From Jules Verne’s “20, 000 Leagues Under the Sea” to Simon Lake’s Argonaut Submarine. “Anything one man can imagine; other men can make real.” -Jules Verne
Take all of the classes you want, earn the degrees, read all of the books; but nothing, absolutely nothing will compare to what you will learn from designing, building, and using it yourself. Nothing! –Doug
“My diving suit really should have been preserved in a museum if only as an example of what can be done when one has to do it. I hammered iron into the form of an open helmet, into the front of which I fastened a dead-light, from an old yacht, and covered the whole, except for the dead-light-with painted canvas as far down as my chest. In order to overcome the positive buoyancy of the body I tied sash-weights to my legs, and hoped that this would permit me to walk around on the bottom. No circus clown ever looked any funnier. Bart Champion laughed himself into stitches when I tried the suit on.” –Simon Lake
Simon Lake did not have a Plasma Table, and that did not even slow him down. We too often use the excuse that we don’t have the proper tools, but what we are often missing is the ability to see the solutions that are sitting right in front of us.
Power tools, CNC Router Tables, Plasma Cutters, and Welders are all at our fingertips. In 1894, Simon Lake had none of these things, yet he built a working submarine.
The brilliance of Simon Lake’s submarine was the wheels. Without any underwater navigation other than a compass, wheels removed drifting with the current and allow measuring the distance traveled by counting the rotations of the wheels.