Page 1 of 1
Sega Nomad Tool how to open the sega nomad
#1
Posted 22 February 2005 - 03:46 PM
please help,
I need to open my sega nomad to fix a problem. I can undo all the screws apart from the one in the middle which requires a gamebit tool. I have the correct sized tool for the screw but cant push it into the well deep enough to reach the screw, and cant find any other variations of the 4.5mm tool
If anyone has had this problem and found a solution your advice would be most appreciated
Dave. :huh:
I need to open my sega nomad to fix a problem. I can undo all the screws apart from the one in the middle which requires a gamebit tool. I have the correct sized tool for the screw but cant push it into the well deep enough to reach the screw, and cant find any other variations of the 4.5mm tool
If anyone has had this problem and found a solution your advice would be most appreciated
Dave. :huh:
#6
Posted 23 February 2005 - 02:49 AM
#8
Posted 23 February 2005 - 03:13 AM
the ballpoint pen: invented by laszlo biro, a hungarian bloke.
László Bíró (1899-1985)
The Inventor of the Ballpoint Pen
Everybody is familiar with the ballpoint pen and all over the world this eminently useful invention has become an indispensable part of our everyday lives. But how many of us know the story behind this convenient writing implement or the name of its inventor?
The story begins in the 1880s. At that time several inventors tried to develop a ballpoint pen but it was the Hungarian, László Bíró, who created the pen with which we are familiar today László Bíró was born in Budapest on September 19th, 1899. He gained a place at the Medical School in Budapest but did not graduate. For a time he dabbled with hypnosis then he got a job with an oil company as a clerk responsible for matters relating to customs duties. He also had a go at motor racing, which provided the stimulus for his next invention - a new type of gear lever. He was also a successful painter.The need to invent something like the ballpoint pen arose when he took up journalism. He was the editor of the journal "Hongrie-Magyarország-Hungary" and when this was closed down he began working for the newspaper " Elôtte". As a journalist he was frequently irritated by the difficulties involved in using a fountain pen and began to think about how he could replace it with a more convenient writing implement.
Eventually he realised that the technique used in printing by which a rotary cylinder ensures continuous and uniform application of the ink could be adapted for use in a pen in such a way that a slender tube filled with ink with a small ball bearing at the end would be able to apply the ink continuously to the paper. It took several years of experimentation, however before the original idea could be realised in the form of the ballpoint pen, which rapidly became popular all over the world. Part of this experimentation was carried out abroad because in 1939 fears for his own and his family�s safety prompted him to flee from Hungary, firstly to Paris and then to Argentina.
Like all inventions the ballpoint pen had its precursors and required the input of numerous experts and considerable financial backing. For the ballpoint pen to work well it requires precision-made ball bearings, which finally a Swedish company was able to produce to the standard required by László Bíró. Another problem was to produce ink of suitable viscosity. Initially Bíró�s brother, György, helped to resolve this problem, but later the experimentation was continued in the workshops of the firm of Goy and Kovalszky.
Andor Goy played an important role in the development of a ballpoint pen that could be mass produced. His name is associated with the "Gopen". In 1940, in Argentina, László Bíró began experimenting independently until he finally patented his ballpoint pen there in 1943. The first ballpoint pens sold in large numbers to the public were manufactured in 1945 and were marketed in Argentina under the name of "Eterpen".
Bíró invented other things but his name will be for ever associated with the ballpoint pen, in fact in Britain a ballpoint pen is usually referred to as a "Bíró".
László Bíró was so highly respected in Argentina that the Argentine Inventors� Day is celebrated on his birthday September 29th.
László Bíró died on November 24th 1985 in Buenos Aires.
god bless google. :D i thought he was a french bloke called louis.
check the bittom: apparently it's only us brits that call it a biro, although Bic are more known for making them now, who i thought were famous for making disposable razors... which were, I think, invented by king camp gillette (who wasn't really a king, I think...)
ahh... i'm confused now...
