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STEM

Invent@SU Students Design Modular Padding for Skateboarders

Wednesday, January 17, 2018, By Alex Dunbar
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Students

Traditional pads help protect skateboarders from injury but can be bulky and limit mobility. As part of the Invent@SU program, students Tiago Da Costa and Lucas Lin designed modular padding called PhalHex that gives athletes unique and personalized protection.

Young man showing protectors on his arm

Tiago Da Costa demonstrates the PhalHex protectors.

“Longboarding really started based on surfboarding. It was sort of the idea to put wheels on a much longer board than a skateboard because it would offer you stability,” says Da Costa. “A lot of people wanted to do sort of urban surfing. They wanted to go down a hill like they would a wave.”

“Traditional skateboard pads, they look like a turtle shell. They wrap around your knees and your elbows. We conducted a survey and found a lot of people don’t like to wear them because they are uncomfortable and look ugly,” says Da Costa. “We thought that if we were able to incorporate a modular design, we would be able to make a product that can better wrap around you. It accommodates to you, not the other way around.”

“With our current design of the sleeve, it has many Velcro mounting points that are already designed on the sleeve,” says Lin. “These individual shields, they attach to the Velcro mounting points in the way that fits the user so the user can design where they want to put it and what they want to protect.”

The Invent@SU program is now accepting applications for summer 2018. Click here for more information.

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Alex Dunbar

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