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 3 of 7)
Brown is eager for Razor to release an adult version of his stick, but so far, only the children’s model is for sale. The bow leg, meanwhile, is still kicking. In 2008, Brown and a team of colleagues won a grant from the National Science Foundation to develop the technology into a lightweight “parkour bot” that climbs by leaping between parallel walls.
When Bruce Spencer retired after 28 years as a firefighter in Huntington Beach, California, he imagined a simpler life. A husky man with a broad brow and ruggedly handsome features, he dreamed of flying his two-passenger Cessna to Idaho and Colorado and scouting the wilderness for a patch of earth to build a cabin and live out his years with his wife, Patti, in quiet.
A few months after leaving the department, though, Spencer hosted a family party. His nephew Josh Spencer had built a prototype adult-size pogo stick, stuffing a 33-inch steel spring into an aluminum tube. But the weight of all that metal made the stick unwieldy. Josh was venting about it at the party, and Bruce Spencer’s son Brian went to his dad for advice.
“Brian comes in and says, ‘Hey Dad, if you ever made a big pogo stick for adults, how would you do it?’” Bruce Spencer recalled.
Before joining the fire department, Spencer had earned a degree in aerospace engineering and worked at Northrop on the design team for a lightweight fighter jet that would become the F-18. His son’s question lit up a dormant part of his brain.
Spencer penciled a diagram in the margins of a newspaper. “Make an air spring,” he told his son, “because it would be very light.” With that, he considered himself rid of the matter. “Just fun and games,” he told me, with the tone of a man recalling a spell of youthful naiveté.
A few months later, Brian, a charismatic marketing executive, announced that he’d found an investor. He handed his father a check for $10,000.
Roused by the engineering challenge, Bruce Spencer dove into the project with such zeal that his wife often found him awake at night trying to unravel some pogo-related physics problem.
His first prototype was a Rube Goldberg mishmash of PVC irrigation pipe from Home Depot, truck tire valves, and pistons he machined in his garage. He found a polyurethane shock absorber at an off-road supply store and bolted it to the foot of the pogo to cushion landings. He pressurized the irrigation pipe to about 50 pounds per square inch with an air compressor.
When I asked Spencer for an everyday example of an air spring, he stood up from his desk chair and plopped back down. The seat dipped an inch or so under his weight, then rebounded, thanks to pressurized air in its support column. “It’s core technology,” he told me. “And no one had really made it work in a pogo stick.”
Spencer’s first prototypes worked, but the plunger recoiled with such vehemence that he felt as if he were riding a jackhammer. To sell his sticks commercially, he’d need a smoother ride.
He’d studied Boyle’s law in college and recalled that volume and pressure were inversely proportional: Compress air to half its original volume and the pressure doubles; compress volume by another half and pressure doubles again.
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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