• Question: Is there anything to do with engineering in running?

    Asked by LB_1107 to Ted, Kevin on 7 Mar 2019.
    • Photo: Ted Burke

      Ted Burke answered on 7 Mar 2019:


      There are some pieces of electronic technology that a lot of runners use. Maybe the most common one now is a GPS watch. It records where you’ve run, how fast you went, how many steps you took and so on. A lot of them also use an optical sensor to track heart rate. Some runners carefully plan the intensity of their training sessions with a target heart rate for different types of training. They can use their watch (sometimes with a chest strap) to measure their heart rate while they run and adjust their effort to achieve a particular rate. A lot of runners also upload the GPS data from their runs onto a cloud service like Strava so that they can view a record of all their runs online and see how many kilometres they’re clocking up.

      There is also some interesting engineering work going on in running shoes – analysing how different types of shoe affect the way a person runs and the forces on his/her feet, legs, knees, hips, etc.

    • Photo: Kevin OBrien

      Kevin OBrien answered on 11 Mar 2019: last edited 11 Mar 2019 8:52 am


      I know that some of the pacemakers I worked on used different systems to monitor the activity levels of those with them implanted to adjust the heart rate to meet requirements, similar to how the heart works normally.
      It allowed people to continue to lead an active lifestyle despite needing a pacemaker.
      Before this advancement, it was often difficult for pacemaker users to remain active, as their heart rate was fixed.

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