[TheForge] now The Amateur Scientist -- from Scientific American
Grover Richardson
grover.richardson at gtri.gatech.edu
Fri Apr 15 12:48:32 EDT 2005
Thanks. I have put this in my "look at during lunch with a sandwich in the
other hand" file.
Woof
-----Original Message-----
From: theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net
[mailto:theforge-bounces at mailman.qth.net] On Behalf Of David E. Smucker
Sent: Thursday, April 14, 2005 10:11 PM
To: Sponsored by ABANA
Subject: Re: [TheForge] now The Amateur Scientist -- from Scientific
American
Steve,
It was in deed a great series and almost always the first part of
Scientific American I would turn to growing up. My senior year high school
science project was featured in the Sept. 1965 issue. It had nothing to do
with Blacksmithing.
I had designed a built a high altitude chamber using a 30 gallon drum to
study the effect of high altitude on white rats. Man that was a long time
ago. I still have copies in some box somewhere. If you have the CDROM
check and let me know if it is in it.
Dave Smucker
----- Original Message -----
From: "Steve Smith" <sos at alum.mit.edu>
To: "Sponsored by ABANA" <theforge at mailman.qth.net>
Sent: Thursday, April 14, 2005 7:40 PM
Subject: Re: [TheForge] was cutting 1/4 copper now welders
> Kevin, Grover, whoever else has plenty of time:
>
> Scientific American magazine used to run a column "The Amateur
> Scientist",
> which was an amazing experimentalist's column. You name it, they did it,
> mostly from scratch. Lasers, rockets (no manufactured engines...),
> telescopes starting with a porthole, plasma torches, atom smashers, ruling
> engines for making diffraction gratings. Wonderful stuff that strongly
> influenced me growing up.
>
> Did I say plasma torches? Yep. In the early 60's they had a column on
> such. As I recall, the torch was water cooled and was bench mounted
> pointing up. It "vaporized most metals instantly, including tungsten.
> Ceramics took a little while...". I think it would be really tough to
> adapt to a cutting torch (and it would probably have a huge kerf).
>
> If you want to dig into "The Amateur Scientist", all of it from the
> 1920's
> thru the end of the century, it is available on CDROM:
>
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/0970347626/qid=1113521388/sr=2-1/ref=
pd_bbs_b_2_1/002-2539502-2820810
> Watch out if the URL gets wrapped, you may have to cut and paste a second
> time. Really fine stuff if you're into building and experimenting with
> just about anything.
>
> Steve
>
SNIP
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