ESA astronaut, Pedro Duque writes "I am writing these notes in the Soyuz with a cheap ballpoint pen. Why is that important? As it happens, I've been working in space programmes for seventeen years, eleven of these as an astronaut, and I've always believed, because that is what I've always been told, that normal ballpoint pens don't work in space... and here I am, it doesn't stop working and it doesn't 'spit' or anything. Sometimes being too cautious keeps you from trying, and therefore things are built more complex than necessary." From
Snopes: Fisher spent over one million dollars in trying to perfect the ball point pen before he made his first successful
pressurized pens in 1965, which NASA uses.
[via GearBits]
posted by riffola
on Nov 4, 2003 -
23 comments