15.9: Bridge Report
- Page ID
- 132258
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The Bridge Challenge report uses scientific report format, which differs from the technical memo:
| Section | Technical memo | Scientific report |
|---|---|---|
| Opening | Purpose | Abstract |
| Context | Background | Introduction |
| How it was done | Methodology | Materials and Methods |
| What happened | Results | Results |
| What it means | Analysis | Discussion |
| What to do | Conclusion & Recommendation | Conclusion |
The scientific report is appropriate here because you are reporting what you did and observed. The Bridge Challenge is an experiment: you predicted behavior, built a structure, applied load, and observed what happened.
What to include in each section: Title page (team, date, section). Abstract (challenge, design approach, load achieved, outcome — 3–5 sentences). Introduction (why this design, what you expected, the mass budget and decision matrix from §§15.5–15.7). Materials and Methods (straw count, tape used, construction approach, diagram or photo). Results (actual failure load in lbs and N, final bridge mass, efficiency ratio). Discussion/Conclusion (which members stretched, which compressed, where failure occurred, what you would change, whether more straws would help and where).
If your bridge fails at 8 lbs — below the 10 lb minimum — report 8 lbs. Not a rounded-up approximation. Not an ambiguous description of the failure mode.
The record of 24.25 lbs exists because everyone reports actual results. More broadly: engineering credibility depends on accurate failure reporting. The Mars Climate Orbiter, the Challenger O-ring data, the Citicorp analysis — each case produced an engineering lesson because someone reported what actually happened. Accurate failure reporting is how the engineering profession learns, and it is how your design skills improve.

