Did you as a young person , maybe before adulthood, think about the most appealing, fun-filled things you might want to be doing life-long? And maybe, just maybe, someone might PAY you to do them?
At about 12 or so, I came across an old magazine having an article about a man named Kenneth Strickfaden. I'll never forget his name, but the article, which I actually found this evening, thanks to the internet, brought back, instantly, the memory of it's content, especially the pictures! Here's the whole article, from Popular Mechanics Magazine, Sept. 1949!
As I studied and delved into the strange workings of high-voltage apparatus, this man began to represent a God-like image to this kid. As a high-school sophomore, I actually built a rotary high-voltage switch much like the one Strickfaden designed, pictured on the middle page. The General Science class, of which I was not a member, having been stuck into "college-prep" Physics, presented a science show. I allowed my best friend, Ron, who had General Science, to enter the damned thing. He took 2nd. place!
But, as things turned out, no such career involving building things weird and un-worldly transpired. Nonetheless, the hobby interests persisted throughout my lifetime, sort of culminating in 2003 when my High School Trigonometry class (I taught that year) built with my coaching, a million-volt Tesla coil. I'm itching to start gathering parts lately for an even bigger one...............my wife asserts that I am nuts...........
nthego:
imp



At about 12 or so, I came across an old magazine having an article about a man named Kenneth Strickfaden. I'll never forget his name, but the article, which I actually found this evening, thanks to the internet, brought back, instantly, the memory of it's content, especially the pictures! Here's the whole article, from Popular Mechanics Magazine, Sept. 1949!
As I studied and delved into the strange workings of high-voltage apparatus, this man began to represent a God-like image to this kid. As a high-school sophomore, I actually built a rotary high-voltage switch much like the one Strickfaden designed, pictured on the middle page. The General Science class, of which I was not a member, having been stuck into "college-prep" Physics, presented a science show. I allowed my best friend, Ron, who had General Science, to enter the damned thing. He took 2nd. place!
But, as things turned out, no such career involving building things weird and un-worldly transpired. Nonetheless, the hobby interests persisted throughout my lifetime, sort of culminating in 2003 when my High School Trigonometry class (I taught that year) built with my coaching, a million-volt Tesla coil. I'm itching to start gathering parts lately for an even bigger one...............my wife asserts that I am nuts...........
imp


