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"Gould 0738" wrote in message ... We've all heard the expression, "cold enough to freeze the balls off a brass monkey." .. In fact, the phrase derives from the brass cannon called a "monkey" in the seventeenth century. In very cold temperatures, the iron cannonballs and the bras cannon would contract at markedly different rates, so much so that the gun would be unusable. Sailors referred to this phenonenon as "freezing the balls of a brass monkey," the keyword being "of", not "off", and hence the expression was literally true at the time. Still hard to believe! If you calculate the rates of expansion between the two metals there is very little differance in size from the high temps to low temps. For example figure a 6" bore and the temps ranging 100 degrees fereinheit. Figuring the bore and ball fit at the high end, the ball will be only .002" smaller at the low end of the scale. I don't know what the manufacturing tolerances were in those days, but I doubt they could maintain +/-.010" let alone +/-.002". Greg |
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