Ripley's Believe It or Not by Ripley’s Believe It or Not! for January 18, 2013
Transcript:
In August 2012, Scottish fisherman Andrew Leaper picked up a message in a bottle that had been dropped into the sea off the west coast of Scotland 98 years ago! Counter Weight Geostationary Orbit Cable Closer Anchor Anchor at Equator North Pole The Obashi Corporation of Japan plans to have an elevator to a space station orbiting Earth operational by 2050! On June 17, 2012, Roger Auster from Gloucestshire, England, bounced 4 miles on a hoppity hop- a world record!
Tog almost 12 years ago
They were called space hoppers here and great fun they were too.
Carl Rennhack Premium Member almost 12 years ago
Message in a bottle…Fan mail from some flounder?!?
paultolfree almost 12 years ago
The message said one extra pint please
shibler2 almost 12 years ago
We called them Hippity Hops here
da11a5 almost 12 years ago
so in other words, you earthlings are building your planet a baseball bat? might come in handy for meteors & asteroids!
Dan Tooker almost 12 years ago
In 1784 Chunosuke Matsuyama sent a message detailing his and 43 shipmates’ shipwrecking in a bottle that washed ashore and was found by a Japanese seaweed collector in 1935, in the village of Hiraturemura, the birthplace of Chunosuke Matsuyama.
chuckx777 almost 12 years ago
I’m a bit concerned about that space elevator that, you get a little too much weight in there, the elevator cab will stay in place and pull the space station down to earth!
goalgo almost 12 years ago
is that the correct scale? the cable would have to be 40 000 miles long.
Squirrelchaser almost 12 years ago
They would put the ‘space’ end in geostationary orbit at the equator, I believe the length of the carbon nanotubes would be about 60,000 miles, and it would be flexible enough to withstand wind (rotational speed is irrelevant since it will be in geostationary orbit.) Been a while since I read about it, but it sound promising though.
tbritt99 almost 12 years ago
No thanks. I’ll take the stairs.
Puddleglum2 almost 12 years ago
It was bottled up for a long time.
tadchem almost 12 years ago
The orbiting platform may be weightless, but the rest of the cable is held in place by tension. What material can be 22,300 miles long and still withstand it’s own weight, PLUS the weight of whatever would be riding it? That much steel wire .090 inches diameter would weight 2,500,000 pounds!
barefoottech almost 12 years ago
Ever heard of real SCIENTIFIC Knowledge?WTF does the solar wind have to do with it?
Marvin3 almost 12 years ago
The message in a bottle, wattidit say, wattidit say? As for the ball hopper, what a nuke nuke.
Surly Squirrel Premium Member almost 12 years ago
Four miles on a hoppity-hop doesn’t seem too far. They must be harder on the backside than I remember.
Fuzzy Thinker Premium Member almost 12 years ago
I hope the elevator works out. I would pay $$$ for that ride.