Eva, and I'd hit you with the wood.Tinus wrote:Which would you rather be hit by, a piece of wood or a piece of rubber or eva?
See, that's the point. You are running ON the pavement. The pavement is not running on you.
Same reason.Why are rubber bullets less lethal... because they transmit the shock to the body?
Do you live in a wood house or one made of foam?Why does soft elastic material protect breakable things (e.g glassware but it could also be your feet)?
I don't use a gym and am not interested in why they do anything.Why are mattresses used in the gym made of foam and not of wood?
If you want protection then wear shoes with wood or hard rubber heels. If you want shock then wear shoes with eva heels and soles. This is why there have been and continue to be so many injuries since the advent of eva foam used in running shoes. And this is why such shoes "wear out" (but were never any good anyway) in two or three weeks, whereas they should be lasting a long time. Hard rubber or polyurethane lasts a long time. Eva foam does not, is worthless, provides no protection and is the cause of injuries.Feet really need protection against shocks when they are doing hard work. Well, maybe not all feet. Your feet might be able to sustain the shocks but it is not due to the physics which you propose which is really erogenous.
You have not even tried what I have done.
Think for yourself, instead of repeating what you've been told by shoe advertisements.