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Bed of nails

 
Wikipedia: Bed of nails
A bed of nails
"Magic" trick with smashing cinder blocks placed on a "fakir"
Herbert Ponting's 1907 photograph of "a fakir in Benares" (Varanasi), India
Modern version of the ancient bed of nail

A bed of nails is an oblong piece of wood the size of a bed with nails pointing upwards out of it. It appears to the spectator that anyone lying on this "bed" would be injured by the nails, but this is not so, assuming the nails are numerous enough, since the weight is distributed between them such that the force exerted on each nail is not enough to break the person's skin.

Uses

One use of such a device is for magic tricks or physics demonstrations. A famous example requires a volunteer to lie on a bed of several thousand nails, with a board on top of him. Cinder blocks are placed on the board, and then smashed with a sledgehammer. Despite the seemingly unavoidable force, the volunteer is not harmed: the force from the blow is spread among the thousands of nails, and the breaking of the blocks also dissipates much of the energy from the hammer.

This demonstration of the principles of weight distribution requires that the weight of the volunteer be spread over as many nails as possible. The most dangerous part is the moment of lying down or getting up, when one's weight may briefly be supported on only a few nails. Some "beds" have rails mounted at the sides to help users lie down and get up safely.

History

The bed of nails is also used by some for meditation, particularly in India and other parts of Asia.[citation needed]

In 2009, a commercial version of the bed of nails became highly popular in Sweden. More than 300,000 of the modern version of the ancient bed of nails were sold. The modern version of the bed of nails has spikes made of PVC and a bottom made by cotton and sponge, unlike the old versions which were made of wood. It is used for pain relief and relaxation.

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Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Bed of nails" Read more

 

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