What you'd find in the world's first vending machine
Wednesday, January 29, 2025
Because vending machines are now automated, they can feel like a relatively modern invention. |
|
|
|
|
|
B ecause vending machines are now automated, they can feel like a relatively modern invention. However, the basic contraption has actually been around for more than 2,000 years. Introduced around the first century CE by Greek engineer and mathematician Heron of Alexandria, the first vending machine didn't deliver snacks — it dispensed holy water. Similar to modern machines, Heron's device required inserting a coin into a slot. The coin fell onto a pan that was connected to a lever, which opened a valve on the other end where the holy water flowed out. The pan continued to move under the weight of the coin until, eventually, the coin slid off. The lever would then raise back to its initial state and close the valve, stopping the flow of water. |
|
|
The machine — described by Heron as a "sacrificial vessel" — was made to limit the amount of holy water people were using at ancient temples. (This was during the Hellenistic period, when Alexandria was a multicultural hub for various Roman, Greek, and Egyptian faiths.) Heron's invention didn't stick around with any regularity until centuries later, however. Throughout the 1600s and 1700s, coin-operated machines were used to sell tobacco in English taverns, and by the 1800s, they were selling everything from banned literary works to stamps. In 1888, a new chewing gum called Tutti-Frutti appeared in custom penny-operated vending machines on New York City subway platforms, introducing the United States to vending machines as we know them today. |
|
| |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Approximate number of vending machines in the U.S. | | 7 million |
| | Average amount an American spends on vending machines each year | | $27 |
| | Average amount an American spends on vending machines each year | | $27 |
|
|
|
Year when labels warning against tilting were added to U.S. vending machines | | 1995 |
| | Approximate number of Snickers candy bars manufactured every day | | 15 million |
| | Approximate number of Snickers candy bars manufactured every day | | 15 million |
|
|
|
|
|
| | Did you know? |
|
|
The microwave was invented by accident. |
|
During World War II, Allied forces gained a significant tactical advantage by deploying the world's first true radar system. The success of this system increased research into microwaves and the magnetrons (a type of electron tube) that generate them. One day around 1946, Percy Spencer, an engineer at the aerospace and defense company Raytheon, stepped in front of an active radar set and noticed, to his surprise, that microwaves produced from the radar melted a candy bar in his pocket. After getting over his shock — and presumably cleaning up — Spencer conducted a few more experiments using eggs and popcorn kernels, and realized that microwaves could be used to cook a variety of foods. Raytheon patented the invention a short time later, and in 1947, the company released its first microwave. |
|
posted by June Lesley at 4:07 AM
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home