Questacon Smart Moves

Sport


Surfboards, hovercraft, skateboards, & pogo sticks.  What do they have in common? They are great examples of simple innovations. We showcase stories of young people who are improving old ideas, and coming up with completely new ones.

While you're listening to your favourite music, why not take a ride on an underwater scooter? The ScubaDoo lets you check out what's under the sea without having to learn to scuba dive. Or if you like to fish, check out the River Lake Fishing Aid which was invented by a young Australian.

Science and technology are affecting sport in many ways.  Did you know that Steven Bradbury was skating on Australian made ice skates when he won Australia's first Winter Olympics gold medal in 2002? Check out how Brisbane company, Revolutionary Boot Company, used rapid prototyping to give them the edge when improving skate design.

In the not too distant future, you won't need a human coach there to train you anymore, your clothes will be able to train you, no matter what sport like.

Australian science has combined with Aussie sports to create a device, called Traqua, which will enable swimming coaches to better monitor their athletes training.

Maybe the Intelligent Knee Sleeve will dramatically decrease knee injuries when it soon becomes commercially available.

The next time you get your dog a flea collar, spare a thought that the insect you are to get rid of could actually revolutionise sporting equipment and sports shoes. The CSIRO has created some flea rubber made from a flea protein that could do just that.

Sick of shoes that just don't fit? You can now get your foot scanned and have a pair of shoes printed out for you which will fit your foot exactly. This is a new technology being used in the UK that will allow shoes to be made even lighter.

Have you ever spent hours in your backyard building yourself a skating ramp? If you have you probably know how popular you can suddenly become with all your friends wanting to come over to try it out. Corban Walls builds skate ramps but has taken them one step further and created a company called Remain Industries, which provides portable skating ramps for hire.

The Dirtsurfer can be ridden on dirt, sand, grass, paved road and pretty much wherever you dare to take it.

Is listening to music while playing sport or training cheating?

What do you get when you cross a skateboard and a scooter? Answer: an adari board.

Sport and study do mix. Just ask olympic ice skater Mark McNee, who has developed a new blade for ice-skates.

An solution called Headzone has been developed to allow professional waterskiing coach's to talk to their waterskiers while they are out training in the water!

Shinfin- The Flipper Revolution has begun!

Background Notes

A brief synopsis of each of the sport items in our shows and links to our references.

Surfboards

Back Rack


If you surf then you will like this invention, the Back Rack is designed so you can carry your surf board on your back.

Jackson Richards, who is 15 years old, invented this after his parents complained about transporting him to and from the surf every morning. Not wanting to give up surfing, Jackson invented the Back Rack, which is a sling that attaches to the tip and tail of the board then over your back. The great thing about this invention is that the movement of the wearer is not restricted at all. So Jackson can ride a bike, scooter or even a skateboard with his surf board on his back.

Computer surfboard

Inventors out there have taken a touch-screen computer, made it water proof and embedded it onto the body of a surfboard. So you can literally …..Surf the net! There must be other more productive reasons, but you’ll have to figure them out for yourselves! Yes it is for real, check it out.

Aluminium surfboard

Sick of having his board snap in big swells and damaged by the sun and the surf, keen surfer Ron developed a way to make his surfboard much stronger. By applying a very thin layer of aluminium to the foam core of his surfboard, then coating it with lacquer, Ron’s surfboards are now a whole lot stronger.

References

Return to top.

Skateboards

Brakeboards

Ever used your face as brakes? Sick of grinding your foot to the bone to stop your deck? Thanks to a young Aussie you can now slow to a smooth stop with the flick of your heel. The Brakeboard is a great example of innovation and business-sense in young folk today.

Flowlab boards

Group of young guys who were really keen snowboarders and wanted to be able to do it all year round. They changed the design of existing skateboards to make them feel much more like riding a snowboard. Instead of using the traditional four wheels, two at each end, they put eight wheels at each end on an arc of metal. This design means that the board leans at a much greater angle than a normal skateboard when turning, more like the turning of a snowboard.

These guys set up a company called Flowlab and they sell these boards all over the world.

