‘Longreach’ Lifebuoy-Firing Bazooka Wins James Dyson Award

The Longreach Buoyancy Deployment System has just won the James Dyson Award. Its dull name rather obscures just how cool it is. The Longreach is a bazooka that fires life-belts up to 500-feet, targeting drowning-victims and saving their lives.

Using the Longreach, a rescuer can remain safely on ship or shore and deploy multiple life-belts at the press of a button. The “Rescue Packages” are made from expandable foam, and stay in fireable bullet shapes until they hit the water, whereupon they puff up into a circular buoyancy aid with a gap at one side. The resulting device also has lights so rescuers can find you in the dark.

The system is designed to be small and reliable, and as foam is used instead of inflateable tubes, puncturing at any stage is impossible. The launcher also comes equipped with flares so the operator can light up the night to better target victims. The Longreach is about to go into field tests with Surf Life Saving NSW, Australia.

The James Dyson Award, run by the inventor of the see-through vacuum-cleaner, was created to “encourage and inspire the next generation of design engineers.” It also has an insanely simple, and yet extremely difficult brief: “Design something that solves a problem.” The Longreach certainly does that.

LONGREACH Buoyancy Deployment System [James Dyson Award]

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Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews

Swimsense Stroke-Counter is Like a Nike+ for Swimmers

The Swimsense from Finis is like a bike computer for swimmers, only instead of counting wheel-revolutions, it counts strokes. The new wrist-mounted computer is waterproof (of course) and contains a motion detector which detects “stroke types, records the number of laps swum, total distance, calories burned, lap time, pace and stroke count.” Phew.

The smart part is that motion-sensor, which uses accelerometers to detect what kind of stroke you are swimming based on your arm movements, differentiating between the stately breaststroke, the blind backstroke, the all-conquering freestyle and the flailing, rescue-me-please-I’m-drowning butterfly. Combining this info with settings for the pool-length and your weight, age and gender, the Swimsense then presents a breakdown of what you have done in an online workout viewer. All you do is upload the data via USB.

My swimming is pretty much limited to splashing from the li-lo to the pool-bar, but the more sporting mermaids and mermen out there can add this to their Christmas list: the Swimsense will be $200 when it launches for the 2010 holiday season.

New Product: Swimsense [Finis Blog. Thanks, Jennifer!]

Swimsense product page [Finis]

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Source:wired.com

Posted under Gadget Reviews