h a l f b a k e r yYeah, I wish it made more sense too.
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,
|
|
|
|
Is buoyancy is an advantage in a swimming race? Also, does the area available provide enough volume to alter the buoyancy in any noticeable way? Even if both the buoyancy were an advantage and the volume were great enough, would the abdomen be the area that one would want bouyant? Would that not force the swimmers head underwater as they moved forward through the water? Would that help win races? |
|
|
Oh yes. That makes far more sense. |
|
|
Note to Swimmers : If questioned by officials explain that you are pregnant or if you are a male make up something about a rather large dinner you had the night before. |
|
|
Uno problema... Bubble + Blood = Bad |
|
|
Anal bouyancy would be useful for synchronised swimmers, who spend much of their time upside down, and might also help divers with elegant descents, even if ... I am not commenting on this. Goodbye. |
|
|
wasn't this baked by the east-german swim team at the 1976 olympics? except they used their colons, not the other place. time for a bit o' googling... |
|
|
Come on son get a grip. how big do you think a womens vaginal or womb is. the area is far to small to get the bouyancy. also if that fucker pops the bye bye i'm afraid. Definate Fishbone for this one!!! |
|
|
the havoc this could play with turns would also make this idea impractical |
|
|
Turkish: there aren't words... |
|
|
I think that (extra) bouyancy is of minimal importance in swimming. Modern swimsuit manufacturers concentrate on trying to reduce drag. If bouyancy was of such importance then they'd be churning out swimsuits that made you look like the Michelin Man. So fishbone I'm afraid, ben, even though I like the idea of bicycle pumps becoming a standard piece of equipment for professional swimmers (I keep getting this image of over-inflated competitors floating up to the ceiling of the pool). |
|
|
I believe that our eloquent friend Turkish was trying to say that any advantage gained, likely minimal, is certainly not worth the risk of embolism. I would agree. |
|
|
Peter, that's the second time I've heard that said today. |
|
|
Just imagine if, while in the middle of a race, one of these popped out! Would it go like a bullet or would it just lay there in the middle of the pool? What if it was with the synchronised swimmers and it shot out like all balloons do when 'pricked' It might put out an eye or something. Never thought of swimming as a dangerous sport before, or a spectator sport for that matter. |
|
|
Okay, here's what you do for the ladies. Instead of the latex bladder, you install something similar to those water-rocket toys, only with more pressure capability. Release the main valve, and you're movin. I like the solid rocket-fuel idea as well, although it might be hard to light if you got it wet. |
|
|
I think this idea supports the theory that [benfrost] is a descendant of Archimedes. |
|
|
I can't comprehend how this idea didn't get deleted, yet my beloved, functional, and tasty Yolkless Eggs got the boot. |
|
|
Eureka! someone bunned this! |
|
|
That'll be the autoboner. |
|
|
...and his contrarian friend by the look of it. |
|
| |