That kite looks like a kritter. And it looks like there are even smaller kritters hanging on for dear life on the top/right edge of the kite. And I think that kritter has antennae
I see lots of Helium “party cans” at the local recycling station. Maybe this shortage is a manufactured thing like no gasoline in the 1970s and now with fracking we have tons to spare.
Helium is a very tiny molecule. My first job as a co-op electrical engineer in a lab testing double pane windows to be filled with nitrogen as “insulation” between panes. We would pump helium in and measure fast it escaped. (Helium is a much smaller element than nitrogen, so it leaks faster.) The engineer in charge told me to go to the tool room and get the “standard leak”. I laughed and told him I’m not that naive. But he insisted. After three or four exchanges, I did go, and discovered that there really is such a thing as a standard leak. Boy, was my face red. I didn’t get fired, fortunately, but got laughed at pretty good. Many years later, I have double-pane windows, and one of them fogs up on cold mornings because the nitrogen has leaked out. The others are still doing great.
Years back, some politicians decided that USA should not be in the helium business and mandated selling their stockpile off at bargain prices. Scientists and engineers HAVE to get into politics. There is no other way to prevent politicians from doing scientifically illiterate stuff.
Templo S.U.D. over 4 years ago
you’re already a laughing stock, Jason and Marcus
Algolei I over 4 years ago
Helium? There’s a shortage of that stuff, they shouldn’t be wasting it on balloons.
…not when they could be using HYDROGEN. Mwah ha ha ha haaaaaa!
JonGl Premium Member over 4 years ago
That kite looks like a kritter. And it looks like there are even smaller kritters hanging on for dear life on the top/right edge of the kite. And I think that kritter has antennae
InuYugiHakusho over 4 years ago
This was a more level headed plan than those bottle rockets.
dflak over 4 years ago
I found today’s strip to be very uplifting.
asrialfeeple over 4 years ago
Where there’s a will … there’s usually a corpse.
Ray_C over 4 years ago
https://www.rockymountainair.com/blog/how-is-helium-extracted/
Gweedo -it's legal here- Murray over 4 years ago
I see lots of Helium “party cans” at the local recycling station. Maybe this shortage is a manufactured thing like no gasoline in the 1970s and now with fracking we have tons to spare.
Ray_C over 4 years ago
Helium is a very tiny molecule. My first job as a co-op electrical engineer in a lab testing double pane windows to be filled with nitrogen as “insulation” between panes. We would pump helium in and measure fast it escaped. (Helium is a much smaller element than nitrogen, so it leaks faster.) The engineer in charge told me to go to the tool room and get the “standard leak”. I laughed and told him I’m not that naive. But he insisted. After three or four exchanges, I did go, and discovered that there really is such a thing as a standard leak. Boy, was my face red. I didn’t get fired, fortunately, but got laughed at pretty good. Many years later, I have double-pane windows, and one of them fogs up on cold mornings because the nitrogen has leaked out. The others are still doing great.
yangeldf over 4 years ago
it took THAT many balloons to make the kite fly? I thought it was made of newspaper and sticks, not plaster and drywall.
eccolibri60 Premium Member over 4 years ago
Where do these two get all their money?
CharlesBrickner1 over 4 years ago
What happened to the rockets they bought yesterday?
RobertCraigs over 4 years ago
Years back, some politicians decided that USA should not be in the helium business and mandated selling their stockpile off at bargain prices. Scientists and engineers HAVE to get into politics. There is no other way to prevent politicians from doing scientifically illiterate stuff.