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I need a mechanical way to make my soldiers who are combat explorers in a forest to be able to jump higher than normal. They will be equipped with a variety of weapons from normal hand held weapons up to rocket launchers, and grenade launchers. Most soldiers will be armed with a normal rifle or smaller weapon platform plus a choice of light rocket launcher or a grenade launcher, not both. No soldier will have more than that weight wise other than reserve ammo, and a backpack containing basic survival necessities.

The time period for equipment is our normal history up to the end of ww2, but there is also the inclusion of dieselpunk (it also doesn't take place on Earth, but the planet is similar enough). The main area this would be used would be in a thick forest where movement at the base could be near impossible at times.

Ideally there would also be a combat application to it as well where it would allow soldiers to reposition across the battlefield quickly. For our band of soldiers the battlefield is 360 and there really is no real frontline. Something that would let them hop over terrain, let them hop from tree to tree like a monkey, or scale the sides of a shallow mountain, or slowly hop down from a large height using their environment.

The absolute MAX jump height would just need to be 3 meters, if they want to go any higher they would need to make successive jumps and make a path using their environment.

I am totally fine with elements of handwavium/unobtanium so long as there is a mechanical component to the equipment and sort of grounded reality to it (so no hardened skeleton system + better muscles and that's all). A dedicated resupply squad also joins the team, so replenish able sources are totally fine.

Note that jumping in this case doesn't have to mean only mechanical motion from legs or springs. Something like a jump pack/jump kit from Titanfall or star wars would also be considered a jump device (jump packs from both of those settings just seem a bit to futuristic for this setting, but the use of fuel or gas is valid so long as it doesn't toast the buns of our gang to much).

If one needs an idea for weight, think of something like a US paratrooper during WW2 with all their combat equipment strapped to them, including their extra equipment.

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    $\begingroup$ Spring-heeled Jack? Google it // so these then or a powered version of them, but that aside a question for Worldbuilding SE is more on track if it asks for critique of an idea rather than for ideas so you may find this question closed. due to objections along those lines. $\endgroup$
    – Pelinore
    Apr 15, 2021 at 11:05
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    $\begingroup$ @Pelinore Superb, pretty useless on muddy fields I should think though. $\endgroup$ Apr 15, 2021 at 14:17
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    $\begingroup$ @Draft85 ah, well, now that's where the new range of jump stilt snow shoe attachments comes in handy. $\endgroup$
    – Pelinore
    Apr 15, 2021 at 14:20
  • $\begingroup$ This one doesn’t have as much basis in science, but would sound cool to readers. Maybe some way to temporarily reduce gravity by 30-40% around somebody (not sure how the science on this would work in dieselpunk or not, so sorry if this couldn’t be feasibly implemented) $\endgroup$ Apr 15, 2021 at 18:17
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    $\begingroup$ One thing to keep in mind is that for such weight, the acceleration (force) required for a 3m jump will not be kind to the soldiers knees or rest of the body $\endgroup$
    – Hobbamok
    Apr 16, 2021 at 8:57

6 Answers 6

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Kangaroo boots

enter image description here

I had a set of these years ago, they're basically a spring extending down from your calf to about 30cm below your feet.

With practice, you can run faster and jump much higher than you normally can. I was having so much fun I never stopped to measure how high my jump got, but I could touch a gutter with my hand that I later measured was ~3.6m off the ground (I'm 166cm tall normally).

They work best on concrete or brick or similar, but I was able to use them "off road" (as in packed dirt or grass) with success. Your are vulnerable to tripping if your not aware of the surface your manoeuvring on, (and when you fall, you need a lot of energy to get back up without help or undoing them), but practice could make perfect.

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    $\begingroup$ I'm failing to imagine how you would even get back up after falling down.. $\endgroup$
    – T James
    Apr 15, 2021 at 20:23
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    $\begingroup$ this feels like a very fast way to die. $\endgroup$
    – Daniel B
    Apr 15, 2021 at 22:24
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    $\begingroup$ @TJames start from kneeling. Rotate right leg out and around while pulling right knee up to chin, putting the right base on the ground in front of your left leg, and then transfer your weight onto your right leg, and push down with all you've got. $\endgroup$
    – Ash
    Apr 16, 2021 at 0:15
  • $\begingroup$ @TJames here's an "instructional video" for the use of similar legs.youtube.com/watch?v=1iATQCeHHh0 As for getting up..(without anything to hold on to). You just extend one leg out to the side, hold the other as close as you can and still move. then roll your center of mass until it is exactly between the two supports, and push with the closer foot. Kind of like a first-time skater on the ice. $\endgroup$
    – PcMan
    Apr 16, 2021 at 6:39
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    $\begingroup$ Amazing! Who says money can't buy happiness... $\endgroup$
    – T James
    Apr 16, 2021 at 14:22
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Ash's kangaroo boots are a great option, but if we really want to lean into the Dieselpunk style, consider something like the Soviet 'rocket boots'. These were essentially a pair of two-stroke pistons on either side of each foot connected to a platform under the sole. Stepping down compressed the fuel-air mixture in the piston, and when ignited they would push the user up, up, and away.

