Build a rubber band powered boat using a plastic bottle and simple sticks - no glue or tape needed! This fun STEM project shows how stored energy can be used to create motion on water.

Difficulty Level: Easy

Concepts: Potential Energy, Thrust, Newton’s Third Law of Motion

Materials List

  • Plastic bottle (small)
  • Soft cane sticks / wooden skewers
  • Rubber bands
  • Small piece of foam or cardboard (for paddle)
  • Thread or thin elastic (optional for binding)

Steps

  1. Build the frame
    • Use sticks to create a rectangular frame around the bottle.
  2. Secure the bottle
    • Hold the bottle in place using rubber bands (no glue needed!).
  3. Create the paddle
    • Cut a small rectangular piece of foam or cardboard.
  4. Attach the paddle
    • Fix the paddle between two rubber bands so it can rotate.
  5. Add tension system
    • Stretch a rubber band from the front of the frame to the paddle.
  6. Wind it up
    • Twist the paddle to wind the rubber band and store energy.
  7. Release in water
    • Place the boat in water and let go - watch it move forward! 🚤

Science Behind It

This project demonstrates elastic energy and propulsion.

Stored Energy 🔋

When you twist the rubber band, you store elastic potential energy.

Energy Conversion 🔄

When released:

  • The rubber band untwists
  • The paddle spins

Water Propulsion 💧

The spinning paddle pushes water backward.

The boat moves forward due to action and reaction (Newton’s Third Law).

Balance & Design ⚖️

  • A centered frame helps stability
  • A wider base prevents tipping
  • Paddle size affects speed

Experiment Ideas 🧪

  • Try different paddle sizes
  • Use thicker vs thinner rubber bands
  • Test different bottle sizes
  • Add weight and observe changes
  • Race different designs!

Watch the video!

Keywords: rubber band boat, DIY boat for kids, STEM water experiment, elastic energy project, no glue science project, simple engineering project, kids STEM activity, propulsion experiment, boat experiment for kids