Scorpion Electro

The scorpion electro-board is a cross between a skateboard and a scooter but with a small electric motor. Designed by Sam Deslandes while studying at the University of South Australia the board won an Australian design award last year. Acceleration and braking is controlled via the handle located at the rear end of the board. The small rechargeable motor can power the board to a top speed of around 25 km/h. Despite only having three wheels the board is steered the same way as a normal skateboard.

Wheelman Bushpig: Motorised Skateboard


If you don’t think your skateboard is fast enough, try sticking a motor on it! That's exactly what Grant Taylor from Queensland did, with some help from production design engineer Muzza Grant.  The Wheelman Bushpig is a motorised skateboard that uses body movement to steer, just like in skating and surfing. How fast you go is controlled by a pneumatic ball that you hold in your hand – the more you squeeze, the faster you go.


This strange and new form of motorised transport has a motor and frame supported by spokeless wheels.  You stand with your feet inside the wheels! This looks awesome and also lowers your centre of gravity, so you're not as likely to fall off.

The Wheelman Bushpig is another example of great innovation by Australians.

References

Return to top.

Flying anyone?

For those who have always wanted to fly…

Flying wakeboard

In the latest in Australian wakeboarding technology: a board that can fly! The wakeboard, called the Sharkski, lifts up above the surface of the water using high-pressure systems that build up under the wings. When the rider reaches speeds around 40 km/h they literally fly through the air with enough stability to allow the rider to stand, kneel, and to pull all kinds of tricks. Keep an eye out for the Sharkski…its about to take off!

Hoverpod


A new Australian invention may see us all zooming around on hovercraft in the near future! Kim Schlunke has spent the past three years and $1.8 million designing the Hoverpod, and plans on having the first working model built by the end of the year.


Designed to travel at one and a half metres above the ground at around 50 kph and carry one to three passengers, Schlunke said the Hoverpod was targeted at the recreational market that includes jet skis and four-wheel motor bikes. "It's been designed with the fun factor kept in," he said. "It's been designed so it's safe, space efficient and uses low horse power. A helicopter for example has blades that can chop things up. The Hoverpod can park in your garage but still lift a person."


Schlunke said he plans to design a Hoverpod especially for surf rescue operations and another unmanned version that could be used in surveyance work. In the long-term, he said he could not see any reason why the hoverpod could not become an alternative to the car.

Reference

Return to top.

Flybar


Ever thought your pogo-stick wasn’t quite exciting enough? You are not alone. Seven-time World Cup champion skateboarder Andy Macdonald has spent years working on making the humble pogo-stick more exciting. He collaborated with Irwin Arginsky, president of a pogo stick production company, to produce the Flybar.

The Flybar is like a hardcore pogo stick. Fit coordinated humans can jump higher than a metre and people have been known to get around 2 metres of air using the aircraft-grade aluminium Flybar. The extreme pogo stick uses an elastomeric spring system (12 big rubber bands, to put it simply) to capture and release energy and the springing feels similar to a trampoline in operation.

It’s a simple modification to the humble pogo, but it’s made a lot of difference to the fun of it. Anything lying around that you could modify?

Reference

Return to top.

ScubaDoo

No need to learn to scuba dive this summer. You can grab yourself an underwater scooter and cruise around with your own air-tank in shallow water, checking out the fish and coral at a motorised pace. Kind of like driving an upside-down see-through bucket underwater!

Reference

Return to top.

River Lake Fishing Aid


There are some inventions out there that can help people who are bossed about by their parents! Candice Byrnes, who is 18 years old, invented the River Lake Fishing Aid.

Her inspiration came when she would go fishing with her dad who would send her back to the bank to collect bait or to deposit caught fish. Now Candice, who was tired of these frequent journeys to and from the bank, invented a solution to this problem. The River Lake Fishing Aid is a floating box which can store bait, tackle and caught fish, but instead of being stowed on the bank, this box floats next to the person who is fishing. This just goes to show that inspiration can come from anywhere!

Reference

Return to top.

