Lost area-measuring tool

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  • Опубліковано 17 лис 2022
  • The Adisco Area Measurer, made by Advertising Displays Incorporated, probably in the 1950s.
    This is episode 64 of my video series about old calculating devices.
    Downloadable and printable version: faculty.fairfield.edu/cstaeck...
    The museum in Australia: collection.maas.museum/object...
    The museum in London: collection.sciencemuseumgroup...
    "Strip method" picture from "Maps And Diagrams" by Monkhouse & Wilkinson, 3rd edition 1971, page 74.
    Interpretometer photo from the CIA commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Fi...
    "Coke can planimeter" by David Williamson from durealeyes.com/planimeter.html
    Adiscope photo from ebay listing by ebay user bayareasurplus
    Viewmaster photo from Wikimedia user ThePassenger, CC-BY-SA-3.0
    End song inspired by "Hotter than a Molotov" by The Coup.
    Chris Staecker webarea: faculty.fairfield.edu/cstaecker/
    #ratchet #planimeter

КОМЕНТАРІ • 86

  • @donaldboscoe150
    @donaldboscoe150 Рік тому +71

    ORIGINAL packaging never gets old!

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому +6

      @@creamwobbly psh- what does that guy know about being a successful youtuber?

    • @lucasconner621
      @lucasconner621 11 місяців тому +1

      i mean technically it does...

  • @Mural
    @Mural Рік тому +29

    Great visualisation of how it works with the highlighter!

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому +19

      Thanks! Took me forever to make those few seconds.

    • @Rhynome
      @Rhynome Рік тому +10

      @@ChrisStaecker absolutely worth it.

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому +14

      @@Rhynome As soon as I realized how it worked I knew exactly how I wanted the video to look.

  • @tissuepaper9962
    @tissuepaper9962 Рік тому +8

    This can measure the area of non-convex shapes too, you just need to allow the dial to rotate while crossing over areas that aren't inside the shape.

  • @Gunbudder
    @Gunbudder Рік тому +20

    7:48 my great grandpa worked on this! unfortunately i don't have a ton of information because most of it was never declassified. all i know is that he was contacted by the US government during WWII because he was a film developing expert in hollywood. they had him develop and examine photos taken by the U2 and other aerial photography systems. he mentioned using a special viewing device (this stereoscope thingy) and being one of the few people the military had trained to examine the photos. the only actual document i have now is a letter from his company thanking him for his war contributions and a newspaper article about him when he retired.

    • @MattMcIrvin
      @MattMcIrvin 8 місяців тому

      My dad worked on some kind of digital methods to interpret aerial and satellite reconnaissance photographs in the late 1960s. I don't know a lot about what he was doing, but I do know that it was mostly software and that this was one of the first areas that digital image processing was ever applied to (even though the photographs themselves were taken on film--the satellites in those days dropped them into the atmosphere in reentry capsules that were snagged by a plane in midair). That probably meant that analog photo-interpretation techniques were already becoming obsolete by the Vietnam War era, at least for the military.

  • @jamiehardt3061
    @jamiehardt3061 Рік тому +13

    I really appreciate the simplicity of this thing. Planimeters are cool but you need like two pages of integral calculus to explain how they work :D

  • @Maazin5
    @Maazin5 Рік тому +30

    This is instantly one of my favorite instruments on your channel. Super unique design and it's useful

  • @joshmyer9
    @joshmyer9 Рік тому +3

    Only vaguely on-topic: there's a surprising amount of money in weird little advertising logistics companies, or at least there used to be. About 20 years ago, one of the clients we worked for "made" all the aisle endcaps for a few major brands because they had a patent on rolly feet on the units (or something similarly inane). The owner drove a very, very nice car, the admin/accountant did not, and there were two super low-pay guys who forklifted the product from the trucks of the companies that actually make stuff into the warehouse, then out of the warehouse into the trucks destined for your town's supermarket. That's the whole company, and yet they made money hand over fist. I imagine that's all been vertically integrated by now.
    You learn a lot doing field support for incredibly obsolete accounting software. One of the main takeaways for me was that you mostly "earn" very, very nice cars via exploitation of the system and other people, not by working hard or smart. Happily, I only like kinda nice cars, so having ethics and decency hasn't really hurt me much.

