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Posted: 5/29/2002 10:27:05 PM EDT
Assuming this is true I'm not sure if I should laugh or cry...


When NASA first started sending up astronauts, they quickly discovered that ball-point pens would not work in zero gravity.

To combat this problem, NASA scientists spent a decade and $12 billion developing a pen that writes in zero gravity, upside down, underwater, on almost any surface including glass and at temperatures ranging from below freezing to over 300° C.

The Russians use a pencil.



Enjoy paying your taxes.



EDIT:  Ok not true...didn't enter the correct letter combination in snopes the first few times around.  Still kind of funny knowing how the government works though.
Link Posted: 5/29/2002 10:31:58 PM EDT
[#1]
It was probably worth it, have a pencil sharpener mounted on the space shuttle/capsule would just look silly and just think if you knocked the end of it off, all those little wood filings floating around.  It would be a mess.

edited to ask:  Are the Ruskies still using pencils?
Link Posted: 5/29/2002 10:37:17 PM EDT
[#2]
Quoted:
-snip-
edited to ask:  Are the Ruskies still using pencils?
View Quote


Nah, Clinton sold our ball-point technology to 'em. [:D]
Link Posted: 5/29/2002 10:40:18 PM EDT
[#3]
More like it Klinton GAVE them our ball point pen technology.
Link Posted: 5/30/2002 12:49:03 AM EDT
[#4]
Urban Legend...
[URL]http://www.snopes2.com/business/genius/spacepen.htm#add [/url]

NASA never asked Paul C. Fisher to produce a pen. When the astronauts began to fly, like the Russians, they used pencils, but the leads sometimes broke and became a hazard by floating in the [capsule's] atmosphere where there was no gravity. They could float into an eye or nose or cause a short in an electrical device. In addition, both the lead and the wood of the pencil could burn rapidly in the pure oxygen atmosphere. Paul Fisher realized the astronauts needed a safer and more dependable writing instrument, so in July 1965 he developed the pressurized ball pen, with its ink enclosed in a sealed, pressurized ink cartridge. Fisher sent the first samples to Dr. Robert Gilruth, Director of the Houston Space Center. The pens were all metal except for the ink, which had a flash point above 200°C. The sample Space Pens were thoroughly tested by NASA. They passed all the tests and have been used ever since on all manned space flights, American and Russian. All research and developement costs were paid by Paul Fisher. No development costs have ever been charged to the government.
Because of the fire in Apollo 1, in which three Astronauts died, NASA required a writing instrument that would not burn in a 100% oxygen atmosphere. It also had to work in the extreme conditions of outer space:


In a vacuum.
With no gravity.
In hot temperatures of +150°C in sunlight and also in the cold shadows of space where the temperatures drop to -120°C
(NASA tested the pressurized Space Pens at -50°C, but because of the residential [sic] heat in the pen it also writes for many minutes in the cold shadows.)
Fisher spent over one million dollars in trying to perfect the ball point pen before he made his first successful pressurized pens in 1965. Samples were immediately sent to Dr. Robert Gilruth, Manager of the Houston Space Center, where they were thoroughly tested and approved for use in Space in September 1965. In December 1967 he sold 400 Fisher Space Pens to NASA for $2.95 each.

Lead pencils were used on all Mercury and Gemini space flights and all Russian space flights prior to 1968. Fisher Space Pens are more dependable than lead pencils and cannot create the hazard of a broken piece of lead floating through the gravity-less atmosphere.
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