Ice Skates and Rapid Prototyping


Steven Bradbury's gold medal winning ice skates were made by the Revolutionary Boot Company in Brisbane, which is run by Steve's friend and fellow speed skater, Clint Jensen. RBC started when Clint and Steve became frustrated by how long it took to get a pair of custom-made skates and how easily they broke. They decided to make skates stronger and faster than everyone else. Now RBC supplies custom made skates to elite skaters around the world.

To improve skate design, Clint used a technique called rapid prototyping. The first step in rapid prototyping is to make a computer drawing of the object you want to build. The computer then slices the drawing into very thin layers about 100 μm (microns) thick, about as thick as a human hair. After that it sends a drawing of each layer to a machine that builds the layer. This continues layer by layer until the object is finished. It's a bit like inkjet printing, only in 3D.

Rapid prototyping is very quick and very precise and can make complex objects that other methods (eg. injection moulding or carving) cannot. It is a good way to quickly build an object to check if it is the right size before doing a production run. At first only certain types of plastics could be used in rapid prototyping but engineers have found ways to use metals and other types of plastics. These days rapid prototyping is used to make replicas of bones for doctors to practice on, artwork, jewellery, car parts, mobile phone cases...

References

Return to top.

Coaching Clothes

When you’re at school, your teachers boss you around. When you’re at work, your bosses boss you around. When you’re at home, your parents boss you around. When you’re out playing sports, your clothes boss you around. Yes, you read correctly, your clothes boss you around. In the not to distant future, you will be bossed around by your clothes.

Researchers from the Netherlands are developing clothes that can monitor what you’re doing while you play your favourite sport, and tell you how you could improve by vibrating at specific areas of your body. It’s called the ‘Haptic Sports Garment’. The vibrations are supposed to remind you of things like using the correct posture, using the right muscle group and to help you maintain an optimum speed when you start to slack off. Apparently this is better than having a real life human coach standing there yelling at you constantly, and telling you what you’re doing wrong because it does take a while for the shouting to reach you and for you to “slave” yourself to their demands.

Currently, the researchers are only designing clothes for rowing, speed-skating and soccer, but in the future, there should be clothes for other sports as well, so don’t throw away your old sports coaches yet.

References

Return to top.

Traqua

Have you ever wished you could be a better swimmer? You’re not the only one, Australia’s elite swimmers are always trying to improve - they train heaps both in and out of the pool, they have the best coaches in the world and even fancy swimsuits that make them faster. Now, thanks to scientists working with the Australian Institute of Sport, they can track every move they make in the water using a small device called Traqua.

Swimmers wear a small pack, similar to an iPod, in the back of their bathers. It has motion sensors inside that record information about the swimmers movements and send it straight to a computer. This gives the coach and the swimmer instant access to information like stroke rate, the distance covered and split times which can help them to analyse technique and plan future training sessions.

In the lead up to the Commonwealth Games this could be just the edge Australia’s swimmers need to go for gold!

References

Return to top.

Flea Rubber

Nature provides the inspiration for so many inventions, the CSIRO has recently looked to the insect world for inspiration for a new type of rubber.  Dr Chris Elvin from the CSIRO’s livestock industries department has invented near perfect rubber inspired by….wait for it…FLEAS!!  Fleas, as you may know, are really good jumpers (as in things that jump, not the clothes you wear on cold days).  They can actually jump more than 100 times the length of their bodies.  The reason they can do it is because of a substance called resilin, which is an elastic substance made of cross-linked protein chains. 

Dr Chris Elvin and his team have actually worked out a way of getting this protein and turning it into a solid substance.  This will have heaps of uses for anything from medical applications, to super sport shoes and even really really bouncy, bouncy balls.  The reason that this rubber is so cool is not because of its bounciness but rather because it never loses its bounce.... you might say it’s really good at bouncing back. 

References

Return to top.

Tailor Made Printed Shoes

In recent years there have been a lot of advances in printing technology. Printers have been used to print edible menus, print living tissue and now you can even get a pair of shoes printed. This may sound a little like science fiction but it is actually happening. A London-based company called Prior 2 Lever (P2L) have developed a technique that allows them to print the layers of a shoe that are then joined together using a laser.
This technique could mean the end to mass-production of footwear as each shoe is made uniquely to the customer’s foot. The customer has their foot scanned using a computer and using that image the computer determines which areas of your feet need more support and cushioning and which areas don’t. The end result are shoes which have no extra padding than they need (so they’re lighter) and will hopefully also end the problem of new shoe blisters.

