"Leo" wrote in message
...
On Fri, 22 Jul 2005 21:11:21 -0400, "Dee Flint"
wrote:
"John Smith" wrote in message
news
Dee:
This is going to sound like a joke (and heaven knows I NEVER JOKE!--but
it
isn't...), I once heard the little windshield wiper pumps, the ones
which
spray on the window cleaner were the by-product of nasa technology
adopted
by the auto industry; you wouldn't know about that, would you?
Funny, but that question has stuck in my mind for years. I had made a
mental note to ask, if ever given the chance... sometimes doesn't take
much to entertain me... frown I actually doubt it... I mean, the
cleaner would freeze in the tank in space, immediately freeze and/or
crystallize to ice when discharged, etc...
or, perhaps they meant the pumps used by nasa were actually for another
purpose and just adapted to windshields here on terafirma...
John
Don't know about the pumps unfortunately. However it is amazing some of
the
things that came out of the space program. The original ball point pen
was
one.
Not true. The ball-point pen was invented in 1935 - a long time
before space travel became a reality. NASA did spawn the invention of
a pressurized ball-point pen that would write in zero-gravity
conditions (where the regular pen was quite useless) - I assume that
you were referring to this more modern adaptation of a much older
design.
http://www.ideafinder.com/history/in...s/story055.htm
snip
Dee D. Flint, N8UZE
73, Leo
I stand corrected. Guess I got all those History/Discovery Channels shows
mixed up a bit.
Dee D. Flint, N8UZE