James Burke
Being a grandpa is more fun than working
I am trying to create a soccer ball using a 12 inch gazing ball and have run into a mathematical dilemma.
I’ve disassembled a soccer ball and have reverse engineered the pieces for size and shape, but when I lay the vinyl on the ball, my theory comes to a screeching halt.
I’m only good for right angle trig, and a little bit of sine and cosine law....but I fear spherical trig is my next stop.
Are there any mathematicians out there?
I’m using AutoCAD and I can produce a design right down to the “nth” degree if needed, but I am unsure of where to begin.
I’m thinking I need to make an orthographic drawing first, and then project the polygons onto the spherical radius. And then after that, project the polygons back onto a flat surface for sending to the plotter. Essentially, that will create polygons with dished in sides that will meet up perfectly when applied to the ball. Make sense.
Anyway, I’d like to hear some good tips from those with a little more gray matter than I have.
Take a good long look at a soccer ball some time. They’re absolutely a work of art...getting pentagons to match up perfectly with hexagons. There are 12 pentagons and 20 hexagons on a soccer ball.
After some close observation, it sure appears to be the same design principle for the geodesic dome.
I’ve disassembled a soccer ball and have reverse engineered the pieces for size and shape, but when I lay the vinyl on the ball, my theory comes to a screeching halt.
I’m only good for right angle trig, and a little bit of sine and cosine law....but I fear spherical trig is my next stop.
Are there any mathematicians out there?
I’m using AutoCAD and I can produce a design right down to the “nth” degree if needed, but I am unsure of where to begin.
I’m thinking I need to make an orthographic drawing first, and then project the polygons onto the spherical radius. And then after that, project the polygons back onto a flat surface for sending to the plotter. Essentially, that will create polygons with dished in sides that will meet up perfectly when applied to the ball. Make sense.
Anyway, I’d like to hear some good tips from those with a little more gray matter than I have.
Take a good long look at a soccer ball some time. They’re absolutely a work of art...getting pentagons to match up perfectly with hexagons. There are 12 pentagons and 20 hexagons on a soccer ball.
After some close observation, it sure appears to be the same design principle for the geodesic dome.