h a l f b a k e r y"It would work, if you can find alternatives to each of the steps involved in this process."
add, search, annotate, link, view, overview, recent, by name, random
news, help, about, links, report a problem
browse anonymously,
or get an account
and write.
register,
|
|
|
Please log in.
Before you can vote, you need to register.
Please log in or create an account.
|
With the aid of either (1) being in space or (2) one of those airplanes that flies really high then drops to simulate zero-g, the game would be played using the same rules as normal pool, except it would be played inside a giant perspex cube (ideally see-through to allow spectators).
This cube would
have pool pockets in each corner and the aim of the game would be the same as pool, to pot all your balls before your opponent. Of course you would need to navigate around the space in order to make a 3D pool shot, and any disturbance of the pool balls whilst doing so would incurr the usual penalties.
Using option 2 detailed above would unfortunately require very fast games, as the zero-g only lasts for a small ammount of time, or some kind of laser guided 'ball marking' system like in golf when you move your ball from a green but again in 3D, although you'd have to get all the balls back into position very quickly.
3D Billiards/Pool
3D_20Billiards_2fPool [hippo, Feb 25 2011]
[link]
|
|
Where's the friction to slow the balls down? Playing a single shot could take hours. |
|
|
In space all your balls are going to end up sitting against the air vent. |
|
|
Virgin Galactic could charge $1,000,000 a ticket for rich people to have an hour long 3D pool game in space. |
|
|
From the friction standpoint you could use wiffle balls with low mass that would be slowed down by the air very quickly. |
|
|
Air will provide some friction. Perhaps it can be played in a big cube of water? Pool pool? |
|
|
I was just about to suggest the SCUBA version , but I seem to have been beaten to it - balls made to be the same density as the water. |
|
|
Search 3D Billiards/Pool. I think it's under sports/ billiards/
levitation. |
|
|
Linked. But it's an idea so incoherent and so much
based on a half-remembered sci-fi story the author
may once have read that it's almost impossible to
say whether it makes this idea redundant. |
|
|
I think Max is on to the right answer. Do it in a
virtual-reality simulator that doesn't have to bother
with the real physics of Newton's first law. |
|
|
I've removed the link, but am leaving the account and post. (I don't think we know that the post was merely an excuse to place the link.) To call in airstrikes on spam, don't annotate, please send email to bakesperson@gmail.com. Thanks! |
|
|
Hippo, it was from a story I, myself wrote. The game was part of
it. |
|
|
Unpublished, I guess due to my obvious inability to frame
coherent thoughts for readers. I went pro in something else. |
|
| |