References

Return to top.

Portable Skate Ramp- Remain Industries


Have you ever spent hours in your backyard building yourself a skating ramp? If you have you probably know how popular you can suddenly become with all your friends wanting to come over to try it out.
Corban Walls builds skate ramps but has taken them one step further…
He has created a company, called Remain Industries, which provides portable skate ramps for hire to anyone. He is a keen skateboarder himself and realised that many people wanted skate ramps for events, but since many skate competitions move regularly the equipment would need to be able to move as well.
He started off by designing the ramps themselves, and was rewarded by winning $5,000 from the Nescafe Big Break competition. He was able to put this money towards starting Remain Industries which opened it's web-page in early 2006.
It just goes to show that sometimes tinkering around in your backyard can lead to an exciting future, and I’m sure Corban probably still lets his friends come round to test out his new designs!

References

Return to top.

 

DIRTSURFER

Surf the Dirt
Have you ever wanted to get the same thrill ride as surfers and snowboarders but found it impossible get to the beach or a snowfield? Are you into skateboarding but find it hard to find the perfect place to ride it? Well, Western Australian inventor Graeme Attey has made this possible. He has created something that looks a bit like a cross between a skateboard and a mountain bike, called the “Dirtsurfer”.

What’s going on?
The Dirtsurfer can be ridden on dirt, sand, grass, paved road and pretty much wherever you dare to take it. A Dirtsurfer is made of an aluminum frame and a deck (similar to a scooter or skateboard) suspended between two 20 inch diameter BMX style bicycle wheels.
The Dirtsurfer’s wheels are inclined with each other and very large, so the rider actually becomes more stable as they pick up speed going down a hill (which is pretty unique). When you ride the Dirtsurfer you use the movement of your body to steer the board, just like riding a snowboard or a surfboard.
Dirtsurfing has become a very popular sport throughout the world and in 2005 was given the official classification of being an international gravity sport.

Who’s doing it?
Graeme Attey is a keen surfer, sailboarder and motocross rider and he is also a design engineer. Graeme was looking for a way of getting the same feeling of riding a surf board or snow board even when there was no surf or snow nearby.
Graeme developed the Dirtsurfer in his back shed after he saw some kids sliding down a hill. Graeme says “I started with some basic concepts and over time I refined the concept and incorporated ideas suggested by some of the local riders who served as my test pilots." The combinations of all these ideas lead to the Dirtsurfer.

How do I get into it?
Often new inventions come from people who find flaws in existing products or find the product they were looking for doesn’t exist. The Dirtsurfer came from frustrated surfers and snowboarders looking to keep the good times rolling in the off season.
If you are interested in developing extreme sports, it is a good idea to take the opportunity to study physical sciences at school. Physics or PE will help you understand the concepts behind how a lot of extreme sports actually work. For example, gravity is one of the main factors affecting extreme sports and physics can help predict what affect gravity will have on the particular sport.
Design is also very important in the innovation of sporting products, things must look as fast as they can go. So if you see yourself as a designer you can also get involved in the extreme sports industry.

Extra Info/References

Music in Sport - Is it Cheating?

Will listening to Eskimo Joe or Pink while you run make you a better athlete? If so, is it cheating?

What’s going on?
Professor Peter Terry from The University of Southern Queensland is a sports psychologist who is looking at the effect of music on sport. He has compared using music in sport to performance enhancing drugs and is questioning whether athletes using music to improve their performance is cheating.

Music has been involved in sport for a long time - rowers use a drum beat to help them stay in time, some footballers listen to ‘Eye of the Tiger’ to fire themselves up before a game, and archers have been known to crank up the classical tunes to help them relax.

Listening to music while exercising can improve your performance by up to 20%, especially if you’re doing something repetitive like long distance running. Now there’s even the prospect of having a tiny mp3 player placed under the skin, so that athletes can listen to music whenever they like. So, what do you think, is it cheating?

