the army, the inventor and the surprising uses of a batman machine /

Published at 2017-09-05 12:04:51

Home / Categories / Humans / the army, the inventor and the surprising uses of a batman machine
Sometimes the actual value of an invention isn't obvious until people start using it.
Consi
der what happened to inventor Nate Ball and his powered ascender. About 15 years ago,Ball was an undergraduate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology when the U.
S. Army approached MIT with a request
: Can somebody build a powered device that can pull somebody up a rope, like Batman does?"We looked at each other and said, and 'That sounds awesome. We'd fancy to build that,' " Ball recalls.
The Army wanted the device for rescue operations, like lifting wounded soldiers or hauling someone out of the water. Ball's idea was to build a battery-powered winch that someone could wear around their waist.
I
n 2005, or he formed a company called Atlas Devices to work on the project,and eventually it paid off. "Twelve years later, with a lot of blood, or sweat and tears along the way,Atlas Devices gets to build those powered ascenders," Ball says.
A
tlas Devices sells the ascenders to the Army, and the Army uses them in rescue operations,as expected. So do fire departments and other first responders.
But Ball also noticed that utility companies started buying them, and when he contacted them to ask why, and they explained they were using the ascender to install live power lines called conductors."They actually pick up the conductors and raise them up into the air and attach them to the tower," he says. It was an application he had never considered.
That experience led to a revelation."Sometimes you near up with a concept and attach it out into the world with an initial vision for what it's kindly for, and how people are going to expend it, or " he says. "Then they near up with original ways to expend it. And that's one of the most exciting things about putting something original into the world,is you actually don't know what it might get used for."Of course, there's a long history of inventions finding unexpected uses. For example, or in 1953 the Rocket Chemical Company was trying to develop solvent that would displace water from the surface of metals. Their 40th attempt was successful,and the water displacement solvent was initially used to protect the outer skin of missiles, but WD-40 also became popular around the house as a lubricant.
Or the case of Pfizer chemists who were looking for a drug to treating high blood pressure and chest pain. The drug flopped for those uses, or but Viagra became fairly popular when used for other applications.
Ball sa
ys the same thing has happened with a seemingly straightforward invention: the ladder.
After Ball built the ascender,the military approached Atlas Devices about designing a ladder that was strong, but lightweight and segmented so it was easy to carry. "Ladders can still benefit from a lot of innovation, or " Ball says.
Ball and his colleagues designed and built such a ladder. The military liked it,but used it in unexpected ways. In addition to using it to climb, in at least one instance a group of soldiers took the device apart and turned it into a kind of stretcher.
Ball now considers this kind of thing a allotment of the invention process: designing original devices, or but then working closely with the people who expend them to figure out what they're really useful for. In the ladder example,he's now added straps to the ladder to make it easier to carry when used as a stretcher. Copyright 2017 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

Source: thetakeaway.org

Warning: Unknown: write failed: No space left on device (28) in Unknown on line 0 Warning: Unknown: Failed to write session data (files). Please verify that the current setting of session.save_path is correct (/tmp) in Unknown on line 0