Meet a Mathematical Inventor!

Meet a Mathematical Inventor! 3

This is Jaen-Antoine Lafay’s Hélice a Calcul, a rather unusual logarithmic slide rule. But Lafay himself, its inventor, was just as unusual, not to say quirky… a fascinating lone innovator waging war on an indifferent world. To illustrate, here is a section from Lafay’s marketing brochure: Oh, routine! What wrong do you not do, firstly … Read more

A Googie Kerosene Heater!

Kerosene heaters are smelly, require much maintenance, and are dangerous if used carelessly; on the other hand they create a lot of heat, are independent of utility feeds, and for us older folks they actually have a nostalgia evoked by the conditioned association of the kerosene smell and the pleasant warmth of years past. Be … Read more

A beautiful instrument

This Barometer was made in Florence some 100 years ago, and served my late grandfather, first in Italy, then in Israel; it ended up on my wall, a family heirloom to delight the heart of any engineer. It is a large (23 cm across) Aneroid Barometer, an instrument to measure atmospheric pressure by means of … Read more

Form and Materials: swords of yesteryear

Khopesh sword

Form follows function; but often both must follow the available materials. Consider the image that comes to mind at a statement like The great king raised his mighty sword to smite his enemies. Surely, you imagine a sword structured something like this: Photo courtesy Søren Niedziella, shared on flickr under CC license. This, after all, … Read more

A curious slide rule design

For some reason, inventors in the first half of the 20th century thought that incorporating a slide rule into a mechanical pencil was a great idea. In reality, these combination devices were of dubious utility, gives their low precision as calculators… but they are certainly ingeniously designed. I describe three of them,  including one extremely … Read more