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and why? practical joke in the curry restaurant? |
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Would this be strong enough to be rigid over a 6-foot length? It might be better just to lock the bottom of the curtain to the floor. Or buy a door. |
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I see this idea more as "Prosthetic Bead Curtain" where each strand of beads is individually addressable and can be made to reach out and grab hold of things like an octopus's tentacle or just squirm, creepily. |
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Do away with the electro-rheo-thingy, and just have hollow lines making up your curtain so that you can drop thin metal rods down to rigidify them. |
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You don't even need thin metal rods. If the beads are so shaped that they fit together almost in the manner of vertebrae, then by tensioning a flexible cord threaded through them they form a rigid structure. |
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"Is that a new bead curtain you've got?" "No, actually they're lengths of tubing filled with custard. Look what happens when I pressurize them - Ooh, sorry - do you want me to rinse out your trousers? Mind youself here - it's slippery" |
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Get all the bugs worked out, and include that face recognition bit, and you can really tease prisoners. Make their cages out of the bead stuff, and it remains flexible until they approach. Guards walk right through, but the prisoners can't. Kind of like that Greek myth about the hell torture of not being able to drink the water you're standing in, etc. (pardon me for not having a better memory). |
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[quarterbaker]Imagine the guard's suprise when the inmate approaches while the guard is walking through the beads, causing massive injury to the guard as the beads rigidify. |
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I like this idea. Sort of a force field without the WIBNI aspect. If nothing else, it might be useful for containing pets and small children. |
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Threat of extreme physical violence? |
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I think solutions involving passing threads/string/cords through the beads and tightening them wouldn't be very effective, owing to the natural elasticity of the string. They might be more rigid, but they'd still be able to bend somewhat. |
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[P Oak]: I remember those toys too. That's what I meant earlier when I mentioned vertebrae. |
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This was suggested by the many people including a "force field" as part of their ideas. |
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potts & lg: As it stands, it does not have a practical application except possibly as a practical joke. |
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Make the curtain two dimensional, with warp and weft lines & controlled joints - maybe that will do for a new idea, electrostatically hardening cloth. |
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The joints could be addressed in the same way as the old magnetic core memory devices. |
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Not if the rigid length extended into a socket-like affair recessed into the door lintel. |
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Possibly the bottom of the bead string could be
magnetically drawn to a small clamp in the floor, which
would grab it and prevent people from pushing the beads
aside until it was released. |
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Waugsqueke mentioned making the curtain hollow and pressurising with custard in order to make it stiff. Hippo is responding to that (deleted) annotation. |
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Pertinent Oak said something about toys which had articulated limbs tensioned by strings. |
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Electrorheological fluids (ERFs)
Scientific American September 1988 page 30:
"When several thousand volts are put across a cell containing this type of mixture, the suspension can become as solid as Jell-O within a fraction of a second." |
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Several thousand volts! Phew!! "Starch and transformer oil" Yuck! Sorry guys, that electrostatically hardening cloth idea is off. It would have been cool, to have a jacket you put on, which hardened into body armour, before mounting that 135 mpg bike to roar down the middle of the road, forcing ancient trucks with no crumple zones to give way. |
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this idea is pure genius, makes me wnat to own an establishment just for this! (+) |
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Could you cause it to show shapes? |
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