  • @Beldraen
    @Beldraen Рік тому +17

    I very much enjoy these videos because I am amazed at the ingenuity people had to solve complex mathematical problems with basic, physical tools. Your dry wit is the icing on the cake. I hope you're doing well.

  • @Gunbudder
    @Gunbudder Рік тому +6

    if you start at 15 and use the subdivision, the error should be smaller because the bands are smaller. i would consider this to be like going a trapezoidal integration with smaller delta's (or more steps over the same window). it reminds me of a real world problem i ran into where i was given 1Hz acceleration data and i had to back out live velocity and position. i found that 10 trapezoids per second was good enough for trapezoidal integration. its been a while since i thought about that code lol

  • @someonespadre
    @someonespadre Рік тому +11

    My Dad was a Civil Engineer. One of his business lines was aerial photogrammetry. He had the stereomagnifier glasses thing (lower right of the photo interpretometer) you show in the video, it has fold out legs on the sides, it was set on the desk with photos underneath. He would set up a stereo pair on the desk (2 - 9x9 photos with overlap, the overlap area is called a model) then let us look at them, you could see the 3D relief. Pretty cool for a kid in the 1960s. The other day I was looking through the drawer of unloved old tools in the office and it had one of those in there. Also found 2 K+E slide rules.

    • @someonespadre
      @someonespadre Рік тому +2

      He also had a homemade stereo pair viewer made out of a cardboard box. Don’t remember all the details.

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому +5

      Nice! I’d love to get one of those things. The interpretometer is pretty expensive on eBay- get that cash!

    • @someonespadre
      @someonespadre Рік тому +3

      The camera in the airplane takes one photo at a time but they are taken at intervals determined such that they overlap. I’ve only seen the glasses thing, not the rest of the stuff. I believe that was used to find the flight crosses (big white crosses painted on the ground) and other common objects in the photos. The actual plotting was done on a big Kelsh plotter which projected the two images onto paper on a flat table. Then the photogrammetrist would use a special instrument to draw contours and plot the roads, buildings, etc., they called it compiling. It sounds painful to me, bent over a table all day peering through a scope thingy. Like slide rules most of the math was done mechanically. They can’t even give those big plotters away anymore. Now I get the photos with a drone and feed them into the software which uses reflectivity to match pixels.

    • @williamdavis3658
      @williamdavis3658 Рік тому

      @@ChrisStaecker These things are still sometimes used in geology departments, especially as teaching tools. I used something similar as a student ~5 years ago. It might be worth reaching out to a geology department to see if they could lend you one!

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому

      @@williamdavis3658 any idea what they call it?

  • @randyhelzerman
    @randyhelzerman Рік тому +3

    You are living the life man.

  • @nickmoniker
    @nickmoniker Рік тому +4

    ADvertising DISplays COmpany. I get it.
    I really enjoy your videos of these cool little gadgets, Chris.

  • @OldManBOMBIN
    @OldManBOMBIN 11 місяців тому

    As a fellow Kentucky boy, I feel obliged to take a guess at the subdivisions between 15 and 25 -
    You don't want tiny lines running all up and down the thing, cause that'll make it too busy lookin'. But you do need em. So you put em out there in the middle. And then if you gotta measure somethin' small, you just use 15 as 0, and do your measuring from there. That way, the object isn't covered by your hands when you're trying to measure, and you can be nice and precise.
    This video is old enough that I'm sure this has already been proposed in the comments, but I've got more of these weird devices to learn about.

  • @cmdrredhawk
    @cmdrredhawk Рік тому +6

    Not today Satan!
    Thanks Satan!
    Warehouse full of denim.

  • @Pillowcase
    @Pillowcase 10 місяців тому

    Wow! Thats a really clever mechanism.

  • @retrogiftsuk4812
    @retrogiftsuk4812 Рік тому

    Such a clever gizmo. I love it when the complex maths is hidden beneath the surface so the user doesn't have to know it.

  • @brendtkieffer7095
    @brendtkieffer7095 Рік тому +2

    Glad to see you are still making new videos. Keep it up, man.

  • @alextroche9453
    @alextroche9453 Рік тому +1

    great visuals on this one

  • @AlRoderick
    @AlRoderick Рік тому +6

    Advertising display company might have been a cutting edge imaging and photographic reproduction technology house that started out planning to market its tools to the marketing industry (thus the company name) but then found out that the tools it was making were more valuable to the military intelligence community when the war broke out.

