The Orange Goo Used In Everything From Armor To Football Helmets (cnn.com) 96
dryriver writes:
CNN has a story about a slimy, gooey orange gel developed by British company D3O as far back as 1999 that is very soft and fluid-like normally, but that hardens immediately when it receives an impact: It's a gel that acts as both a liquid and a solid. When handled slowly the goo is soft and flexible but the moment it receives an impact, it hardens. It's all thanks to the gel's shock-absorbing properties... Felicity Boyce, a material developer at D3O, told CNN, "if you hit it with great force, it behaves more like a solid that's absorbing the shock and none of that impact goes through my hand."
American football has become a huge market for the British company, where the gel is incorporated in padding and helmets to absorb the impact of any hits a player receives. D3O claims it can reduce blunt impact by 53% compared to materials like foam. The material can also be put inside running shoes to improve performance and reduce the risk of foot injury. Usain Bolt ran with D3O gel insoles in his shoes at the 2016 Rio Olympics.
The material is being tested in body armor. "While we don't have a material that can stop a bullet, we do have a material that can reduce the amount of trauma that your body would experience if you got shot." There are also soft smartphone casings using the gel that harden when the phone is dropped and hits a hard surface.
American football has become a huge market for the British company, where the gel is incorporated in padding and helmets to absorb the impact of any hits a player receives. D3O claims it can reduce blunt impact by 53% compared to materials like foam. The material can also be put inside running shoes to improve performance and reduce the risk of foot injury. Usain Bolt ran with D3O gel insoles in his shoes at the 2016 Rio Olympics.
The material is being tested in body armor. "While we don't have a material that can stop a bullet, we do have a material that can reduce the amount of trauma that your body would experience if you got shot." There are also soft smartphone casings using the gel that harden when the phone is dropped and hits a hard surface.
SubjectIsSubject (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:SubjectIsSubject (Score:5, Informative)
It's a non Newtonian fluid, but it's not cornstarch
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
There's a video here
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/fin... [telegraph.co.uk]
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It's not cornstarch, it's silly putty
Re: SubjectIsSubject (Score:2)
Dslow, soft bump. Drive fast, hard bump.
So, just like a normal speed bump, then?
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Yes, only this one can get easily vandalised and will cost much more to replace.
Rugby players don't wear high tech helmets (Score:5, Funny)
Now as an American you'll say "Don't they all get terrible brain damage?"
And the answer is "Yes, of course they all do. Have you met any rugby players?"
Re:Rugby players don't wear high tech helmets (Score:4, Funny)
buddy Hey, rugyb palyer I was.
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He said brain damage, not writing like a teenager.
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He said brain damage, not writing like a teenager.
You can distinguish between the two? Man, you're good...
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Let me guess, you played RPN rugby?
Wrong (Score:2)
Re: Wrong (Score:2)
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"No, you just get cleats to the face."
At which point, if whoever did it can be identified, he'll be sent off and possibly banned from the game. "Overenthusiastic rucking" has been banned for a long time due to the injuries inflicted.
yes you get thuggish behaviour on the field, but thugs don't usually last long in teams who care about their position in rankings.
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They may be illegal, but concussion is one of the most common American football injuries.
It simply doesn't happen in Rugby.
Re: Wrong (Score:2)
Re:Rugby players don't wear high tech helmets (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Rugby players don't wear high tech helmets (Score:4, Funny)
One of the early signs of brain damage is mistyping < as [ and > as ]
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One of the early signs of brain damage is mistyping < as [ and > as ]
...and completely losing awareness of the word "fewer".
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Surely a helmet (high tech or otherwise) will make almost no difference to concussive injuries, they reduce the chance of a skull fracture almost completely but the rapid change in speed the head suffers is barely changed.
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If a rugby player tackled an opponent the way american footballers do, he'd be banned for life.
As with boxing gloves, the padding players wear doesn't protect _from_ impacts, it allows them to inflict much harder impacts.
Head trauma is taken extremely seriously in rugby. head high tackles and "blocks" seen in American football are completely banned.
