Sep 7, 1967:
Santa Ynez Valley News
In 1967 a West Virginia mechanical engineer for Union Carbide designed a UFO detector, and claimed its alarm went off at the same time a UFO was seen hovering over a local UC plant.
Sunday Gazette-Mail
In 1968 police in Ft. Lauderdale mistook a homemade UFO detector for a bomb.
Fort Lauderdale News
1968:
Practical Electronics (UK, March 1969)
Project 1947
The UFO Chronicles
Skeptics UFO Newsletter
This 1951 device, exhibited at the 3rd annual Los Angeles hobby show, appears highly unorthodox at first glance. But it’s clunky and has a big sign stating FLYING SAUCER DETECTOR, so it’s still kosher.
The “Do Nothing” Machine—it produces nothing except smiles.
They have an older vid on their website when the machine was shiny & new. Below is from 2010:
Santa Ynez Valley News
In 1967 a West Virginia mechanical engineer for Union Carbide designed a UFO detector, and claimed its alarm went off at the same time a UFO was seen hovering over a local UC plant.
Sunday Gazette-Mail
In 1968 police in Ft. Lauderdale mistook a homemade UFO detector for a bomb.
Fort Lauderdale News
1968:
Practical Electronics (UK, March 1969)
Project 1947
The UFO Chronicles
Skeptics UFO Newsletter
This 1951 device, exhibited at the 3rd annual Los Angeles hobby show, appears highly unorthodox at first glance. But it’s clunky and has a big sign stating FLYING SAUCER DETECTOR, so it’s still kosher.
The “Do Nothing” Machine—it produces nothing except smiles.
Quote:Life Magazine in 1953 headlined its article, “Machine-Age Revenge—Californian’s mechanical clown is built to accomplish nothing.” It went on to say:
The good earth and green thumb are tools enough for Lawrence Wahlstrom of Los Angeles who, in his calling of landscape gardener, is more immune than most to the tyranny of efficient machine—machines that clamor to write his letters, eliminate distances, grind out his product or wake him with music. But for Mr. Wahlstrom, immunity is not enough. When he gets home he slips into his workshop and takes the offensive, working earnestly with piles of nuts and gears. The resulting machine is his own personal triumph over efficiency. It has no name but 700 moving parts. It is cheap to manufacture, economical to operate and it runs smoothly without a hitch or backlash. More important, Mr. Wahlstrom has made sure this one device will never speed or complicate his comfortable way of life; a captive mass of cogs, it will start and stop, but otherwise it accomplishes utterly nothing.
The machine, and Wahlstrom, had a flirtation with fame in the 1950’s, and Wolf has a scrapbook detailing more than 25 television appearances including gigs on the Garry Moore Show as well as spots with Bob Hope and Art Linkletter.
From time to time, Wahlstrom called the machine a Flying Saucer Detector, or a Smog Eradicator. Obviously, it did none of those things—it does nothing but entertain, the inventor was prone to admit.
The Do Nothing Machine
By Keith Christensen, Tabor, SD
It’s wonderful, stupendous, colossal
It wakes up all of my loves
The most wonderful gadget ever
Now what would you say that it does?
It has big gears and small gears and levers
It has a governor too
This machine is downright exciting
I wonder what all it can do?
There’re seven hundred gears to amaze you
There’s even a flashing red light
Things go this way and that way and new ways
It’s just a most wonderful sight.
A magnificent kind of invention
A wonderful thing to behold
The most beautiful thing in the world
It’s a do nothing machine I am told.
The Internet Craftsmanship Museum Presents: Lawrence Wahlstrom
They have an older vid on their website when the machine was shiny & new. Below is from 2010:
"It is hard to imagine a more stupid or more dangerous way of making decisions than by putting those decisions in the hands of people who pay no price for being wrong." – Thomas Sowell