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому +10

      Sounds plausible to me. But any complete theory must explain the denim!

    • @totally_not_a_bot
      @totally_not_a_bot Рік тому +1

      ​@@ChrisStaeckerDenim is older than Dacron, and serves a similar purpose while costing far less. Clean denim doesn't scratch things (unlike Dacron which needs a lining), and cotton is more sustainable than polyester. It used to be common for soft cases, although usually died black rather than blue. Denim is also much cheaper than leather. It's still common for recycled fabric book covers and such.
      Seeing that the company operated around WWII, denim is a natural choice.

  • @YZoxK52m
    @YZoxK52m Рік тому

    You are amazing. Thanks for sharing your interests!

  • @DavidvanDeijk
    @DavidvanDeijk Рік тому

    great episode and yes the polar planometer feels like magic to me too

  • @AngrocSound
    @AngrocSound Рік тому

    Great find! Great vid!

  • @wompastompa3692
    @wompastompa3692 Рік тому +5

    A few of the slide rules I got didn't come with their original cases, so I cut up some old jeans and got my mom to whip up a few.

  • @plopgoot5458
    @plopgoot5458 Рік тому +1

    this together with the steinhaus longimeter, are my favorite tools you have shown so far

  • @hughobyrne2588
    @hughobyrne2588 Рік тому

    2:39 "Just the face part, obviously, I mean, c'mon now." This really really hit my funny bone.

  • @MordecaiV
    @MordecaiV Рік тому

    I love it!

  • @user-wx2js6ox7d
    @user-wx2js6ox7d 3 місяці тому

    I have one of those! I collect slide rules (and adding machines and some drafting equipment) so when I saw it, I had to get it. Have been wondering ever since how it worked. My best guess was that it measured column inches for ad space, but still couldn't figure out how. Thanks.

  • @BillRicker
    @BillRicker Рік тому

    Lovely! A similar adding of angles in repeated turnings is done with dual motion surveyors' transit, either for averaging for precision , or summing for closure.

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому +1

      Thanks! Do you know anywhere I can read more about this?

    • @BillRicker
      @BillRicker Рік тому

      @@ChrisStaecker are you asking for "more" on Area Meters or summing/averaging angles in a dual motion transit ?
      (i'll assume BOTH)
      Will send email(s) to your school address, as if i paste too many links into a reply I'll probably get SPAM filtered.

  • @Vzome
    @Vzome Рік тому

    The fine gradations feel like they might have to live there due to some logarithmic relationship, like the way a circular slide rule gets continually finer as you go completely around. Not sure of the mechanism, but I'm pretty confident that they are for *refining* a coarser measurement... maybe you move your center back without changing the ray to the first tangent point.

  • @yorgle
    @yorgle Рік тому

    Neat!

  • @warnerschler9255
    @warnerschler9255 Рік тому

    I have 2 of these And one case like new. Thanks.

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому

      WHAT? How? Where did you get them?

    • @warnerschler9255
      @warnerschler9255 Рік тому

      @@ChrisStaecker I purchased a lot of survey equipment from the university of Kansas , Got the two
      ADISCO, three alidades, one fantastic transit several microscope. And
      Several other items. I have a small collection of survey instrument from quite
      Vintage to current. I have a weakness form the classical survey instruments
      Warner Schler

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому

      @@warnerschler9255 Sounds like a great haul! (I don't like posting my email on youtube, but it's easy to find if you google my name)

  • @glarynth
    @glarynth Рік тому

    Looks more like a disco pizza cutter

  • @PendragonDaGreat
    @PendragonDaGreat Рік тому

    Alternate theory on the very small subdivisions in the middle: This device is made by "Advertising Display Company" I wonder if something in that range might be right near a cutoff for two different rates for something, so by subdividing you made sure you didn't go over whatever that limit was.
    That's more of a random theory, I personally think it's likely for measuring very small things accurately.

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому +1

      Even if you make it all the way to the 15, this still doesn't really say anything about how big your shape is. You could have a very small shape (by area) that makes it to 15, or a very big shape that never makes it to 15. So none of the marks on the scale can represent a "cutoff" in terms of areas.