Quote
László Bíró (1899-1985)
The Inventor of the Ballpoint Pen
Everybody is familiar with the ballpoint pen and all over the world this eminently useful invention has become an indispensable part of our everyday lives. But how many of us know the story behind this convenient writing implement or the name of its inventor?
The story begins in the 1880s. At that time several inventors tried to develop a ballpoint pen but it was the Hungarian, László Bíró, who created the pen with which we are familiar today László Bíró was born in Budapest on September 19th, 1899. He gained a place at the Medical School in Budapest but did not graduate. For a time he dabbled with hypnosis then he got a job with an oil company as a clerk responsible for matters relating to customs duties. He also had a go at motor racing, which provided the stimulus for his next invention - a new type of gear lever. He was also a successful painter.The need to invent something like the ballpoint pen arose when he took up journalism. He was the editor of the journal "Hongrie-Magyarország-Hungary" and when this was closed down he began working for the newspaper " Elôtte". As a journalist he was frequently irritated by the difficulties involved in using a fountain pen and began to think about how he could replace it with a more convenient writing implement.
Eventually he realised that the technique used in printing by which a rotary cylinder ensures continuous and uniform application of the ink could be adapted for use in a pen in such a way that a slender tube filled with ink with a small ball bearing at the end would be able to apply the ink continuously to the paper. It took several years of experimentation, however before the original idea could be realised in the form of the ballpoint pen, which rapidly became popular all over the world. Part of this experimentation was carried out abroad because in 1939 fears for his own and his family�s safety prompted him to flee from Hungary, firstly to Paris and then to Argentina.
Like all inventions the ballpoint pen had its precursors and required the input of numerous experts and considerable financial backing. For the ballpoint pen to work well it requires precision-made ball bearings, which finally a Swedish company was able to produce to the standard required by László Bíró. Another problem was to produce ink of suitable viscosity. Initially Bíró�s brother, György, helped to resolve this problem, but later the experimentation was continued in the workshops of the firm of Goy and Kovalszky.
Andor Goy played an important role in the development of a ballpoint pen that could be mass produced. His name is associated with the "Gopen". In 1940, in Argentina, László Bíró began experimenting independently until he finally patented his ballpoint pen there in 1943. The first ballpoint pens sold in large numbers to the public were manufactured in 1945 and were marketed in Argentina under the name of "Eterpen".
Bíró invented other things but his name will be for ever associated with the ballpoint pen, in fact in Britain a ballpoint pen is usually referred to as a "Bíró".
László Bíró was so highly respected in Argentina that the Argentine Inventors� Day is celebrated on his birthday September 29th.
László Bíró died on November 24th 1985 in Buenos Aires.
god bless google. :D i thought he was a french bloke called louis.
check the bittom: apparently it's only us brits that call it a biro, although Bic are more known for making them now, who i thought were famous for making disposable razors... which were, I think, invented by king camp gillette (who wasn't really a king, I think...)
ahh... i'm confused now...
#9
Posted 23 February 2005 - 05:54 AM
also through the magic of google
Linkity
I think they are talking about the lid off one of THESE things
Quote
The other man to bring the ballpoint pen successfully back to life was Marcel Bich, a French manufacturer of penholders and pen cases. Bich was appalled at the poor quality of the ballpoint pens he had seen and he was also shocked at their high cost. But he recognized that the ballpoint was a firmly established innovation and he resolved to design a high-quality pen at a low price that would scoop the market. He went to the Biro brothers and arranged to pay them a royalty on their patent. Then for two years Marcel Bich studied the detailed construction of every ballpoint pen on the market, often working with a microscope. By 1952 Bich was ready to introduce his new wonder: a clear-barreled, smooth-writing, non-leaky, inexpensive ballpoint pen he called the "Ballpoint Bic." The ballpoint pen had finally become a practical writing instrument. The public accepted it without complaint, and today it is as standard a writing implement as the pencil. In England, they are still called Biros, and many Bic models also say "Biro" on the side of the pen, as a testament to their primary inventors.
I think they are talking about the lid off one of THESE things
Page 1 of 1

Sign In
Register
Help

MultiQuote