The pogo stick meets robotics

Opinion
Aug 13, 20091 min

Carnegie Mellon's BowGo could bounce competition at Pogopalooza event

BowGo pogo stick
We’ve written about Carnegie Mellon researchers raising Charles Darwin from the dead, building a robo-tank and developing a gigapixel camera for the masses. But they might have really outdone themselves with the BowGo, a super bouncy pogo stick from CMU’s Robotics Institute that the organizer of next week’s Pogopalooza event in Pittsburgh says is likely to shine in the high jump (possibly via 9-foot-high jumps).  Ben Brown, a Robotics Institute project scientist who invented BowGo about 9 years ago, said the sticks get their springiness from a fiber-reinforced composite bow that packs up to five times as much elastic energy per unit of mass as a steel coil spring. BowGos are not commercially available, but demand from extreme athletes could change that.