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Perpetual Skislope

the hollow room writes: "How about skiing on a never ending slope? A story at New Scientist suggests that some fool is going to try to build one of these. Built like a huge tilted record player, it can spin at up to 30 km/h. Any takers?"

14 of 239 comments (clear)

  1. And when you fall on your ass... by R2.0 · · Score: 4, Funny

    You travel up the hill, go into the equipment area, get sprayed with man made snow, and turn into a mogul.

    I want to see it built just for the entries into the Darwin Awards it will generate.

    --
    "As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
  2. The perpetual slope already exists by PhatKat · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I learned how to ski as a kid riding a huge conveyor belt made out of a big rug in the bottom of a sporting goods store. It doesn't sound like much, but it was fun as a kid. The coolest part was that you could turn it on and off with a garage door opener type gadget. I always wanted to turn it up really fast and see how much speed I could get up tucking, but my ski instructor wouldn't let me. Now that I look back, tucking really wouldn't matter. There's no wind resistence to worry about when you aren't actually moving.

    1. Re:The perpetual slope already exists by ackthpt · · Score: 5, Insightful
      They have one here in the Calif. central coast area I live in, at a snow board shop. Ok if you want to keep in practice or get ready for the real thing, but no substitute for it. You just stand in place and move from side to side.

      What this guy has in mind is like an upended record, on a much larger scale, more terrain to move about in, but ultimately still what I would consider a dull experience. Probably good for teaching beginners and little else, since the inside and outside of the track would be moving at different rates you'd get pretty good at turning one way, but would find difficulty adjusting to a real slope. Nothing like screwing up your motor skills and equilibrium.

      IMHO it looks terrible. I'm sure it'll be a hit.

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  3. Let me be the first to predict... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    ...that it's all downhill from here.

  4. what if the "record" gets a "scratch" ;) by Xzzy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When this thing is running at full tilt, how the hell do you get off it? Or worse yet, where do you go if you fall, as is sure to happen.

    Seems to me there's a lot of issues with physics involved as well, ignoring the problems of getting the thing to actually operate.

    People learn to ski on solid, non moving surfaces. What happens when you try to stop.. do you overbalance and fall down? Or how about the race track problem.. you're always turning left, cuz if you turn right you run into the wall.

    Basically I see this thing creating more questions than solutions. :p Be nice if the article was more than a brief overview.

  5. Movies by spt · · Score: 4, Informative

    Movies of a working ski-trak!

    Okay, it's just a model but they answer the everyone's question about getting on and getting off - there's a stationary area in the middle

  6. Doesn't the snow get worn out? by wadetemp · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The problem I'm seeing here is pretty major. If you take a 3000m ski run and compress it into a 300m run, there's still going to be 3000m worth of "snow damage" per skier/run, but it will be compressed into 300m of distance. So the snow is going to be 10 times as chopped up in any one place. And real ski resorts have multiple runs that reduces the traffic on any one run... to even begin to pay for this thing it's going to have to be packed.

  7. Hang on... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny
    Didn't M.C.Escher draw one of these?

    Oh wait, that was steps...

  8. rotational speed is important by LM741N · · Score: 5, Funny

    "Scientists debated for weeks over whether 33, 45, or 78 rpm was the best speed for skiing"

  9. Natural equivalent by jeti · · Score: 5, Interesting

    If you think about it, there are natural perpetual slopes: Standing waves (wakes?) on rivers.
    I even found a very cool video (8MB) demonstrating riversurfing on the Eisbach in Munich.

  10. The old saying... by FakePlasticDubya · · Score: 4, Funny

    So couldn't this somehow be used so that someone could end up walking to school, in the snow, uphill BOTH ways?

    --

    "We shall show mercy, but we shall not ask for it" -- Winston Churchill
  11. Chairlifts... by Chazmati · · Score: 4, Insightful

    No chairlifts sounds nice. If you out-ski the turntable you just pull off to the side and ride to the top, then hit the trail again.

    But chairlifts also meter traffic. I'm talking out my butt here, but I'm sure that ski slopes do some kind of calculations involving skiers/hour and trail capacity. Without a traffic limiter, the turntable could get 'too busy' on heavy days.

  12. Subject to the ``Skating Force'' of LP days by Dr.+Zowie · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Anyone here actually old enough to remember LPS and the skating force? Skiers would be drawn toward the middle of the disk and would have to be constantly turning outward to avoid hitting the spindle at the center of the terrain. Odd, that.

    If you've never operated an LP phonograph -- the skating force is due to the differential friction on opposite sides of the needle on a phonograph, and tends to draw the needle inward toward the center of the record. It's large enough to cause a needle to skip, bump bump bump, right over the grooves unless a counteracting force is applied. Low-end turntables used springs to pull the needle outward and combat the skating force; high-end turntables used little weights with little mechanical linkages that were designed to match the changes in the skating force with radius.

    You can see skating force in action at the bottom of a teacup if there are a few tea leaves floating around down there at the bottom. The tea leaves (after they're waterlogged) sink, so spinning the tea in the teacup "ought" to make them fly outward in the local gravity field. But in fact, tea leaves at the bottom of the cup tend to pile up in the center (when you spin the tea). Counter-intuitive and mysterious, until you realize that the leaves are also dragging on the bottom of the cup and therefore are subject to the skating force.

  13. So have it slope up towards the middle? by GlenRaphael · · Score: 4, Insightful
    [due to the "skating force"] Skiers would be drawn toward the middle of the disk and would have to be constantly turning outward to avoid hitting the spindle at the center of the terrain.

    I'm not sure I get the physics involved in this assertion, but it seems like it you could discourage people hitting the spindle by building up the middle of the disk such that you have to ski "uphill" to get to it.

    --
    I play Nerd-Folk!