mark anders

Shredder

A stronger, cheaper surfboard made of the same material as a moving box

Clear Seas: This surfboard’s frame is cut from 16.6 square feet of cardboard and covered in transparent fiberglass. Photo by Brian Klutch
When it came time to replace his old surfboard, Mike Sheldrake decided to build his own. But the former Web programmer didn’t have the sculpting skills to carve one out of foam the way professional builders do. So he used 3-D modeling software to design a snap-together deck that’s as sturdy as a conventional model and performs just as well, made from the cheapest material he could find: cardboard.

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Underwater Overtime

Ocean-dive longer with a military-style system that recycles your air

If you plunge into the sea to ogle exotic wildlife, why not stay a while—and get an even closer view? Cave-diving engineer Bill Stone [see Journey from the Center of the Earth, February 2007] makes that possible with the most user-friendly version yet of a rebreather, a device that recycles your exhaled air, removes carbon dioxide, and adds oxygen. (A scuba device quickly burns through tanks of fresh air.)

On a typical dive, the Poseidon Discovery lets divers stay underwater at least three times as long as scuba gear can, and since you dont exhale into the water, you dont create bubbles or noise that can scare off fish.

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