Touchpads are extensively used in swimming competitions due to their accuracy and reliability. But how do these swimming touchpads work? This Buzzle post explains the working of swimming touchpads.
Thank You for the ErrorIn the 1960 Olympic swimming tournament, the US team thought they had been on the wrong end of a gaffe by the timer, when Lance Larson had to be content with silver in the 100 m freestyle. Touchpads had not been accepted by the majority of sports coaches in the US before the incident, but they became popular after outcry over the rankling Olympic defeat.Touchpads are mainly associated with touchscreen electronic gadgets such as laptops and mobile phones. But they also serve other important purposes. One of them is competitive swimming.
Starting block pads are installed in the starting blocks from which swimmers start their laps. They are pressure-sensitive, and are triggered when the pressure of the swimmer standing on it is lifted as he/she jumps.The starting block pad is crucial in relay runs, where it needs to determine whether a competitor started his lap before the previous one completed his. Despite this, it is not used to determine false starts in solo events. False starts are decided through visual cue by referees, and the starter block pads are merely used to provide the reaction times of the swimmers.Lane PadsLane pads are installed on swimming pool walls, and are used to time laps. It is designed to trigger the timer when the player touches it, and yet, remain unaffected by the constant movement of water all around it. It is made of stainless steel, aluminum, or plastic. It is sometimes coated with a smooth surface, to prevent injury to the swimmers when they kick off from it. Lane pads differ from starting block pads in one way; lane pads have to be, and are thus, designed to be portable and lighter than starting block pads.Lane pads can also show split times, triggering the timer every time it is touched. Lane pads are also used as lap counters. Every time the competitor kicks off from the pad at either end of the pool, 1 lap is deducted and the remaining number is displayed.History of TouchpadsSwimming touchpads were invented by Bill Parkinson, Emeritus Professor of Physics at the University of Michigan, in the mid-1950s. In those days, timing and refereeing swimming was a messy affair. There used to be 3 timers and 2 judges per lane―amounting to 30 adjudicators on a 6-lane pool, not counting the starter and the referee! Obviously, however many timers worked to get the timing right, it was an inevitable fact that the splashing and the sheer crowding made it an unenviable task.Is Scuba Diving Training Right For Me?


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