h a l f b a k e r yThe word "How?" springs to mind at this point.
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This version of bowling is great if you have a bad back, or can't lift heavy things, or just want a change of pace!
The ball is made of styrofoam and weighs about 6 ounces. You bowl it the same way, but when it gets down towards the pins, a powerful vaccuum sucks it up, and a wide, heavy mallet
swings down in the same location/direction where your ball was, approximately simulating what would have happened if you had sent a real bowling ball down the lane.
[link]
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When you're built like I am <flexes> every bowling ball feels like styrofoam... |
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You'd have to play in a very thin atmosphere. Otherwise the very light ball would stop after a very short distance. Trying to compensate with shorter lanes would just make the game boring (since the pins would take up a much larger angle, they'd be harder to miss). Maybe it'd work if the lanes were slanted down towards the pins...but then what if you trip while taking your turn?- you'd slide down a slippery, waxed wood lane, hit a bunch of pins, and then be clobbered by a wide, heavy mallet. Methinks that if you have the technical ability to sense speed and direction of a moving ball well enough to use a giant mallet to simulate the effect of a normal ball, maybe you should just use the data your sensors give you to launch a real ball on the same path. |
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hopeful, all was well in the universe of bad things that could happen until you said "Methinks". + |
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[hopeful] - I'll install fans over the alley so that the ball keeps its momentum and doesn't come to a stop. |
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