Hey friends, Happy Wednesday!
Last week, I met my grad school friend after 4 years over lunch and we visited a history museum.
Let’s look at how Airbags work this week. I aim to write my newsletter issues in a way one can follow them while traveling on a bus, having a coffee, waiting for your food, etc. Let's jump in!
I’m sharing cool facts about gadgets and sharing behind the scenes of this newsletter every day on Twitter. And here is one of them for you. Follow me on Twitter to join the community :)
​https://twitter.com/ChendurSingaram/status/1678908342000054272?s=20​
Once the car begins to crash, a high current is passed to heat a thin resistant wire. Which causes a chemical guanidine nitrate filled inside the steering wheel to explode. This forms Nitrogen rapidly and fills the airbag in ~20ms, causing it to pop through the panels of the steering wheel. Thereby finally acting as a cushion and saving you!
When we crash our car, our heads can hit the steering wheel or other parts with an enormous force due to inertia. This can lead to death. So we need some cushioning effect that reduces the impact and injuries we face on such occasions. Hence, we came up with an invention called the airbag. There are several variations of the same, and the above is the most common one that is being used currently.
My blog post S2E9 with more details on how Airbags work is coming out next week. I will notify you next Wednesday about the same. To recap, all my current newsletter issues are based on Travel and Transport, which is the topic for Season 2. I don’t convert all my newsletter issues into blog posts. I do expand on some of them and write them as blog posts. You can find all my previous blog posts here, down below.
| Read all past blog posts on Gadgets! |
Thank you for reading!
Have a nice rest of the week, and take care!
Until next Wednesday,
Chendur
Understand the inner science, tech, and AI of your gadgets with me, a Carnegie Mellon alumnus. Join 335+ readers every other Wednesday to see the world differently in just 3 minutes—regardless of your background! 🚀
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