Spanx on Steroids: How Speedo Created the New Record-Breaking Swimsuit
After Olympic officials banned the swimsuit that caused records to fall at the 2008 games, scientists are back with a new outfit that might break even more
- By Jim Morrison
- Smithsonian.com, June 27, 2012, Subscribe
In 2009, Speedo’s research team began to brainstorm innovative ways to help swimmers go faster. The polyurethane bodysuits that contributed to an astonishing number of swimming world records over the previous 18 months had been banned. To think outside the box, the Speedo representatives met outside the lab, joining academics, coaches and research consultants at hotels, conference centers and even an English country house to spawn ideas, ideas inspired more by Captain Avenger than Mark Spitz.
“Lots of conversation was had around wild and wacky ideas,” says Joe Santry, the research manager for Speedo’s Aqualab in Nottingham, England. “Some of the initial sketch concepts brought to the table looked like a superhero suit with a sleek cap, goggle, and suit combination that wouldn’t look out of place in a Marvel comic.”
They were trying to replace the now infamous full-body LZR suit. Dubbed “the rubber suit,” it compressed a swimmer’s body into a streamlined tube and trapped air, adding buoyancy and reducing drag. Speedo says 98 percent of the medals at the 2008 Olympics were won by swimmers wearing the LZR. Michael Phelps set world marks in seven of his eight events at Beijing wearing the suit, but applauded its ban.
The new rules, in effect since 2010, permit only “jammers,” suits from the kneecap to navel for men, and from the knee to shoulder for women. The fabric must be air permeable, and a suit may not have any fastening devices such as a zipper, a response to companies that began creating wetsuit-like neoprene suits after the 2008 Olympics.
Ultimately, Speedo decided to rebuild not only the suit, but create a “racing system” that it claims combines the suit and the goggles and cap working in synergy to reduce drag and improve performance.
At Aqualab, researchers took four years and spent 55,000 man-hours to produce what Speedo calls the Fastskin 3 system. The internal team of 19 supplemented by outside experts talked to hydrodynamic experts, aircraft engineers and nano textile producers. They called on experts in kinesiology, biomechanics, fluid dynamics and even a sports psychologist, who suggested a blue-gray tinge on goggle lenses to instill a sense of calm and focus. They tried the “Six Thinking Hats” method of brainstorming, a green hat for creative ways to attack a problem, a black one to look at the feasibility of those ideas. They “reverse brainstormed,” picturing how to make a swimmer go as slow as possible with oversized goggles and a suit compressing the body so parts stuck out, creating drag. The crazier the idea, the better.
“It opens up your mind,” Santry says. “We all have a strict path of how we get used to thinking. We used those techniques to pull out interesting facts and work around ideas.”
They scanned athletes in 3-D, creating avatars so computational fluid dynamics software could uncover where turbulence and drag were being created, similar to racing car teams that use aerodynamic modeling. “We found the head and goggles created huge amounts of turbulence at the top of the body, and this slowed down the swimmer and decreased the effect of the suit,” Santry says. “So much like a Formula 1 car, which has this wing that allows you to set up airflow, we realized we needed something like that for a swimmer.”
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Comments (6)
I have a good friend that is 8 years old He was in n accident and Is having to learn to walk among many other challenges all over again. The family was told compression shirts and pants of some kind could help with his shakes while learning to walk. Could it be a full body swim suit could help him? Please email me with any thoughts or ideas on this! Your product sounds like it will not only help a swimmer win a race but could help an eight year old little boy win back his ability to walk and feed him self.... Thank you, Maranda
Posted by Maranda Morin on October 12,2012 | 01:06 PM
deane chase, Joshua Caldwell - That's a very good solution. In addition to competing nude,anyone who tested as a male should also be disqualified. I would think these simple changes to the rules would make swimming competition much more popular than say, women's basketball, which everyone hates. These rules, should they prove popular with spectators, should also be adopted for gymnastics.
Posted by Guglielmo Boogliodemus on July 31,2012 | 10:04 PM
Okay, want to boost flagging Olympic attendance? Let's try this: nude participants, in accordance with Olympic tradition, and in a new twist for the media age: nude spectators. Occasional erotic content mixed with plenty of comic opportunity. Major sponsorship opportunities for contraceptive manufacturers.
Posted by Trail Head on July 31,2012 | 04:53 AM
"trapped air". Are you serious???
Posted by p1itopre on July 25,2012 | 11:33 PM
Why not make it mandatory that all swimmers, divers, and any other aquatic comepetition participant must be NAKED, (nude,unclothed) with no hint of external visable or detectable? And a long as we're at it, disqualify anyone with hair shorter than 3"!
Posted by deane chase on July 23,2012 | 02:55 PM
The Olympics should not be about a technology race, Olympic events should be done in the nude as they started. This is the only true way to compete and explore the limits of human potential.
Posted by Joshua Caldwell on July 22,2012 | 11:30 AM