The ‘Chain Reaction’ is a hands-on activity inspired by Rube Goldberg’s cartoons. Rube Goldberg was an American inventor best known for his cartoon inventions which illustrated how you can complete an extremely simple task by using a chain reaction. He never actually built the inventions he drew…but he inspired people all over the world to follow in his footsteps by building the most amazing yet excessively complicated chain reactions!
Rube Goldberg Cartoon. Image from: https://www.rubegoldberg.com/the-man-behind-the-machine/
Nowadays kids and adults all over the world are making their own Rube Goldberg inspired chain reactions! Science teachers use chain reaction activities to teach energy concepts, companies use it as a teambuilding activity, and bands such as OK-Go spend months (yes…months!) designing and building chain reactions in warehouses for their music videos!
OK Go – This Too Shall Pass – Rube Goldberg Machine – Official Video
To build your chain reaction, you can use any materials that you can find lying around your home. All chain reactions usually involve the following:
List of resources which you might have at home:
And anything else you can think of. You can also use crafts material and Christmas decorations to decorate your Christmas Chain Reaction.
Chain reactions are a great way of getting together as a family during the Christmas holidays to see who can build the longest, most creative, and most complicated chain reaction.
There’s more than one way of building a chain reaction but the basics always remain the same. One movement needs to trigger the next movement to carry out a simple task at the end. It’s a fun and hands-on way of exploring cause and effect!
Below we’ve included a few steps of how you can carry out this activity at home – but feel free to change the steps in any way you want!
We suggest you first introduce what a Rube Goldberg machine is & what a chain reaction is. The below video is a chain reaction built by a Form 3 student from St.Paul’s Missionary College. Observe how each part of the invention is linked to each other and how there is always something moving from one place to another. Amazing right?
You can also use the links below to watch online videos of people who built chain reactions, including some easier chain reactions which are suitable for younger kids.
Most Rube Goldberg chain reactions are built to carry out a really simple task in the most complicated way imaginable.
You can create a chain reaction machine:
These are just a few examples. You can create chain reactions to carry out any simple task!
Follow the design process to plan your chain reaction. We suggest you constantly test, re-design and re-build to fix any problem or challenge that you encounter along the way.
Step 4:
Use your resources and start building!
We built a medium scale chain reaction across the kitchen to switch on a kettle!
The beauty of this project is that you can make it as challenging as you want. Here are a few ideas how:
Show us what you’ve made! Take a photo of at least 4 of your favourite activities from Esplora’s Science Advent Calendar. Trust us, you’ll need them later!