Brazilian scientist creates technology to "surf" out of water
The mechanism generates "waves" in plastic, sand, snow and silicone, and also in water
A Brazilian entrepreneur, Lincoln Neves Junior, invented a device that creates waves on a skate park called Dry Wave. The concept was designed to make waves propagate on surfaces such as plastic, grass, sand, snow and silicone, although it can also generate waves on liquid surfaces such as swimming pools, lakes and tanks, the English site reported. Surfer Today.
The inventor created a test platform where the dry artificial wave can be caught and speed can be gained for riding on the skate park. “It is ideal for action sports,” said Neves Junior who believes it has the potential to create many different fun waves for skateboarding, snowboarding, BMX, roller skating, as well as to develop new sports such as sand wave surfing.”
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