[STL Geocaching] Re: Geocaching Display Idea

  • From: Glenn Nash <GLNash@xxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: geocaching@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Mon, 18 Mar 2002 13:54:10 -0600

Holy smokes, what an idea. Surprised that no one has thought of that before.
It sounds like a lot of work but I think it would be worth it. I was at bass
pro shop yesterday and there were 2 or 3 GPS reps each with cool displays
but NONE were this neat. The exhibit designers/ constructors at the science
center might even help build it. You know,  just so it meets their codes for
quality construction and all that. And having a cache there also is really
neat. I think I like it.  I think going as a group or at least sounding like
you come from "the Association"  makes ya sound kind of official too. :)

glenn

-----Original Message-----
From: geocaching-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
[mailto:geocaching-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx]On Behalf Of BEDenney@xxxxxxx

Hey everyone, I thought I would jump on the bandwagon and get in on the
discussions.

I also have an idea that I have been kicking around and wanted to propose it
to you and see what you think.  I dont think I want to attempt it by myself,
besides, a group may be more fun as well as provide some basis of
'authority'.

The idea is to construct a professional looking museum quality display that
explains how GPS works.  Think of it as a science fair project on steroids.
I have several sketches of different ideas from a light based model that you
push a button to show different aspects, to a rotating 3D model of
satelites,
to a simplified hands on thing that children could get their hands on.  My
personal favorite is a way to show that using one satelite makes a sphere,
two make a circle, three isolates 2 points, and four a single point along
with an atomic clock accuracy.  This would be in a 3D display of satelites
over the US, concentrating on a Spot in St. Louis, with an actual GPS device
imbeded into the display showing a live reading.

Once a good plan is somewhat drafted and agreed upon, I wanted to propose it
to the powers that be at the St. Louis Science Center and see if they would
accept it as a local contribution and display it in an appropriate place,
possibly near a window so that a GPS device could take readings in close
proximity.  If they bite, then a few calls to Garmin or other companies
might
get a few thousand dollars to fund the project as well as a donated GPS or
two.

Working on the project would take a few months and quite a few hours of
labor
to do it right.  In some corner, there would be a plaque thanking the
corporate sponser and possibly a 'built and donated by the St. Louis
Geocachers Association.'

Now, some of you may say that this would be pretty cool in itself (some
others are thinking 'what, and loose all of that precious caching time'),
but
here is the kicker that might sway you. Into the display, I would want to
build a secret compartment or hidden drawer, accessable by combination only
or some trick as a magnetic or hidden catch release that would reveal....
yup, you guessed it, a geocache.

Flight of fancy or do-able.  Vote on it and get back to me.

Spinner
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