odd dinner conversation
Nov. 1st, 2003 08:07 pmSo Dani challenged that -- why assume that the tube is uniform? I said because otherwise you're out of the price range of medicine-cabinet thermometers. This, in turn, led to speculation about how that type of thermometer is manufactured; I argued for a large uniform (hollow) rod that's cut to length with ends then treated (seal at one end, mercury + bulb at other), while he argued for individually molded. (Insert tangent about plastic vs. glass here.) Of course, neither of us actually knows anything about this; we're trying to make intelligent guesses and apply design principles from other fields.
I don't think we're the only people who have weird speculative conversations like this, but I never seem to notice stuff like this coming from other tables in restaurants. On the other hand, we haven't been kicked out of any restaurants for annoying the neighbors either. (On the third hand, it seems to take a lot to produce that result.)
(no subject)
Date: 2003-11-01 09:58 pm (UTC)It's potentially possible to mess up the tube during sealing, but not all that likely; you could form the bulb end from the rod segment with just enough air going through the tube to (a) keep it open and (b) inflate the bulb slightly, then fill the tube, then put a small drop of molten glass on the other end to seal it. (I don't know if they're currently mass-produced that way, but it wouldn't surprise me to find that they were initially created as I described.)