Sport: Fighting: Jousting
laser jousting   (+2)  [vote for, against]

Jousting looks like a lot of fun. I imagine it's less popular now than it used to be because of the cost of horses and their upkeep, and the risk of being impaled.

This idea solves these problems and brings jousting to the masses. Firstly, the horse will be replaced by a bicycle. Secondly, the lance will be replaced by a small hand-held laser pointer and radar transceiver. Each player wears a small target on their front which can detect a 'hit' from the other's laser pointer. Each player rides towards the other, keeping to the right of a line drawn on the ground, and tries to score a hit on their opponent's target. The radar is to measure the distance between the players and a hit will only be deemed valid when the players are a precise distance apart (i.e. the length of a lance).

Tudor cosplay optional.
-- hippo, Jan 21 2021

If you're going to use a laser, why not one that can simply measure distance also and drop the radar?
-- RayfordSteele, Jan 21 2021


Yes, that might be better. How do laser distance-measuring devices work - are they sending out pulses of light and timing the delay for them to be reflected?
-- hippo, Jan 21 2021


But you can still finish them off with a few blows from a heavy cudgel?
-- xenzag, Jan 21 2021


// a nice touch //

No it isn't, quite the opposite, because it's a pointless, sissy non-contact sport for pansy wimps.

Jousting = blood or you're just making a mockery of the whole thing ... even in scooter jousting, arms* & stuff can get broken...

[-] for socially-acceptable politically-correct dilution of a brutal, vicious gladiatorial combat.

// you can still finish them off with a few blows from a heavy cudgel? //

Yes, of course. You may have to do it in the car park after everyone else has left and there are no witnesses, but yes.

*actual upper limbs. Ironically, being a squire and successfully competing in a joust - even if you fracture said limbs - can result in your being made a knight, thus allowing the College of Heralds to grant you Arms, because your arm(s) is/are broken...
-- 8th of 7, Jan 21 2021


Boggles my mind how they can get that precise by bouncing light speed and measuring time lapse and interference. I would think that some sort of pulsy-wave thingy that had encoded time from start, combined with some type of long- wave interferometry could make laser distancing much more precise.
-- RayfordSteele, Jan 21 2021


That may prove useful for calibrating a halfbakery standard for mental boggleability, or then again probably not.
-- 8th of 7, Jan 21 2021


So I could have a promising career as the average halfbakery test dummy? I have to warn you that my center of inertia has moved in the past 15 years.
-- RayfordSteele, Jan 21 2021


Yes. By force, if necessary.

// I could have a promising career as the average halfbakery test dummy? //

Much as we hate to have to bestow something resembling a complement, you're probably more the sophisticated, highly-instrumented end of the market, rather than the dumb, simple, expendable [xenzag] end ...
-- 8th of 7, Jan 21 2021


// all those years of prior art from before you posted your idea. //

Mean-spirited underhand retrospective editing, is all ... fake news.
-- 8th of 7, Jan 21 2021


Yes, with a smattering of those yellow-and-black quadrant transfers, applied to skeletal articulation points, so that on the slo-mo replay the effects of the violence can be measured with accuracy.

But we're only going to do it because it's technically necessary, and we're certainly not going to compliment him ...
-- 8th of 7, Jan 21 2021


This is true. And then afterwards, he'll look positively smashed.

But there's no need to mention that until we've got the data. Apparently there's this thing called "informed consent". We take that to mean that we should tell him that he's agreed to consent to whatever happens, and has automatically waived any legal rights he may have thought he had.
-- 8th of 7, Jan 21 2021


I don't recall signing anything. But then again, with all of these mysterious dents I've somehow picked up in my forehead and this odd target-shaped thing, I don't recall much...
-- RayfordSteele, Jan 22 2021


//a much higher, incinerating burst//

OK so, solar parabolic mirror jousting.

Each contestant wields a lightweight 20-ft solar mirror mounted on a convenient carrying handle.

They have to cycle towards each other

If one contestant manages to flash the focal point of the mirror onto the other contestant's luxurious facial hair there will be a satisfying smouldering smell and cry of "ouch" from their opponent.
-- pocmloc, Jan 22 2021


Mirror- approximately 7m diameter.

The cyclists will be about 1.5m above the ground, so the mirror will need to be on the end of a long pole.

Aerodynamic drag will be huge - the mirror is nearly 40m2 - and will act like a sail.

Merely staying upright will be a task in itself. The cyclists will inevitably fall off and quite likely be injured. This is in keeping with the true spirit of jousting.

// I don't recall signing anything //

It's in the small print... "reading this document indicates that you unconditionally accept all the terms and conditions, and any subsequent unadvised changes"

Retaining Buchanan & Buchanan as our legal advisors has been somewhat of a curate's egg so far, but now and again they come up with a real gem*.

*Usually misappropriated, and the property of someone else.
-- 8th of 7, Jan 22 2021


Have the two tracks filled with stage smoke so you can see the beams and you've got something here.

Then have the beam sensor on the person's chest activate an ejector seat and you're REALLY got something there.
-- doctorremulac3, Jan 22 2021


Good point - stage smoke would really make a difference
-- hippo, Jan 22 2021


Real smoke would make even more of a difference ...
-- 8th of 7, Jan 22 2021


In general, I think it would be quite easy to hit a chest- sized target with a laser pointer while on bicycles. Wheels are notoriously smooth, when compared to galloping horses at least. So, we need wheels with off- center hubs to make the rider & target move up and down in a speed-sensitive manner.

//have the beam sensor on the person's chest activate an ejector seat and you're REALLY got something there.//

Ejector seat, and ejector handlebars activated by the beam striking the target only at the precise lance-like relative distance. This would give a pleasant knocked-off- backwards motion.
-- bs0u0155, Jan 22 2021


// pleasant //

Hmmm.

<Aside>

"Igor, quadruple the amount of Sodium Azide in the next batch !"

</Aside>
-- 8th of 7, Jan 22 2021



random, halfbakery