Got this off of a buddy's AIM profile. I don't know if its true, but its amusing regardless.
Good Lesson in Engineering
When NASA first started sending up astronauts, they quickly discovered that ball-point pens would not work in 0 gravity. To combat this problem, NASA scientists spent a decade and $12 billion developing a pen that writes in zero gravity, upside down, underwater, on almost any surface including glass and at temperatures ranging from below freezing to over 300 C.
The Russians used a pencil.
Enjoy paying your taxes.
Devolution is quite as natural as evolution, and may be just as pleasing, or even a good deal more pleasing, to God. If the average man is made in God's image, then a man such as Beethoven or Aristotle is plainly superior to God, and so God may be jealous of him, and eager to see his superiority perish with his bodily frame.
Everybody used pencils before the invention of the space pen; and at any rate, it wasn't NASA that developed it. Fisher developed it out of his own money and then sold it to NASA; once he started mass-producing it, the costs came down and the Russians started buying them as well.
Having broken bits of graphite, which is a nice electrical conductor, floating around in a spacecraft is not a good thing.
BlkbrryTheGreat wrote:Got this off of a buddy's AIM profile. I don't know if its true, but its amusing regardless.
Good Lesson in Engineering
When NASA first started sending up astronauts, they quickly discovered that ball-point pens would not work in 0 gravity. To combat this problem, NASA scientists spent a decade and $12 billion developing a pen that writes in zero gravity, upside down, underwater, on almost any surface including glass and at temperatures ranging from below freezing to over 300 C.
The Russians used a pencil.
Enjoy paying your taxes.
Pretty sure it's false. Most ball point pens work due to air pressure forcing the ink down the tube, not gravity. Try writing with a pen upside down and it will write. If gravity operated it, then it wouldn't work upside down.
Nathan F wrote:Pretty sure it's false. Most ball point pens work due to air pressure forcing the ink down the tube, not gravity. Try writing with a pen upside down and it will write. If gravity operated it, then it wouldn't work upside down.
Most ball point pens will write for a little while upside down, then they will stop. They are gravity operated; since there's air pressure on both sides of the pen (the ink reservoir and the ball point) there is equilibrium and the ink isn't going to flow unless there's some force acting on it.
Hence the time-honored tradition of vigorously shaking a ballpoint pen before using it.
Claim: NASA spent millions of dollars developing an "astronaut pen" which would work in outer space while the Soviets solved the same problem by simply using pencils.
Status: False.
[img=right]http://hem.bredband.net/b217293/warsaban.gif[/img] "Either God wants to abolish evil, and cannot; or he can, but does not want to. ... If he wants to, but cannot, he is impotent. If he can, but does not want to, he is wicked. ... If, as they say, God can abolish evil, and God really wants to do it, why is there evil in the world?" -Epicurus
Fear is the mother of all gods.
Nature does all things spontaneously, by herself, without the meddling of the gods. -Lucretius
"I once asked Rebecca to sing Happy Birthday to me during sex. That was funny, especially since I timed my thrusts to sync up with the words. And yes, it was my birthday." - Darth Wong
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Nathan F wrote:Pretty sure it's false. Most ball point pens work due to air pressure forcing the ink down the tube, not gravity. Try writing with a pen upside down and it will write. If gravity operated it, then it wouldn't work upside down.
Most ball point pens will write for a little while upside down, then they will stop. They are gravity operated; since there's air pressure on both sides of the pen (the ink reservoir and the ball point) there is equilibrium and the ink isn't going to flow unless there's some force acting on it.
Hence the time-honored tradition of vigorously shaking a ballpoint pen before using it.