the pool. "It's also interactive and a lot of fun."