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Heard the church bells in the
distance?
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 11:33
AM
Subject: Re: Puzzler of the week
Looked at his watch?
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, October 23, 2002 11:19
AM
Subject: Puzzler of the week
This week's puzzler:
One day last
week my brother awoke from his mid-morning office nap to discover there had
been a power failure. Tommy knew this because his digital clock was
flashing "12:00."
Now, there are a lot of ways today that Tommy could
have found out the exact time. But while he was devising a plan of action,
he happened to walk by the mirror and realized that he was in urgent need of
a haircut. So rather than deal with correcting his digital clock, he
decided to walk to the barbershop.
My brother always walks at a very
predictable pace, just one foot ahead of the other, hands behind his
back.
At the barbershop, there was a working clock on the wall. There
were a couple of guys in front of him, so Tommy sat there and caught up on
his magazines.
Finally, he got his haircut. He left the barbershop,
walked home and set his clock to the right time.
We don't know how
fast Tommy walks, and we don't care.
We don't know how far away the
barbershop is -- and we don't care.
So, how does he set his clock to
the correct time?
Last week's puzzler:
One day
last summer, I got a frantic call at the shop from a woman, who explained
that she was about to leave on a cross-country trip. She was worried because
something very strange was going on. I said, "Why don't you just come on
in." She seemed to be a little bit out of sorts.
Here's what was
happening. When she plugged her cell phone into the cigarette lighter to
recharge it, she noticed that the phone wasn't getting charged up. The
little charging light didn't come on. Stranger still, the warning lights,
including the battery and oil lights, lit up on her dashboard. She happened
to be driving a Saab, but there are a lot of cars to which this could
happen. She was worried that there was something wrong with her car, and
that her cell phone wasn't going to get charged because of what was wrong.
I took her cell phone and walked outside the garage. I made a call.
I called the shop. One of the guys answered the phone, and I told him what
was wrong with the car. A minute later, she drove away.
What did Ray
tell the guy who answered the phone?
Last week's puzzler
answer:
Well, the first thing I had to do was to verify that her
phone worked, because in order for my theory to be correct, the phone has to
be working, because if the phone's dead, the theory doesn't work. So, in
fact, by using her phone, I verified that her battery was not dead. Now, I
need to give you a little lesson in electricity.
When you plug
something into your cigarette lighter like your hair dryer, or your portable
yogurt maker, electrons that are in your car's battery stream out of that
thing, go through the fuse, and go through the wires, and into the socket of
your cigarette lighter. They operate whatever it is that you're operating.
And everyone understands that principle.
But when you plug in
something that needs to be charged like the cell phone, something
interesting is happening, because there are electrons in the cell phone. How
do I know that? The battery isn't dead. And when you plug something in that
needs to be charged, the reason it does get charged is there's a difference
in electrical potential between the car's battery, which is 12 volts, and
your cell phone, which is like eight, or nine, or 10 volts, or something
like that. So, when you plug the cell phone into the cigarette lighter
socket, electrons from your cell phone try to go into the wires in the
opposite direction than those electrons from the battery are going.
So you get the scenario here?
Electrons are coming from your
car's battery. The electrons from the cell phone are trying to escape, but
something is wrong here, because things that aren't supposed to be working
are working.
When there were no electrons coming from the car's
battery to the cigarette lighter, those nine volts of electrons in the cell
phone, they are emboldened and they will travel wires that they were never
intended to travel on and they will actually go to things and energize
things like those lights on the dashboard that ain't supposed to be getting
energized.
So what I told Manny when I called him on the phone was
replace the fuse. She needed a fuse for the cigarette
lighter.
_______________________ Scott
MacLean [EMAIL PROTECTED] ICQ:
9184011 http://www.nerosoft.com
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