Not begging for advice here as much as I am wondering if anyone already has offhand knowledge of these things seeing as I will research into them further but here it goes...
I am doing this project for a freshman engineering course where I'm designing a ring that will shock your finger from a remote trigger.
I'm familiar with IR switches, but for this I'll need something that will be able to flip a switch remotely from up to 10-20 feet with some small obstructions. Any ideas? I'm guessing maybe a sound activated trigger that is out of audible range may work... but i dunno
As for the ring. It will need to be able to deliver a fairly painful shock :p but nothing too serious.
1. One idea is to use a piezoelectric striker device. These can create high voltages without a power source (apart from the striker part). The only problem with this is that the cylinder will stick out from the ring and I'm not sure how small they can be nonetheless. This is a hypothetical design though, so if I figure out how to modify the general piezoelectric striker design to conform to the shape of the ring, that would be good...(even though I wouldn't necessarily have the means to create it)
2. The second idea is to just basically design the ring as a (hollow cored) capacitor. This would be good because it would conform to the shape of the ring, but I'd have to worry about dissipation of charge over the 12 hrs or so that the ring will be away from any sort of charging dock.