I know (and tell) the standard jokes about rugby players but having grown up in a rugby-crazy country (I don't like the sport myself) I can tell you that the bra
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I can tell you that the brain-damaged behaviour usually starts long before they start playing the game - and conversely, that the top players (even the forwards) are skillful and intelligent. (Basically, the ability to be thuggish on the field attracts thugs, but thugs seldom if ever move out of the bottom rung sports teams. Paradoxically a lot of top cricketers are thugs when off the field.)
It reminds me of the old joke "Rugby is a game for animals played by gentlemen. Football is a game for gentlemen played by animals"
See also Roy of the Roasters [youtube.com]
Water and corn starch (Score:3)
Isn't this what you get when you mix water with corn starch?
Some of the science behind it explained here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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Only if they weigh the same as a duck, you idiot.
On Discovery Channel (Score:2)
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I'm not sure how this would be more protective than a hard substance, if it hardens on impact. Is the point that it's more comfortable, at the cost of higher cost and weight?
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So it actually just lessens damage to the skull, distributing the impact over a wider area of the skull but as it acts like a solid, it transfers the full force of the impact to the brain, in fact more than without the helmet, because deformation of the skull would actually absorb some of the force. The gel has zero shock 'absorbing' ability when it acts as a solid as claimed, it transfer all the force to the surface being protected it just distributes it over a wider area. Thick foam under a deformable hel
It is called a Non-Newtonian fluid (Score:5, Insightful)
See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org] for details.
I see that it was a CNN report, that explains were the big science words were missing...
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
I see that it was a CNN report, that explains were the big science words were missing...
Slashdot: News for the least nerdy of nerds, partisan political arguments that don't matter.
The BIG question on everybody's mind (Score:2)
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Actually, I was wondering if anyone had tried to hit Trump's hair when I first saw "Orange Goo."
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Screw what Gwyneth Paltro does with Orange Goop.
I want to see what Covetton House does with it.
It's more than "just" a non-Newtonian fluid... (Score:2)
...as they can cast it into "solid" forms. Try plastering your head with wet cornflour... Apart from the obvious mess & amusement, it will drip off the areas where you want the fluid to stay. The video on the site isn't half bad, watch it...
Oobleck (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Because back then, orange food colouring did not exist!
Wait, that's not it...
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Or maybe - and this is a bizarre idea - it's NOT corn starch and water.
3DO? (Score:2)
Oh, sorry.
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I used some similar padded shorts to protect me while snowboarding, but they didn't do what I wanted.
The material hardens, but provides zero cushioning. It's probably going to stop something going through your skin, but I could have used a pillow to protect better against pain.
Re: Mythbusters (Score:2)
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I forgot that how I look is why I snowboard. Thanks for reminding me of how shallow I didn't know I was, and that I should keep friends who think this way.
Also, search for a "tail saver".
Cornstarch (Score:1)
Cornstarch may just actually stop bullets:
http://www.foxnews.com/us/2017/06/02/air-force-cadet-creates-bulletproof-breakthrough.html [foxnews.com]
I use d3o (Score:2)
I need the opposite - self-supporting until hit (Score:2)
I'd like to find the opposite - something solid enough to be self-supporting at least, until it softens greatly on impact. It's easy enough to find thick liquids that thin under stress (ketchup being one example), but I want it *solid* until it's stressed.
So far the closest I have is floral foam, which crushes easily into a powder.
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a football helmet is just a type of armor. (Score:2)
lol
Not quite corn starch (Score:2)
While similar to how corn flour in water works, it's a different compound. More info here: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]
soft, gets hard when you hit it? (Score:2)
Sounds like the exact definition of someone who needs a dominatrix.
shear thickening fluid (Score:2)
I've used D3O armor for years: OBSERVATIONS (Score:1)
I've used D3O in some ski baselayers (Session) as well as bike armor/gloves (POC).
D3O is flexible, sure. It does not offer great penetration protection.
It is more protective per volume than foam armor in terms of spreading a focused blunt impact out over an area. (D3O loves the ball peen hammer demonstration)
However, D3O is not necessarily better than foam for energy absorption (absolutely inferior to foam by weight).
Foam backed plastic plate is better at both spreading the force out and much better at abs