How the Pogo Stick Leapt From Classic Toy to Extreme Sport
Three lone inventors took the gadget that had changed little since it was invented more than 80 years ago and transformed it into a gnarly, big air machine
- By Ariel Sabar
- Smithsonian magazine, September 2012, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 7)
Brown developed the BowGo to prove a simple idea: that with the right design and materials, a lightweight spring could conserve an extraordinarily high share of the energy put into it, with minimal losses to friction.
“A pogo looks to us like a toy,” said Matt Mason, the director of Carnegie Mellon’s Robotics Institute, where Brown has worked for three decades. “To Ben, it’s an idea taken to its most radical extreme.”
Brown, a onetime mechanical engineer for Pittsburgh’s steel mills, joined Carnegie Mellon in the early 1980s and worked on Defense Department-funded research into “legged locomotion”—robots that walk, run and hop. The military was interested in vehicles that balanced on legs and could roam mountainsides, swamps and other terrain too rugged for trucks or tanks.
Brown and his colleagues built a stable of hopping one-legged robots that could leap over objects and move nimbly at nearly five miles per hour without losing their balance. But the hoppers—picture a 38-pound bird cage on a swiveling stilt—were energy hogs. Powered by hydraulics and compressed air, they had to be tethered to pumps, electrical outlets and computers. Brown was left wondering: Could you build a leg light and efficient enough to bounce without external power?
“Kangaroos were always inspiring,” Brown told me, “because the kangaroo uses an Achilles tendon that stores a huge amount of energy and allows it to hop efficiently.”
In the late 1990s he and a graduate student, Garth Zeglin, bent a six-inch length of piano wire and joined the ends with a piece of string that held the wire taut, like a bow. They called it a “bow leg,” and tested it on an inclined air-hockey table. When dropped, the leg flexed and recoiled, bouncing back to between 80 and 90 percent of its original height, a feat of energy conservation.
Brown wanted to put his idea to a bigger test. One route would be to build a battery-powered, human-size hopping robot with an onboard computer, stabilizing gyroscope and giant bow leg. He opted instead for a pogo stick.
“It was really the easiest way to build a robot without all the robot technology,” Brown said. The only power source, thrust actuator, leg position controller and altitude sensor you needed was a flesh-and-blood rider.
In 2000, Brown and another Carnegie Mellon engineer, Illah Nourbakhsh, built their first BowGo prototype. Instead of piano wire, they bolted a strip of structural-grade fiberglass to the outside of the pogo’s aluminum frame. They fastened the top of the fiberglass strip near the handlebars and the bottom to the plunger. When a rider lands and the plunger shuttles through the frame, the strip flexes and then abruptly straightens, reversing the plunger and launching the rider skyward with as much as 1,200 pounds of force. Ounce for ounce, they discovered, this fiberglass “leaf spring” stored as much as five times the elastic energy as a conventional steel coil.
After a couple of years of field testing in his backyard and on campus greens, Brown pogoed over a bar set at 38 inches. “A couple of times, the foot slipped out and I was unconscious for a bit,” Brown recalled. “I remember some guy standing over me and saying, ‘Do you know your name?’”
It became clear that Brown, a grandfather of four, needed a younger test pilot. He shipped a prototype to Curt Markwardt, a Southern California video game tester who learned his first tricks on a $5 pogo stick that a friend had bought as a joke at a toy store’s going-out-of-business sale.
Within months Markwardt had somersaulted on the BowGo over his car and cleared a bar set at 8 feet 7 inches, a record. When he’d first told friends about his passion for pogo, “people would kind of chuckle,” Markwardt told me. “They think of little kids bopping up and down and not doing anything.” But when “they see you jump six feet in the air and you do a flip, holy cow...it turns into instant awesome.”
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Comments (4)
i alwaysed liked pogo sticks even though i could only do 2 tricks 1=bounce up and down 2=jump on and off stuff. but it is still fun
Posted by Bryce on September 24,2012 | 08:32 PM
I used to pogo when I was about 6 or 7 years old... Did some really radical stuff like jumping up and down the stairs and picnic benches. One day my mom saw me pounce up the stairs and onto the picnic bench on the porch, from there I launched over the rail for a 12 foot drop, I had no problem with the landing but for some odd reason my stick disappeared after that day ...
Posted by mikem on September 13,2012 | 09:36 PM
Ariel: I was looking for a way to email you. In 1967 I met an inventor, John Ray Wilkinson, who had made a 2-stroke powered pogo stick. I believe the device was published in some motorcycle related publications of the day. It would boost the rider to some considerable height - and though I raced motorcycles at the time, I was unwilling to try the thing myself. I am a designer and builder of unusual engines myself - and have run my engines on karts. One of my engines helped get me a job at McCulloch corp where I designed engines for snowmobiles, motorcycles, karts, helicopters, etc. I can send you some photos of powered pogo sticks (Von Dutch designed one too - don't know if he built his or not). Thanks for the article.... Best regards, Mike David Savin
Posted by Mike Savin on September 5,2012 | 07:53 PM
Wow, I loved this article. Fascinating portrayal of the three very different inventors with three very different paths to successful pogo making.
Posted by Kathy on August 21,2012 | 08:09 PM