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19 votes
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Students invent quieter leaf blower
41 votes -
Turtle tanks, "cope cages" and modified vehicles in Ukraine - Purpose, evolution and effectiveness
20 votes -
How bridge engineers design against ship collisions
4 votes -
The most powerful fire truck ever created
2 votes -
Calendar types in watches
13 votes -
Lotus' Evija X laps the Nürburgring Nordschleife in under seven minutes
15 votes -
May the best AI win - Abu Dhabi Autonomous Racing League
7 votes -
Connecting solar to the grid is harder than you think
13 votes -
Norwegian bridge collapsed ten years after it was built – all because designers focused too much on making it look good
35 votes -
Windows keep falling off skyscrapers. Why?
9 votes -
How do fish ladders work?
15 votes -
Ferrari patents inverted I6 hydrogen engine with electric turbocharging
14 votes -
The insane engineering of the Nintendo Game Boy
16 votes -
SubTropolis – The "world's largest underground business complex," a 55,000,000-square-foot city underneath Missouri
13 votes -
Classic classroom toy 'dippy bird' inspires scientists to build electricity generator
9 votes -
How the Lockheed SR-71 Blackbird works
21 votes -
Not so fast, Mr. Fourier!
6 votes -
US nuclear missile program set the launch code to "00000000" during the cold war
37 votes -
Sampling: What Nyquist didn’t say, and what to do about it
10 votes -
Weird Wings: The M-21, an A-12 (SR-71 Blackbird predecessor) modified to launch a drone for recon missions over China in the 60s
10 votes -
Airfoil
18 votes -
Weird Wings: The Boeing YC-14 and the McDonnell Douglas YC-15
15 votes -
How a Kalman filter works, in pictures
17 votes -
Balancing cube
12 votes -
The blue LED was supposed to be impossible—until a young engineer proposed a moonshot idea
26 votes -
Denmark's Henrik Stiesdal and Andrew Garrad from the UK share engineering's QEPrize for contributions to the development of wind power
5 votes -
What it takes to manufacture 3D printers in Europe
13 votes -
How a huge rainfall simulator helps Japan study and prevent landslides
8 votes -
Inside the mechanical Bendix Air Data Computer, part 3: pressure transducers
4 votes -
Spot at AB InBev Belgium
6 votes -
Pop-up tents work in a really clever way
7 votes -
Engineering question about rust free steel construction
What do companies do to make their products corrosion resistant?
16 votes -
The economic secret hidden in a tiny, discontinued pasta
46 votes -
The world’s largest earthquake simulator, and how it works
6 votes -
A matter of millimeters: the story of Qantas flight 32
35 votes -
GM’s hydrogen ‘power cubes’ will be used in cement mixers and terminal tractors
15 votes -
Why railroad tracks don't need expansion joints
13 votes -
Does anyone have recommendations for physics simulation software? (E.g. Algodoo, Simulo, Physion, etc.)
I just got into watching physics simulation videos on youtube, stuff like marble races, marble battles, Multiply Or Release, and various other simulation content. Absolutely enthralling stuff for...
I just got into watching physics simulation videos on youtube, stuff like marble races, marble battles, Multiply Or Release, and various other simulation content. Absolutely enthralling stuff for someone like me who enjoys simply watching an environment do its thing.
I wanted to get into making my own sims/scenarios and was wondering if you all on tildes had some recommendations. I've been trying algodoo and it seems very nice but I've heard its mostly abandonware and theres some features I find lacking. So I wanted to look into options for my little tinkering. I understand that there may not be a perfect one but I'd love to have some options to try and tinker in, and my research has led me to lots of them that seem at first look to be purely for academic purposes.
To crystallize my desires into a definite paragraph:
I'm looking for physics sim software recommendations to make my own marble races and other simulated 'games'. I don't mind having to learn it from scratch(including scripting language). I dont care if its paid or free. Ease of use is great but Non-essential since it can likely be learned over time. Preferrably not abandonware, or at least feature-rich if development has been completed. and lastly, performance is definitely important since I'll likely be building some grand designs as I settle in.15 votes -
World’s biggest experimental nuclear fusion reactor launched in Japan
21 votes -
The engineering challenges of Grand Paris Express, Europe’s largest transport infrastructure project
16 votes -
Sewing machines are mechanical marvels – here’s how they work
43 votes -
Welding and the automation frontier
6 votes -
Engineering the largest nuclear fusion reactor
7 votes -
How the gas turbine conquered the electric power industry
8 votes -
This transparent engine is fascinating (How internal combustion engines work)
19 votes -
The ritual of the calling of an engineer
30 votes -
Inside the world’s most famous LED factory - Worldsemi Co. Limited, in Dongguan, China
9 votes -
A cast saw can't cut through skin. Find out why in slow motion.
15 votes -
The insane engineering of the F-16
11 votes