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Shaft passer

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Wheel with shaft passers
Detail of a shaft passer

A shaft passer is a device that allows a spoked wheel to rotate despite having a shaft (such as the axle of another wheel) passing between its spokes. The device is usually mentioned as a joke between nerds, in the manner of a fool's errand, however, examples do exist. In ~100 C.E. Heron describes a horse statue with the neck connected to its body with a shaft passer. A sword (acting as the "shaft") could slice through the neck but the head would not detach. In 2023 Blonder created a two and three dimensional shaft passer that allows a wire mesh cube to penetrate a mesh screen under its own weight.

One of the earliest modern references to these devices was made by Richard Feynman, who was told by a colleague at Frankford Arsenal in Philadelphia that the cable-passing version of the device had been used during both world wars on German naval mine mooring cables, to prevent the mines from being caught by British cables swept along the sea bottom.[1]

The device was supposed to work using a spoked, rimless wheel that allows cables to pass through as it rotates. The ends of the spokes are widened, and the cable is held together by a short curved sleeve through which these spoke ends slide.[2]

[edit]
  • Éviteur d'axe [Shaft passer] (in French), Dr Goulu, Dec 29, 2005, ISBN 9782738107718, with diagram of the device.
  • Shafter passer mechanism allows a mesh to pass through a mesh
    Heron, Pneumatica, no. 78
  • Heron's Horse
  • Tesseract cube, Blonder, 2023

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Feynman, Richard (1992), Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman!, Vintage Books, p. 101, ISBN 978-0-099-17331-1
  2. ^ Francis, Devon (1946), "Their war is not over", Popular Science (January): 74