Boy Builds Wall-Climbing Machine Using Recycled Vacuums 96
Joe McIntosh writes "Hibiki Kono just might be a boy genius. The 13-year-old decided he wanted to climb vertical surfaces like his hero, Spiderman. So, he used two 1,400-watt recycled vacuum cleaners and a little bit of elbow grease to make a machine that allows him to scale walls. Kono has been scaling the walls of his UK school and has told the media that he hopes his invention will help window washers eliminate clumsy ladders from their daily routine."
Mother (Score:5, Funny)
and mother likes it because it cleans the wall on the way up.
Re:Mother (Score:4, Funny)
Oh no he didn't! (Score:4, Funny)
Because didn't Adam fall down a lot on his during the Mythbusters attempt?
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So you are mythbusting the Mythbusters? I hear recursion is also a myth.
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I hear recursion is also a myth is also a myth.
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so, a myth is a myth, and recursion is recursion and therefore all recursions are myths and myths are recursive. Hmmm, my spidey sense of an infinite loop forming is tingling!
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Even worse - they weren't recycled - they were reused.
There is an important difference between recycling and reuse.
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After recycling some vacuums, he's going to start recycling the holes in the road. Then he'll know how many holes it takes to fill the Albert Hall.
Re:Oh no he didn't! (Score:4, Interesting)
http://mythbustersresults.com/episode54 [mythbustersresults.com]
A suction cup system can be used to scale a (23-story) skyscraper.
plausible
The concept worked but Adam did not have the stamina to scale the entire building. Making the climb would require significant physical training.
Re:Oh no he didn't! Dick Francis Novel ? (Score:1)
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"Bang Goes the Theory" did it. They guy on there seems a lot better at making stuff work than the mythbusters team.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W1qoINo2MPM [youtube.com]
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That's true about science in general. You can't prove that something never happens. But it only takes one example to prove it does.
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True until someone whips out the 'Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence' card, at which point you have to wait for a generation or two of scientists to die off. Look how long it took the Wright Brothers to gain credibility. Low probability events suffer in particular, eg, ball lightning and meteors.
Re:Oh no he didn't! (Score:5, Interesting)
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There are a few important differences between the two systems.
Adam's design was not tethered and has a finite amount of power to work with. This meant he had to rely on a few mechanical components. I think overall his gear appeared to be quite a bit heavier.
The kid's design is not an efficient system and has a relatively infinite power source. It gets to be lighter and a bit more lossy in terms of suction. This is how he is able to scale brick walls with what appears to be a few hoses and cups.
However, I th
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Re:Oh no he didn't! (Score:4, Interesting)
But like my sig says....
The question isn't "can you?" But rather "why would you want to?" So much power and effort when much easier and more importantly, simpler systems have been developed. But that's not to say it might not have an application some day right? Say like, having to venture outside of the international space station a`la R2D2 to fix a power coupling or something. Just saying!
Re:Oh no he didn't! (Score:5, Funny)
But that's not to say it might not have an application some day right? Say like, having to venture outside of the international space station a`la R2D2 to fix a power coupling or something. Just saying!
I'm no physicist, but I'm guessing that a vacuum suction system in space will be about as effective as a ShamWow at the bottom of the ocean.
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"why would you want to?"
Because when you're 13 you invent things for their sheer awesomeness.
Re:Oh no he didn't! (Score:4, Informative)
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...Because hook-and-loop fasteners aren't good enough at grabbing and holding things in relative zero-G?
If you want to put a vacuum cleaner in space, good luck. I'll be down here nailing Jello to a tree when you need me.
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But then, rock climbing isn't just about climbing rocks; it's about climbing them in the most difficult yet still possible way. Otherwise you'd just use fixed ropes and ascenders, or walk up the gentle slope to the side, or take an elevator [youtube.com].
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I'm pretty sure the biggest difference between this and mythbusters is mythbusters built a self-contained system, while this one requires an external power source.
What this kid has done is very impressive, but it does require an extension cord plugged into mains power.
Windowcleaning (Score:1)
Can't speak for other countries, but over here we don't use ladders anymore. Instead we simply have a stick large enough to reach the 3rd(4th) floor from the ground ;-)
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useful for blind-dating also
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what abuot a building that is 20+ floors tall?
Guys in rock climbing gear repelling down the wall. I heard this story about a room full of women learning how to breast feed...
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I heard this story about a room full of women learning how to breast feed...
Each other?
rappelling. !repelling (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rappeling [wikipedia.org]
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Thats the word I wanted.
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You just attach a few sticks together, obviously!
No more ladders? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Or one of the tubes come loose or otherwise gets a leak.
Cool fun project but totally impracticable for real-life use (you think no one thought of this before?).
