Miniature Water Wheel Winch

by 21022 in Craft > Cardboard

961 Views, 5 Favorites, 0 Comments

Miniature Water Wheel Winch

6A2A1532-1645-4BBA-9336-44817382E28A.jpeg
8CB978F3-97FD-47FC-9521-C129C443756E.jpeg
This project is a small demonstration of how water can be used as a tool without people needing to do anything. The water wheel will use the force of the water pushed against it to pull along an object without needing aid from any individual. To construct the project you will need the following:

Supplies

- A PVC vinyl sign board
- A protractor
- A Ruler
- A pencil/sharpie
- A pair metal shears
- A box cutter
- A hot glue gun
- A picture mounting hook
- Yarn
- Painter’s mixing stick

Tracing Out the Main Wheel

DBBCC709-B9D1-4430-BA7E-43F3C18CC467.jpeg
Place the protractor on the fluted vinyl board and trace a full 180 degrees, then flip it and trace another 180 degrees till both hemispheres of the circle connect.

Cutting Out the Wheel

E18194E5-02CD-4A69-95E2-7E7F01A3B390.jpeg
Carefully score along the line and then cut deeper into the board until the wheel is fully separated from the board.

Drawing Out the Paddles

E961D450-0627-426A-9B6C-C1652B4652D4.jpeg
Measure out 1 inch by 1 inch squares on the board.

Cutting the Paddles

A489606A-892A-4F8E-B89D-138E1314D782.jpeg
Score the marked lines and incrementally cut deeper until the paddle is freed from the rest of the board.

Cutting Out the Remainder of the Wheel Components

78A30F38-45B2-40A5-93C1-81091099602D.jpeg
Repeat the previous steps until you have 2 circles and 8 paddles in total.

Assembling the Water Wheel

EC04FF90-EA18-44A3-BCDC-ECB6A34941B4.jpeg
833E67B0-5C5F-4E9C-9E2F-FC4846283C91.jpeg
Use the hot glue gun to stick each paddle every 45 degrees on the wheel.

Making the Axle

6F08B97C-3EC1-4E1D-BCDF-E6D7180B3E20.jpeg
C65023BC-C41E-42A7-90D1-83F4BD7449DB.jpeg
Take the hook and cut off the curved portion roughly around the middle of the curve.
Next, with the pliers bend the remaining segment about 3/4 of the way from the end into a U shape.

Feeding the Axle Through the Wheel

A3963E47-FF7E-4702-866B-E56CD6AFC58F.jpeg
Puncture a hole through the middle of the wheel and continue to feed the axle until the cut edge punctures the first lay of the bored.

Building the Frame

F72C540A-1173-4033-B770-177CB45A1354.jpeg
5A694D26-311A-4F10-AB4B-1C045EF1C144.jpeg
Take the painter’s mixing stick and cut a 45 degree cut half way along it with the box cutter.

Building the Frame

737FF388-658B-4039-8389-B3456B30549B.jpeg
Hot glue the two stick together with the cut edges facing where the bottom would be. Create a support underneath the hole in which the wheel axle will pass through so that the axle does not bend.

Cut Out the Base

2202F7B7-7298-43CD-B351-89E1E61BAB5F.jpeg
Sketch a 12 inch by 6 inch rectangle on the board, then cut along it just like how the paddles and wheels were cut.

Connecting the Frame to the Base

176810B5-2482-48A8-A7EE-D8163D078B70.jpeg
Using the hot glue gun attach the legs of the frame to the base with the side the wheel will be on facing the inside.

Attaching the Yarn

E306D79C-CC81-4366-8297-837EAB4EF67D.jpeg
596BD399-E21D-48BE-9647-A3761CEBA6ED.jpeg
On the inner side part of the axle tie one end of the sting of yarn and secure with hot glue. On the other side add two dollops of hot glue so that the wound end of the string does not slip off while its winding. Then attach the wheel to the frame and tie the other end to the object you want pulled.

Watch It in Action

34574896-DB2B-4394-9941-FEAF2AED4015.jpeg
6358265E-DB12-49AA-8109-3244C5C93893.jpeg
847FBDF8-45E3-4B7B-82CD-C2115DBDFB38.jpeg
Place under a stream of water and watch it pull whatever you want.