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Vehicle: Car: Speedometer
Red Shift Windshield   (+1)  [vote for, against]
Make velocity apparent by tinting windows.

Put a layer of LCD pixels into the front and rear windshields, and gradually turn the front windshield blue and the rear windshield red as the car approaches maximum design speed.

Bonus addition: In-dash clock that slows as car picks up speed.

Credits to [waugsqueke] and [krelnik] for correcting the physics...
-- Don Quixote, Sep 10 2003

Also change the speedometer so it reads as a percentage of C.
-- krelnik, Sep 10 2003


According to Special Relativity, the clock already slows down the faster you go. At least, to pedestrians and fire hydrants...
-- DeathNinja, Sep 10 2003


kinda like when the shutte re-enters the atsmophere?
-- dickity, Sep 10 2003


This would only make sense if you're in reverse. Red shift occurs when things are moving away from you.
-- waugsqueke, Sep 10 2003


Ah yes, so the red goes in the rear windshield. You'd need a blue shift set to go in the front windshield.
-- krelnik, Sep 10 2003


Idea updated per [waugs] and [krelnik]...
-- Don Quixote, Sep 11 2003


+. Could you have warp drive type stars flying along the side windows?
-- RobertKidney, Sep 11 2003


What color does it turn when you are speeding?
-- k_sra, Sep 11 2003


Yes, [dag], you don't do speed cuz you're high on life. ; )
-- k_sra, Sep 11 2003


[DQ] - "rear windshield" Is this a UK thing? The way I drive (forward), only the front glass shields me from the wind. The side and rear glass are just windows.

As an alternative to this idea, you could "make velocity apparent" by setting up hundreds of millions of stationary objects outside the vehicle. These would seem to move relative to the vehicle with increasing speed in proportion to the vehicle's speed. This has the added advantage of already existing.
-- ConsultingDetective, Jan 31 2004



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