For climbing walls I personally I like those nanofiber pads that the military has. Basically the same design as a gecko's feet pads. Lets you climb anything string enough to support your weight. Doesn't work well on crumbly surfaces though.
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particularly on skyscrapers (Score:3, Informative)
Window washers may also want to carry around a UPS on their backs.
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Fuck that risk, I'll just send up a Roomba instead.
-Neil Armstrong
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Fuck that risk, I'll just send up a Roomba instead.
-Neil Armstrong
But how do you empty out the moon dust.
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Replace it with Mars dust.
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Window washers may also want to carry around a UPS on their backs.
Or a parachute.
Goodf Idea (Score:5, Insightful)
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thank you captain buzz kill!!
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A swing stage is more common on taller buildings. Just sayin'...
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A swing stage is more common on taller buildings. Just sayin'...
You know that, and I know that, but apparently nobody told this industrious 13yr old.
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You can now use a piece of technology susceptible to power failure, surges, blown fuses, and seized motors, instead of the centuries old, proven technology that you've been using for years.
You could've made the same argument about the first combustion engines, or electric lighting systems...
Impressive? Sure, but it's a rip-off... (Score:3, Interesting)
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Exactly. A cool hack? Yes. Some impressive engineering nous for a kid? Sure. Invention? Nope.
Re:Impressive? Sure, but it's a rip-off... (Score:5, Interesting)
A kid building a wall-climbing machine out of spare vacuum cleaner parts? It reminds me of something you'd read in a Cory Doctorow novel.
Kids are great. They give me hope. My kid just got a job as a research assistant in a genetics lab at her university, and though she's working like a slave for next to nothing, the experience has lit her up like a neon sign. Every night I get to hear about stuff about which I understand very little, but her excitement is just ambrosia for this proud papa. I usually only get about five minutes of thrilling reportage before she dashes out, probably to some hormone-fueled assignation with a pierced and pimply male, but knowing that her intellect, her future, her life is just exploding with the new sustains me.
That, and the fantasy of gelding the grabby boy who dares lay an insincere hand on her.
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I saw him on the morning news and he freely admitted it was based on a previous TV show.
It's the idiot who submitted the story that got it wrong.
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And they're doing nothing more than ripping off the Mythbusters.
"Bang goes the theory"? Really? Why don't they just call it "Rumorbreakers"?
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Nice to see the original - it seems like he would have had to do a lot less work if the extension cord had been run from above rather than below. A hundred feet or so of extension cord is fairly heavy.
An improvement of the gloves would be some kind of wipe to neutralize oily surfaces...
Ahhhhh... (Score:1, Offtopic)
What a wimp! (Score:1, Troll)
If he was not such a wimp, he would have gotten a bite from a radio active or genetically engineered spider.
Wasn't he the one screaming while he ran down the hall when they tried to give him vaccinations in school when he was 5 year old? Oh, no that was me.
BGTT (Score:1)
Health and Safety (Score:2, Insightful)
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Stop listening to everything Richard Littlejohn tells you. Some of it happens to be sensationalist bullshit.
No: risk assessment (Score:2)
I thought the internet was supposed to be quick! (Score:1)
The kid is smart, the techurs not so much (Score:1)
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The kid should have been roped off for this stunt, not kind of sort of assisted by the naughty vicar there.
The Vicar has already seen the boy "roped off", the element of suction adds more excitement to it.
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Oh, good grief. He'd 13 years old. If he doesn't get at least one major injury in the next year or two he'll be the wimpiest kid in his class. At half that age I was building forts in trees 20 feet off the ground with scrap lumber full of rusty nails and sneaking onto the grounds of the local mental institution to go fishing.
He's a kid. Kids fall down. Most of them survive. Besides, when he's older and his prospective girlfriend ask
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The audience (Score:2)
It Would Be Perfect... (Score:1)
Perfect for sneaking back into your mom's upstairs basement after a late night of LARPing...
No Nitrogen (Score:2)
The next prototype (Score:1)
Should use solar and batteries.
He also needs vacuum power for his feet.
http://www.sensorsone.co.uk/news/26/Measuring-vacuum-pressure-with-negative-gauge-or-absolute-pressure-ranges.html
Research he might be able to apply to improve his device.
Go peter parker!
Reeks of Cmdr Keen (Score:1)
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Commander Keen definitely never had vacuum-powered wall climbing capabilities.
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Ladders to wash windows? (Score:2)
I don't know about where you are, but I work in a Chicago suburb, and every once in a while I look out my window and see a guy sitting on what looks like a playground swing washing the windows.
I work on the 6th floor of an 8 story building.
There's also a big scaffolding rig that they can drop down the side, but I assume it's a lot more work to get that setup and move it around the building, so for window washing, they get the guy sitting on the board.
(He is wearing some sort of harness with another cable go