This blog celebrates what I believe to be the top 100 inventions of all times. I have not conducted a survey or any of that nonsense. These are what I believe are the most important inventions of human history which has shaped our world.
Wednesday, April 16, 2014
Okay, okay!
Okay, kids! I will start back with my top 100. I have been somewhat busy and kept forgetting about this awesome blog. Look for new post coming soon within the week!
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
95: Paper
95: Paper
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Egyptian Papyrus |
You cannot have a list with the pencil on it if you are not
going to place its counterpart on the same list. The invention of paper is yet
one of those inventions that I believe is taken for granted. Paper is still
being used today even in our digital world. (Please don’t start singing
“Material Girl”, cause you know I just did.)
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Daphne Tree |
Writing a record of time has always been one cornerstone of
human existence. We wrote on cave walls, drew in mud that hardened only to be
found thousands of years later, and we even scribed in stone tablets. It really
was the Egyptians that can take create in popularizing paper. The
Egyptians used the bark and the pulp the papyrus tree to create a writable surface.
This is how we get the noun paper (papyr-us). Papyrus is really in a list of other fibers
that were used as paper. The mulberry, fig and daphne trees were also used to
create a writable surface. Papyrus was used not only in the Mediterranean
region such as in Rome and Greece, but the Chinese also used a form of
paper.
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Papyrus |
The Chinese tradition creates Ts'ai Lun (150CE) as the
developer of paper who was deified and is the god of papermakers.
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Ts'ai Lun |
In our modern world, paper is everywhere. Because of the
industrialization of paper making, today we use paper in making cups and
plates. We take paper and treat it with a chemical which response to low heat
radiation giving use thermal paper. OCR, copier paper, and yes, loose-leaf
notebook paper complete with three holes to go into a binder. Its amazing to
imagine what the world of yesterday looked like without emptying pockets without
little pieces of paper falling out. Think about this: what would gum be
packaged in without paper?
Sunday, August 11, 2013
96: The Pencil
Millions of school children, accountants, bankers,
engineers, artists, and legal secretaries use pencils nearly everyday even in
our digital world. The pencil is a simple and one of the most influential
instruments that comes in different shapes and sizes, and densities. The pencil
is usually the second writing utensil that most of us learn to write with and
you can never find one when you need one.
Like most things, the pencil began in Rome. The scribes of
the ancient world use a piece of metal inlaid in a wooden case called a stylus.
Remarkably, the stylus used on papyrus made a mark, which was readable or on
wax filled tablets. From this point, the Europeans began to experiment with
lead as a substitute but it didn’t mark as clearly. It wasn’t until the
discovery of graphite in England in 1564. Graphite was so brittle and broke
constantly until it was then wrapped in string and then was then placed in
hollow sticks to have better control of its physical properties. Graphite made
darker marks. With this simple action the modern pencil is born. In the 1880’s
pencil factories began to print the brand on their pencils.
It was the Germans who led the manufacturing of pencils in Nuremburg
in 1662. It wasn’t until Faber-Castell (1762) began mass-producing pencils.
Staedtler, who still produces pencils and writing implements joined the game.
The wooden pencil did not come painted at this time, to show off the craftsmanship
and wood working of the pencils. What about America?
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Clark's Pencils |
The colonist had to start producing their own pencils
because England had cut them off. That’s okay though, we knew what to do. Mills
began to pop up all over the place to make pencils. Most of these pencil
factories were built in the north until the discovery of red cedar in
Tennessee. Once this happened, factories began to be built closer to the
source. Red Cedar is hard and it is a smooth wood, which doesn’t splinter
easily. For you Georgia people, check out the Atlanta National Pencil Company.
Where does the yellow
pencil come from? It’s not just a clever color to identify it when you need to
find it. In fact, pencil factories began to paint pencils yellow because of the
Chinese. Yes, its Chinas
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Clark's Pencils |
Now you can tell people how the yellow pencil came into
being. You will be a hit at your next social gathering.
Friday, August 9, 2013
97: The Singer Sewing Machine
97
The Singer Sewing Machine
In the corner of my grandmothers dinning room, sat her
Singer Sewer. Her house was small, built right before World War II. She
didn’t have room for a traditional sewing room like most southerners; so, the
corner of the dinning room served the purpose well. I remember her using it
nearly every day when she babysat me before I began school or when I stayed
with her during the summer. She sowed for extra cash or sowed for her family.
