[Elecraft] [Fwd: Dumb Things]
Bob Nielsen
nielsen at oz.net
Thu Jan 5 12:04:20 EST 2006
I remember the hot dog cooker from my JHS days, as well. Things were
different then! We had a rifle club with a shooting range in the
basement and I would bring my .22 to school on my bike--an activity
which would probably get you arrested today.
I built my first transmitter in 1952. One day, after I had it
finished a ham friend came over to take a look at it. He leaned
over, resting his hand on the tuning capacitor which happened to be
set with the plates fully meshed. Before I could tell him that the
plate voltage was on he let out a scream, jumped back and took a look
at the stripes on his palm.
Bob, N7XY
On Jan 5, 2006, at 5:54 AM, Eric Swartz - WA6HHQ Elecraft wrote:
> A repost for Fred, K6DGW.
>
> -------- Original Message --------
>
> ---------------------------
> The definition of a "dumb thing" often changes over time. In Jr
> High electric shop in '53, we were given our choice of two
> projects: An electric motor that would run on a car battery, or a
> hot dog cooker. The hot dog cooker consisted of a wooden base
> through which two long nails had been driven, about 2/3 of a hot
> dog length apart. A lamp cord was soldered to the heads of the
> nails. To cook a hot dog, you performed the following steps (in
> the order shown, please):
>
> 1. Remove hot dog from package and push it onto the nails
>
> 2. Insert plug on the end of the lamp cord into a wall socket
>
> 3. Watch hot dog cook
>
> 4. Remove plug from wall socket
>
> 5. Remove hot dog
>
> I chose to build the motor ... not because I thought the hot dog
> cooker was absurdly dangerous (although I had just been licensed as
> KN6DGW so I was on a first name basis with a few electrons, but
> dangerous never occurred to me -- after all, the teacher gave us
> the projects, no?), but because while harder, the motor looked like
> more fun ... stuff moved.
>
> I would surmise that, given the general trend in product liability
> over the intervening years, the hot dog cooker is no longer a
> project choice in schools.
>
> Fred K6DGW
> Auburn CA CM98lw
>
> "The problem with 'Lessons Learned' is that so few ever really are."
> Leo Endres
>
>
> --
>
> _..._
>
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