The inventor got up to 10 mph in them, and a test runner reached about 22 mph. No mention of maximum jump height, but according to Google the average person's top speed when running is somewhere around 5-6 mph. Assuming they manage a 2-4x boost to your jump along with your speed, that takes the average person's jump height from ~16 inches (again, a Google 'rich snippet' value) to 32-64 inches, or a little over 1.5m at the upper end.

This was with real-world 1970s technology, so the amount of handwavium to punch these numbers up to get your 3m jump height is probably minimal.

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    $\begingroup$ Great find, but Google's "average person's top speed when running" must include toddlers and people with mobility issues or is looking at middle or long distances. To give one example, average sprint speeds for 100-200m for under-15 girls are over 15 mph. Combat-fit soldiers will be more burdened with gear but have much higher fitness standards than the average person. $\endgroup$ Apr 16, 2021 at 1:04
  • $\begingroup$ Why not combine the two answers? $\endgroup$
    – Hobbamok
    Apr 16, 2021 at 8:55
  • $\begingroup$ @KerrAvon2055 good point - I'm guessing that value is a sustained run over a sprint. I do like the idea of "you can hide but you can't run" that this leads to - characters might be able to beat the Leadfoot Brigade or whatever we're calling the diesel-shoed troops to cover, but you can't get fully away without a vehicle. $\endgroup$
    – Pottermost
    Apr 16, 2021 at 14:22
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    $\begingroup$ @Hobbamok If you mean literally merging them I'm open to it, but am still pretty new to SE and have no idea how to do that! $\endgroup$
    – Pottermost
    Apr 16, 2021 at 14:23
  • $\begingroup$ @Pottermost that is sadly not anything anyone can technically do here (it doesnt come up that often) but OP can do it in his story :) $\endgroup$
    – Hobbamok
    Apr 18, 2021 at 12:13
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I here shamelessly recycle my old answer. Shamelessly!

A clothing material or other method to slow free-fall descent down walls

Super pogo stick.

super pogo

https://www.pinterest.com/pin/554576141587551724/

Your soldiers carry pogo sticks on their backs. The unobtainium springs capture the energy of their descent, and when they are in a hurry give it right back; when they hit the ground they decelerate over a split second then bounce right back up nearly as high as they were. For long drops you need an exosuit on because it is still a lot of work for the quads.

The super pogo will be good for other things too. Of course you can move quickly on it although the exosuit itself is about as good; mostly this is useful if your exosuit is damaged or you don't have it, but you have the pogo. A changed setting will keep the spring coiled and after jumping down the soldier can stay on ground level; the pogo will gradually uncoil the spring if desired or (more dangerously) stay coiled until deployed. A soldier can gradually coil the spring by making a lot of little jumps and storing the energy. That can be used for an ascent, or punching open doors.


I note that the super pogo stick also finds use as a nonlethal weapon. A boxing glove might be placed over the foot for this use.

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Short-burst jetpack mounted on the back.

The exhaust can be directed to the sides for safety or further to the back to also give a strong forward push and not endanger the wearer. There can also be special heat resistant trousers for jump crew. The need to have it compact would stop you from flying around for longer as carrying a larger fuel pack would make you less nimble.

There is a really nice dieselpunk design by Safdar Ali Mirza which shows how a jetpack could look like in that genre:

enter image description here

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    $\begingroup$ would a gas like steam or another non extremely high temp gas exhaust be viable in a situation like this or is the power/thrust produced by them simply to low to send someone high/assist in their jump? Its not like they need constant flight capability. The retro/mechanical vibe of the jet pack in question looks interesting $\endgroup$
    – FIRES_ICE
    Apr 16, 2021 at 2:27
  • $\begingroup$ Anything that can exit the exhaust at high velocity will do the trick. $\endgroup$
    – dubious
    Apr 16, 2021 at 6:20
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I would recommend a combination of the super pogo stick, Soviet diesel boots, and kangaroo legs. Basically, do an image search for "digitigrade stilts" and use those pics as a starting point. Also check out the video game Valley and their L.E.A.F. suits.

Basically, though, take some digitigrade stilts, extend them upward to connect at the hips; maybe incorporate a torso element with a pack frame. Paint them olive drab, of course. Now add some beefy-looking coil springs or volute springs--components that will visually remind people of tank suspensions--to the thigh section and maybe the calf section as well. Think about adding some lightweight armor panels to protect the knees and thighs, or maybe the knees and shins or just the knees? Throw in some small diesel pistons (like on the Soviet boots), and presto: you've got a combat engineer's load-hauling frame.

The Load Bearing Equipment, Individual, Engineer's (LBEIE, commonly called "Elbies") were, of course, originally developed to give combat engineers the ability to carry heavy loads over soft, muddy terrain. Once they reached the fields, trouble with the speed and force limiters led engineers to routinely disconnect or remove those devices, and they discovered that with practice, a skilled user could run at competitive hundred-yard-dash speeds while carrying a hundred pounds of gear, and have a vertical leap of around six feet.

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It might not be as instantaneous as a jump-assist technology, but what about a hot-burning material, and a personal hot air balloon?

All that's really necessary is something to heat /fill the air inside the balloon fast enough, and they'd have as much vertical as they need-- until the material runs out. Something similar might work for lighter-than-air gases, and a blimp sort of structure.

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