sophiecentaur said:
Yes, it would be much easier to detect the presence of the capacity of your opponent when attached to your sabre if you were to use an AC signal. The fact is that, with an AC /HF signal, there IS a return signal path via the ground because of the capacity between your feet and the Earth.
I am surprised that no one has developed such a system already. It would make very good sense.
The olympic fencers use this method for their wireless technology, if i understand what you're saying correctly. Essentially it uses the body's natural capacitance to detect closed circuits. There are also RF designs that have been explored and work quite well, though I'm not sure what the status of their commercial availability is.
And if your sabre contacts his sabre no hit is registered because both sabres are at +5v here? Or maybe there is a metal tip that's insulated from the rest of the blade?
Is the sabre blade insulated from the handle?
But if you went with wireless HF, then contact with an opponent's sabre might produce similar effect to contact with his vest.
2 effective lines in fencing:
A - Ground (Lamé aka vest)
B - +5V - Blade, insulated from the hand.
C - (Tied to B in sabre)
In epee and foil the C line is used to detect invalid hits. In foil, the C line is used reverse of foil. Not entirely sure on the specifics, but basically when the pushbutton is pressed, it has to be grounded for foil to get a "hit" (against the vest). In foil if an invalid touch lands, the action is halted, which is why line #3 is required. In epee, no vests are worn and the floor is grounded, which allows one to recognize a valid hit by the fact that the tip is depressed but is NOT grounded. When the epee tip contacts the ground, no lights activate (I think? Idk I fence sabre :P)Note that for any NEW wireless fencing technology to be adopted, it has to be proven to be
1) Reliable
2) Low maintenance
3) Un-"Hackable". This means that there should be no way for the fencers or someone in the audience on behalf of the fencers to remotely trick the box into registering a hit. Encrypted LOS wireless LAN network radios like those used for squad-level communication by the military are probably going to be the most secure.