Who’s doing it?
Professor Peter Terry from The University of Southern Queensland has been investigating the relationship between music and athletic performance and presented his findings to a joint conference of the Australian Psychological Society and the New Zealand Psychological Society in Auckland.

How do I get into it?
If you want to get into sport psychology, a great place to start is by studying Psychology in years 11 and 12.  This will give you an idea about psychology in general and if you like it you could go on to study it at University.

Extra Info/References

Return to top.

Surfing on Cement....

Mike Hodgkinson is a 20 year old University student from Sydney. Mike was sick of walking to uni everyday and with his love of skateboarding, surfing and snowboarding he figured he would be able to make an easier mode of transport.

Impressed with the manoeuvrability of a scooter, Mike decided that is what he wanted in a skateboard, and invented a two-wheeled skateboard in his family shed.

“Essentially what I’ve got is a scooter without handlebars. It’s sort of a fish shaped deck, and it looks cruisy. It’s got two wheels on the bottom, both in line…The rear wheel is fixed and the front wheel is on a castor like a trolley wheel and spring loaded.”

Funding for the prototype and the first set of boards were made as a result of a $5000 scholarship from the university which Mike attends.

References

Where to from here?
This innovation is the perfect example of how you can get inspiration for an idea at any time. Mike was inspired by being sick of walking to uni, and used this to come up with a method to travel. Student interested in innovations could simply put thought into an idea for an invention that may work, or talk to people involved in that career field.

Furthermore a degree in Engineering may be suited to you, and many universities Australia wide offer degrees in Engineering. The pre-requisites would be dependent upon which university you wish to attend but good subjects to choose are maths, physics and chemistry.

Return to top.

Speed Demon Graduates, at last

What’s going on?
A new blade for an ice skate has been developed. The curve of the blade is different so as to increase the performance of the skater. Previously blades have been made by hand to perfect the curve, but Mark McNee has developed a computer program that makes the production process repeatable.

Who’s doing it?
A mechanical engineering student from The University of Queensland (UQ)named Mark McNee has used his engineering skills to enhance his passion for speed skating by developing a new curved blade that makes him skate faster.

Mark McNee has competed in 2 winter Olympics, while completing his uni degree. He graduated last year and has been nominated as valedictorian of his year, even though Mark openly admits he will probably have the lowest grade point average of any valedictorian yet, as an Olympian study was not really his highest priority.

How do I get into it?
Most universities offer engineering courses. Studying maths and physics at school will give you a great start. If you have great ideas to increase your sporting performance check out the Questacon Smart Moves Invention Convention (QSMIC).

Reference

Return to top.

Bright and Beaming Basketball Shirt

What’s going on?
Honours student Mitchell Page has used wearable technology to develop basketball shirts that display a players fouls, score and even the amount of time left in the game. The jerseys are fitted with flexible panels that are linked by electricity-carrying cotton threads to strapped-on computers. Using wireless technology and a computerised scoring system (where a score keeper is able to enter the information into the computer manually), the game information can be fed back to the jersey and panels on the jersey light up to communicate information to team players, referees and spectators.

The Jerseys have panels on the side, front, shoulders and the back that are all used to communicate different aspects of the game. As a player scores more, the panels on the side of the torso light up to communicate this to their fellow team mates. Panels on the shoulder indicate a player’s foul count, panels on the chest light up when there is one minute left of game time and the panel on the back lights up to show the winning team. The Jerseys have been tested on basketball players and have so far achieved positive results. They found that player’s awareness of the information was increased as was spectator’s knowledge. They also found that the time warnings and the display of the winning team could markedly change the player’s behaviours and motivate teams.

TeamAwear was tested using basketball because player-specific information changes rapidly during the sport and because no physical contact is involved. But Mitchell believes football, soccer, volleyball, netball, cricket and boxing could all benefit from similar outfits.

The shirts are only at the prototype stage but have been tested in controlled situations with a referee and a small crowd with positive results. So, we won’t be seeing them in professional games just yet.

Who’s doing it?

