New news.... - Appalachian Trail

imported
#1

anyone see this???..

LONDON (Reuters) - Carrying heavy loads could become easier thanks to a new ergonomic backpack that uses bungee cords to take the strain off the shoulders and joints, scientists said on Wednesday.

The cords suspend the load in the pack so it stays at the same height from the ground while the wearer is running or walking and reduces the risks of muscle and joint problems.

Its designers said it will allow users to carry an extra 12 pounds (5.4 kg) while expending the same amount of energy as when carrying a normal backpack.

“For the same energetic cost, you can either carry 48 pounds in a normal backpack or 60 pounds in a suspended ergonomic backpack,” said Lawrence Rome of the University of Pennsylvania.

“It is like carrying an extra 12 pounds for free,” he added in a statement.

The backpack, which was designed for soldiers and emergency workers, could be useful for children and hikers.

“Being able to move at relatively high speeds is crucial for many professions as well as in some athletic competitions and recreation,” said Rome, who collaborated with researchers at the Marine Biological Laboratory in Woods Hole, Massachusetts.

In most traditional backpacks the load is attached to the frame of the pack which is strapped tightly to the body. As a person walks it moves in line with the hip.

The new pack, which is described in a report in the science journal Nature, reduces the vertical displacement of the load.

“What is striking about our ergonomic backpack is that one can feel the 86 percent reduction in force with each and every step,” Rome added in a statement.

The scientists have formed a company to produce the backpacks and are now working on a lighter, small version.

jealously looking in from the outside

#2

Not to be cynical or anything, but I doubt that you’ll get ‘something for nothing’! I wonder how much all of the suspension hardware adds to the base weight of the pack? It’s likely to be more in the category of trekking poles, wherein your knees and legs get a little bit of a break while your arms/upper body carry a bit more of the load. That’s a welcomed ‘trade off’ for me, though, for sure!

This sounds suspiciously like putting a fellow in the back of the truck to poke the chickens with a stick so they’ll stay in the air while the truck crosses a decrepit bridge with a load rating less than the weight of the truck + chickens! :lol

TBott

#3

We go up and down a lot as we walk forward, so the idea is that if the load we carry moves up and down less we use less energy. This pack came out of some research that was aimed at generating electricity from hiking. The company is here:

http://www.lightningpacks.com/

And here’s another link:

http://www.newscientisttech.com/article/dn10835-bouncy-backpack-seriously-lightens-the-load.html

So this research led to 2 different ideas. One is just to suspend the load on some kind of spring. If you do this correctly you’re actually moving the weight on your back a shorter distance upwards, so expending less energy. The other idea is to generate electricity as the weight on your back goes up and down, which is really wasted energy. Unfortunately the pack at Lightning Packs is quite primitive, don’t think it’s anywhere near as comfortable a pack as a long distance hiker requires.

Brian Osborne