Wiimote Tennis Serve Trainer Won’t Make You Into Roger Federer
The line between Wii games and the real-life activities they emulate is increasingly squiggly and faint, no thanks to people like this guy, who’s jury-rigged a tennis serve trainer out of his Wiimote.
Its uses are limited—it exists solely to help train its user to throw a perfect serve height (A high, confident toss made 30-60cm. inside the baseline allows the server to uncoil both upward and forward into the court, making contact at 1.5 times body height)—and it might not be terribly practical, but you have to admire the ingenuity. Preemptive sic:
I poped (ed note: this is my favourite new verb) open my wiimote soldered in a few wires to the minus key and then taped the wiimote to left arm (I am right handed). Then I taped the other end of the wires to my thumb and wrapped a tennis ball in aluminium. So now when I had the ball in my hand it completed the circuit and pressed the button which registers the data in the software. I then toss the ball and when it leaves my hand it unpresses the button stopping the registry of the data from the accelerometer.
From here, our intrepid inventor is able to feed his data into a laptop to calculate his throw height and adjust accordingly. Clever. [Eyes on Tech—Thanks, Mans!]
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Comments (AU Comments | US Comments)
John, thank you for spelling "jury-rigged" correctly. You are awesome. "Jerry" has nothing to do with it.
senorbelly
Or aluminum.
aprather
I think the problem here is that he seems to be practicing his serve with a rotten peach...
aprather
This has got to be one of the stupidest things I've seen in a while...
@Ehrich Blackhound: um he is? Practicing doesn't just inherently make you good you know. If you practice wrong in fact, it makes you inherently WORSE.
The system he devised allows him to track his practicing, which in turn allows him to adjust and thus NOT practice his technique wrong.
Sure it might be easier to have a guy out there helping him, or a camera recording him, but this way allows for more than just telling him he's doing it wrong.
He can use the data to track any number of variables, like fatigue over time and the like.
Jim Topoleski
Or you could just PRACTICE YOUR SERVE TECHNIQUE!!!! WTF!!!
It won't even make you as good as #1000 in the world.