Mitchell Page is an Honours Student in the Centre of Design computing and Cognition at The University of Sydney.

How do I get into it?
Mitchell designed, developed and evaluated his design for his honours project at university. He studies a Bachelor of Design Computing at the University of Sydney. If you think you’re interested in this type of course visit:
http://www.usyd.edu.au/fstudent/undergrad/study/index.shtml
And follow the links to find the course you’re after and what you’ll need to study at school.

References

Return to top.

Headzone

If you’ve ever tried to talk to someone across a crowded room or in a really noisy area you’ll understand how frustrating it can be. Imagine if you faced this problem everyday. Mark Ellis got sick of yelling to water-skier’s he was trying to coach, and having to wait for them to get back to the shore before he could talk to them. So rather than continuing to be frustrated Mark came up with a solution. He’s developed a system called Headzone which is a waterskiing helmet that has a receiver and speaker in it, so that his water-skier’s can hear all of his instructions.

What's going on?

Mark Ellis, an Australian waterskiing coach, has come up with a system to help coaches communicate with athletes while they’re playing sport. Headzone uses a microphone and transmitter at the coach’s end and a receiver and speaker in a waterskiing helmet to allow the coach to talk to the athlete from as far away as three kilometres.

Who's doing it?

Mark Ellis is a waterskiing coach from New South Wales who got sick of yelling across the water and waiting for his students to come back to shore so that he could give them instructions and advice. Mark had his idea featured on The New Inventors on the ABC and has started a business called Headzone.

How do I get into it?

If you have an idea for an invention you should enter the Questacon Smart Moves Invention Convention. It’s a competition we run every year and if you get selected you’ll get a free trip to Canberra and learn a bunch of skills that could help you turn your idea into a reality.

References

Headzone Home Page

New Inventors Website

Return to top.

Shinfin- The Flipper Revolution has begun!

If you’re a body boarder or a keen swimmer then more than likely you have used flippers at some stage to help you gain some speed. One of the biggest problems that go hand in hand with flippers is that quite often you trip over them, and body boarders generally have to enter the ocean backwards to avoid this. Walking backwards is very impractical and more importantly takes up valuable boarding time. An Australian company has come up with a solution to this problem, with a man called Marc Lee as their driving force. Inspiration struck Marc when he was sitting on the beach watching people struggle with their flippers and admiring how surfers on top of their streamlined boards could hit the waves so much quicker. Marc developed a new kind of flipper, which he calls  Shinfin with its main defining feature being that you strap the flippers to your shins and not your feet. This eliminates the struggle of walking in flippers, whilst allowing a more powerful kicking stoke. The Shinfin design further reduces the effect of shin injuries and foot cramps which are often associated with the original style of flippers. It has taken many prototypes and a lot of setbacks but Marc has finally come up with a marketable product which he sells from home.

What’s going on?

Shinfin is a new design of an old idea. It is a new style of flipper which allows the wearer to swim more effectively without hindering the way they walk. It also allows for a much more natural kicking style in the water, and reduces injuries surrounding flipper use.

Who’s doing it?

Marc Lee is the developer of Shinfin. He is originally from Cambridge in England but now lives in Australia with his wife and children. Marc was always a keen inventor, and enjoyed pulling things apart since he was very young. At school the subjects he was most interested in were subjects that taught him how things worked, like maths, physics, engineering drawing, design, woodwork and metalwork. His dream job was to be involved in inventing, designing, and making better things that people could use. He naturally gravitated towards this and never really considered other career fields.  Marc stands by the belief that you have to try many ideas to end up with a few good ones, and along the way you can have a lot of fun.

How do I get into it?

If you’re interested in how things work it’s a good idea at high school to do topics such as maths, physics, science, drawing, design and technology, woodwork and metalwork.  At a University level, degrees in Engineering, or Industrial Design could be a strong choice.  Advanced Diplomas in these area's at Tafe could also be a sound basis.  Also having an open mind, and being a creative person is the most important part .

Extra Info/References

Shinfin

New Inventors Website

Return to top.

HomeFeedbackSitemapSite IndexSponsorsWhat's New