h a l f b a k e r yFewer ducks than estimates indicate.
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Creates a 3-D rotatable, zoomable image of a climb. | |
For rock climbers of all stripes.
Sits on a tripod with a long extendable arm or can be lowered down a cliff to get a digital, 3d depiction of a climb or cliff. Would use either radar or sonic waves to map out the "topography" of the cliff. Comes with tie-in points for big wall and multi-pitch climbing.
Although
considered cheating by most people in the sport, it could be extremely useful for the adventure climber exploring untouched rock.
Could come with a small, portable computer to view and store the images and store GPS coordinates and route info.
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to get a useable resolution, you'd need a millimetric radar, or perhaps one of those new flash <<{laser-radars}>>. Unless you get really tricky (and I mean really really tricky) you're stuck with line-of-sight anyway. |
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just buy a spotting scope, and use your brain. |
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EDIT - Reference to apparently fictional laser radar highlighted, as I couldn't find any reference to them on the net. I read about it somewhere, though. |
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bingo! I knew I wasn't crazy. I had it in my head that the mig-29 used a "laser radar", only it turns out it doesn't, just references a laser rangefinder to it's conventional radar for accuracy. Most of that Lidar stuff is about large scale geo-mapping, but I'm still sure I've read about it being used to map smaller spaces, such as a room for a robot to navigate, etc. |
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