My mother wore a dress that my grandmother made on the first day of first
grade. She and her friends would pass partners back and forth and create every
thing from curtains, to clothes, and everything in between. I have a few table
clothes she made. The Singer Sewer completed and made the chore of sewing
quicker. But this domestic machine didn’t come with out controversy.
The two men that are credited to have completed the sewing
machine are Elias Howe and Isaac Singer. (There is a third player in this drama
that will be mentioned later in this article). In 1846, Elias Howe filed for a
patent for his invention of the lockstitch, which he placed the eye of the
needle at the point that when it pushed into the cloth, it left a loop which
then a shuttle passed through the loop creating a stitch from two separate
pieces of thread. Then the process is repeated rapidly and continuously.
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Isaac Singer |
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Elias Howe |
Isaac Singer, who began production in the early 1850’s of
his machine, also used the lockstitch method. His needle moved up and down
rather than the side-to-side movement that other machines had. Also another aspect
of his invention that set the Singer apart form the rest is, the machine was
powered by a foot treadle while, the other machines were powered by a hand
crank.
Though Isaac Singer took all these mechanisms to make his
machine, what he did not expect was to be sued in 1854 for patent infringement.
Howe sued Singer for using his patented lockstitch method and won. But here is
the kicker. A man by the name of Walter Hunt, built a machine in 1834 which he
called the Lacing machine (it was really a sewing machine) but he had developed
the use of using two spools of thread to create a locking stitch like that of
Howe had made. If Hunt’s patent had not been misplaced, Hunt would have sued
both Singer and Howe.
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Howe Sewing Machine |
Howe, after winning the patent on the Signer machine’s
lockstitch he began to be paid by Singer. Howe who then began to share in the
profits of Singer, his annual income went from two hundred dollars a year to
nearly 200,000 dollars a year. The Singer is still one of the top selling sewing
machines. The Singer Corporation also has produced home versions of embroidery
machines and home machines that are automated by computer.
The Singer sewing machine is one of those inventions that
that shaped the
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1900's Singer |
Threading a vintage Singer
Singer Sewer commercial (1954)
Singer Treadle in action (he talks to much for my taste but he does show how it works)
Saturday, August 3, 2013
98: The Steam Engine
98: The Steam Engine
This whole list cannot be complete without this little gem!
If you haven’t noticed thus far, the first three inventions are the reason for manufacturing
and industrialization. The steam engine really moved things. I am a champion of
the steam engine. I love the way they sound, the way they smell, and the awesome
power that it can supply. If the zombie apocalypse happens, the steam engine
will come back, I am sure of it.
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Thomas Savery's Steam Engine |
The fundamental idea of the steam engine is just brilliance.
Take a boiler, take its steam, push a piston, and there you have it, complete
power to move many machines at once.
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Thomas Newcomen's Atmospheric Pressure engine |
Invented by and improved by three different inventors, the
steam engine was used to pump water out of English coal mines. In 1698, Thomas
Savery, applied for the first patent on the first crude steam engine. It was built
to pump water out of the mines. It worked well for a while to a guy come along
made more adjustments to it. Thomas Newcomen developed an engine (1712) that
used atmospheric pressure to move the piston. Unlike in the Savery engine,
Newcomen’s engine cylinder was cooled by cold water, which allowed the
temperature to drop and move the cylinder to create a vacuum, which could pump
water out of a mine faster than the Savery engine. The third and final man to
make even more improvements of the steam engine is our very own James Watt. In
1769, Watt moved the condenser from the cylinder, which was then cooled at
the same time that the cylinder was hot. This simple addition to the steam
engine made his design the most used to this date in history. By the way, when
looking at the output power of Watts (W), think of this guy. He was so awesome
and understood power so well; he has his own unit of measure named after him.
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James Watt's Steam Engine |
The improvements James Watt made was then harnessed,
literally, to pullys and belts that ran the course of a mill that then moved many
machines, preforming the different jobs at the same time, causing the mills of
those days to move from water wheels to steam engines. The steam engine had a
marvelous advantage to the water wheel. The steam engine did not have a
dependence on a waterway, which then made it possible to build factories and
mills anywhere. Once the steam engine was connected to a railway, the train was
born.
Demo Model of Thomas Savery's Steam Engine
Demo of Full Scale Model of Thomas Newcomen Steam Engine
Demo of James Watt's Steam Engine
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