Overall, our Rube Goldberg Machine worked out to be great. The overall complexity of the design proved its worthiness as each step flowed on to the other. We started off with making a schematic of how we would have liked to see our Rube Goldberg Machine look. We knew that our final product would be different then the Schematic as drawing something and execution are two different things. For Example in our original Schematic, we had fire included during the spinning of the motor part. There were a lot of things wrong with this when it came to building as first being the obvious safety concern and secondly, it just wouldn't work. During the building process we were building and testing at the same time so that we do not end up building something that does not work at the end. One big problem that we encountered was that the ball was inconsistent in its path, to resolve this we set barriers to ensure that the ball would go to its directed path. This worked perfectly as this also helped us set up a circular path on the base of the box. There was also a big problem with energy getting passed on from each step to another. Sometimes a step would work but then the ball wouldn't reach the next step so we had to adjust the heights on ramps for it to get more kinetic energy. After finishing the whole project we noticed that we had a lot of space left in our box so we decided to add the dominoes which spell out "G" symbolizing our team's name. If we were to do this project again we would add a spring at the start to create less errors in the start off process. We would also make it longer as this just improves the overall quality of the whole machine.