    • @Jimorian
      @Jimorian Рік тому

      @@ChrisStaecker I think you'd probably "Zero" it at the 15 and then use the smaller markings for each sweep (so you'd also get straighter sweeps). Would need to divide the final answer by 5?

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому

      @@Jimorian Yes that's right- divide by 5 when you're done.

  • @shoofle
    @shoofle Рік тому

    I was trying to think of what an advertising company might have a use for this kind of thing... the only thing i can think of is maybe if you're painting a large mural advertisement, you would want to be able to measure how much paint you'll need, and therefore need the areas of the segments?

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому +1

      Yes I agree- though I've never seen any evidence that they really were an "advertising company", at least in any way I can identify.

    • @jaapsch2
      @jaapsch2 Рік тому +1

      @@ChrisStaecker It seems that they made small "Tru-Tu-Life" window and lobby displays, depicting scenes with miniature figures. At first this was a service for banks, who could get a different scene installed every two weeks.
      See the ad here: archive.org/details/sim_bankers-monthly_1929-05_46_5/page/44/mode/2up
      They diversified into 3d photography when they bought Stereo-Tach in 1939. I've not yet found where the Adisco comes in.

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому

      Very interesting- I missed that one!

  • @mcrsit
    @mcrsit Рік тому

    For the algorithm!

  • @Rhynome
    @Rhynome Рік тому +1

    I can't think of a good reason why, if the finer ticks are intended for fine measurement that they wouldn't start at the origin where you'd have the most control with your hand and the most accurate reading due to the wider spaces between ticks.
    Fine measurement seems like the most reasonable use for them, but why are they where they are?!

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  Рік тому

      I agree 💯!

    • @Rhynome
      @Rhynome Рік тому +1

      On second thought, maybe the wider spacing nearer the origin would result in you missing details and the middle of the scale gives a nice trade-off between manual control and ability to pick up details.

    • @the8ctagon
      @the8ctagon Рік тому

      I wonder if the reason for the 15-25mm fine range is that, at the time the CIA were doing their work, and given the magnification they were using for e.g. a certain type of missile manufacturing facility, the scale of those facilities always fell within those bounds.

    • @MordecaiV
      @MordecaiV Рік тому +6

      For a small object, measuring out from 15-25 means that your segments are much more of a rectangle instead of an arc, and you're working right between your hands, so I believe it will be easier to work there and see what you're doing with reasonable arc length (and hand motion). Since each arc is equal area, it doesn't matter where you actually start the shape.

    • @MordecaiV
      @MordecaiV Рік тому

      @@the8ctagon That's not how the device works.

  • @markvanhorne3276
    @markvanhorne3276 21 день тому

    I'd really like to make one of these, but the links in the description don't work. Can you make the PDF files available?

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  21 день тому

      Sorry about that- I had to move my webserver recently and I still haven't quite updated all the links. Should be working now!

    • @markvanhorne3276
      @markvanhorne3276 10 днів тому

      @@ChrisStaecker Link in the description still doesn't work.

    • @ChrisStaecker
      @ChrisStaecker  10 днів тому

      @@markvanhorne3276 Sorry- try it now! It's here: faculty.fairfield.edu/cstaecker/machines/adisco.html

    • @markvanhorne3276
      @markvanhorne3276 9 днів тому

      @@ChrisStaecker Thank you. I want to make a Gerber Equameter too. Can you fix that link? BTW, I bought the Gerber book that you mentioned. Very interesting.

  • @greeneaglz2573
    @greeneaglz2573 Рік тому

    If only there was one in metric...

  • @warnerschler9255
    @warnerschler9255 Рік тому

    Tried to respond need your email have info for you

  • @puffinjuice
    @puffinjuice Рік тому

    Thanks Satan! 😂

  • @theastuteangler
    @theastuteangler Рік тому

    Not today Satan!
    Thanks Satan!!

  • @fl8281
    @fl8281 Рік тому

    Pizza cutter ruler

  • @bksl09
    @bksl09 Рік тому

    Thanks satan!

  • @LoganDark4357
    @LoganDark4357 9 місяців тому

    Your voice is so quiet I can't hear it over the music, unwatchable :(

  • @johnsrabe
    @johnsrabe Рік тому +5

    AdIsCo. CIA. I mean, cmon, it couldn’t be any clearer.