Have there been any technological advances in bouncy ball technology in the last decade or two?
from DoGeeseSeeGod@lemmy.blahaj.zone to nostupidquestions@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 00:55
https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/31422928

Have there been any technological advances in boucey bouncy ball technology in the last decade or two? What is the most dangerous boucey bouncy ball I can buy?

Edit: I will admit 3 things.

  1. I don’t spell good
  2. I def forgot about newtons 3rd law of motion and that bouncy balls aren’t magic or something. They will always have less energy than I throw it with after the 1st bounce.
  3. Gonna have to think of new way to commit murder. I could shoot bouncy balls out of potato cannon but that feels cheap.
  4. I don’t count good either

#nostupidquestions

threaded - newest

BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 01:13 next collapse

Bouncy balls are already reasonably efficient. If you want them to be more dangerous, you just get ones that weigh more.

betterdeadthanreddit@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 02:40 collapse

Or make them out of nitrogen triiodide.

xxce2AAb@feddit.dk on 07 Sep 03:08 collapse

Can… can we add shrapnel?

betterdeadthanreddit@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 03:15 collapse

Yes, but only a little and just this once.

xxce2AAb@feddit.dk on 07 Sep 03:45 next collapse

Oh, all right. Now, let’s talk about the practical applications of Octanitrocubane and the potential to make everything in the vicinity bounce (but not for long).

NotSteve_@piefed.ca on 07 Sep 06:03 collapse

As a treat

idkwhatimdoing@sh.itjust.works on 07 Sep 01:58 next collapse

Most dangerous bouncy ball is a golf ball

Edit: golf not gold

DoGeeseSeeGod@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Sep 13:58 collapse

This is a pretty good answer, but my inner child says nah. Golf balls are for adults. I want a bouncy ball!! Or bouncey ball! (depending on your persuasion 😉)

ace_garp@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 22:29 collapse

You can carefully crack open a golf ball to reveal a decent bouncy-ball.

From memory, I think it is a weighted core, wrapped in a long thin strand of rubber.

Glue the rubber strand to stop it unravelling and it should be good.

(Crack open carefully means with a vice and a hacksaw, rather than using any knife)

Edit: Turns out the wound rubber strand is only in balls up to 1970, newer balls have solid cores which may be fixed to the outer shell in a way that is hard to extract the bouncy-ball.

FilthyHands@sh.itjust.works on 07 Sep 02:31 next collapse

Check out amorphous metals

DoGeeseSeeGod@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Sep 14:42 collapse

Thanks for the video! Those metals are dope!

Makes me want a Saw movie based on weird real life science taken to the extreme. Jigsaw meets Cave Johnson!

Like two people are trapped together in a giant amorphous metal room made to look like a pinball machine. One of the people has to get in a giant amorphous pinball. The other person controls the paddles. If they score enough points in time they both move on to the next room. Well both if the one person isn’t splattered inside the pinball.

Sometimes I worry myself slightly

AmidFuror@fedia.io on 07 Sep 03:56 next collapse

Please stop putting in comments about bouncy balls. OP made clear by typing it twice he she wants to know about boucy boucey balls.

DoGeeseSeeGod@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Sep 04:37 next collapse

1st off she not he.

2nd thank you for the sass about my spelling mistakes! It’s especially nice cuz you reversed them yourself lol

AmidFuror@fedia.io on 07 Sep 08:24 collapse

Thanks. Fixed it.

egrets@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 08:12 collapse

*boucey – they’re Irish, not Scotch

sanguinepar@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 14:40 collapse

I see you’ve got a rye sense of humour.

s38b35M5@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 04:59 next collapse

The Elders tell of a young ball much like you. She bounced three meters in the air. Then she bounced 1.8 meters in the air. Then she bounced four meters in the air. Do I make myself clear?

SirActionSack@aussie.zone on 07 Sep 06:16 collapse

Mr. Ambassador, our people tell the same story.

RedEyeFlightControl@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 13:24 collapse

We’ve seen too many body bags and ball sacks!

Telcontar@lemmy.today on 07 Sep 05:18 next collapse

I remember seeing rubber balls about the size of a bocce ball filled to a high pressure with helium. Not enough buoyancy to float, but they definitely took off when you chucked it at the ground

DoGeeseSeeGod@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Sep 14:07 collapse

Holy fuck that is amazing! Wanna try one so bad lol

pineapplelover@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Sep 06:23 next collapse

I actually did this research a while back and there is an ultimate bouncy ball that I forgot the name of. I will report here once I find it again.

Edit: Megabounce XTR is the one.

I also have tried the Waboba Moon Ball and that’s cool but the craters make it bounce all over the place. Up to you whether or not you want that, but I can’t have that unpredictability indoors.

Professorozone@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 10:25 next collapse

I’m sorry, but the OP asked about boucey balls, not bouncy balls. Nice try though.

tungsten5@lemmy.zip on 07 Sep 11:23 next collapse

Is ot really that good, the xtr? I just looked it up and am feeling an intense urge to impulse buy

pineapplelover@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 07 Sep 16:31 collapse

The megabounce xtr says it bounces 85% of its dropped height and its made out of PU foam so it does have durability issues.

The Moon Ball is made out of some kind of hard rubber and that thing will never break on you. You will most likely break things around the house before you ever break the ball.

DoGeeseSeeGod@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Sep 14:06 collapse

Thank you for doing this important research!! I had one with craters when I was a kid! So very dangerous and fun!!

Aeao@lemmy.world on 07 Sep 14:10 collapse

Might’ve been a golf ball

altphoto@lemmy.today on 07 Sep 13:40 next collapse

The car still flies if anyone is wondering.

fmstrat@lemmy.nowsci.com on 07 Sep 15:14 next collapse

Since no one is actually answering your question. This was published about 2 weeks ago: arxiv.org/abs/2508.18519

DoGeeseSeeGod@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 07 Sep 15:34 collapse

An actual scientific article? Love it, thank you!

tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip on 07 Sep 22:02 next collapse

It’s not new but there are balls made for bounce juggling that have a 90% bounce ratio

renegadejuggling.com/play-g-force-bounce-ball-60m…

glibg@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 22:11 collapse

These look like so much fun, thank you!

glibg@lemmy.ca on 07 Sep 22:14 next collapse

An outdoor lacrosse ball is super bouncy and has a decent amount of weight. Fun to play with against a wall.

HobbitFoot@thelemmy.club on 08 Sep 12:45 collapse

The NBA developed a 3d printed basketball. Does material science count?

LegoRobinHood@lemmy.ml on 08 Sep 12:52 collapse

As a materials science student, I’m gonna go with… heck yes!!