Re: a chain of events
Enigma, on host 158.52.254.238
Monday, September 11, 2006, at 14:37:57
a chain of events posted by Howard on Sunday, September 10, 2006, at 16:17:23:
> Well, I've been working for a while changing > engines in my favorite scooter. It has not > been an easy project, because the scooter is so > old. Well, younger than me, I suppose, but old > for a scooter. > > Somewhere in the process, I dropped a small > quarter inch lock washer. It went down behind > the air shroud, and I assumed it wound up on > the floor. No such luck. It stopped on the > bottom of the magneto which of course is > magnetic. > . . . > > After leaving the driveway, I started gaining > speed. Centrifical force soon overcame > magnetic attraction, and that little lost > washer came off. It hit the gas line, knocking > a small hole in it and continued on to get > caught between the chain and the rear wheel > sprocket. Since the chain had just been > adjusted, it was nice and tight and the little > washer was just enough to cause one link to > snap. This all happened in the blink of an > eye. With the chain no longer connecting he > engine to the rear wheel, it over reved and > broke the connecting rod in the engine and it > knocked a hole in the oil pan and blew a hole > through the piston. > . . .
That sounds a lot like a book that I once read, called "Codgerspace" by Alan Dean Foster. In that story, the entire course of human history is changed because of a single drop of melted cheese.
When I first read the book, I was 12 or 13, and I really enjoyed it then. (I'm not sure if I'd still recommend it - I'd have to read it again.) I do remember that it was fun to see the way that such a minor event could ripple out into greater and greater consequences.
- E"Butterfly Effect"nigma
The toasters are coming! The toasters are coming!
|