22 May 2014
Last updated at 06:11 ET
The discovery by the
French state-owned railway company SNCF that 2,000 new trains are too
wide
for many station platforms is embarrassing, but far from the first
time a small mis-measurement or miscalculation has had serious
repercussions.
The French fiasco has been
blamed by SNCF on the national rail operator RFF.
But sometimes there is no-one else to share responsibility. Here are 10
examples where a little error has proved very expensive, or even fatal.
1. The Mars Climate Orbiter
Designed to orbit Mars as the first interplanetary weather
satellite, the Mars Orbiter was lost in 1999 because the Nasa team used
imperial units while a contractor used metric. The $125m probe came too
close to Mars as it tried to manoeuvre into orbit, and is thought to
have been destroyed by the planet's atmosphere. An investigation said
the "root cause" of the loss was the "failed translation of English
units into metric units" in a piece of ground software.
2. The Vasa warship
In 1628, crowds in Sweden watched in horror as a new warship,
Vasa, sank less than a mile into her maiden voyage, with the death of 30
people on board. Armed with 64 bronze cannons, it was considered by
some to be the most powerful warship in the world. Experts who have
studied it since it was raised in 1961 say it is asymmetrical, being
thicker on the port side than the starboard side. One reason for this
could be that the
workmen were using different systems of measurement.
Archaeologists have found four rulers used by the workmen who built the
ship. Two were calibrated in Swedish feet, which had 12 inches, while
the other two measured Amsterdam feet, which had 11 inches.
3. The "Gimli Glider"
In 1983, an Air Canada flight ran out of fuel above Gimli,
Manitoba. Canada had switched to the metric system in 1970, and the
plane is reported to have been Air Canada's first aircraft to use metric
measurements. The plane's on-board fuel gauge was not working, so the
crew used measuring "dripsticks" to check how much fuel the plane took
on during refuelling. Things went wrong when they converted this
measurement of volume into one of weight. They got the number right, but
the unit wrong - mistaking pounds of fuel for kilograms. As a result
the plane was carrying about half as much fuel as they thought. Luckily,
the pilot was able to land the plane safely on the Gimli runway, giving
the plane the nickname "Gimli Glider".
4. The Hubble Space Telescope
The Hubble telescope is famous for its beautiful space images,
and is considered a great success for Nasa. However, it got off to a
very rocky start. The first images sent back by the telescope were fuzzy
because the telescope's main mirror was too flat. It wasn't out by much
- only 2.2 microns, or about 1/50th the thickness of a human hair - but
this was enough to put the project in jeopardy. One theory is that a
speck of paint on a device used to test the mirror resulted in distorted
measurements. Luckily, scientists manage to fix the problem in 1993,
using an instrument called the Corrective Optics Space Telescope Axial
Replacement (Costar). This cancelled out the error in the main mirror,
by matching it in reverse.
5. Big Ben
The Big Ben bell at the Houses of Parliament in London cracked
during testing in 1857 and was melted down to be recast. But the new
bell, winched into position over three days in 1859, also quickly
cracked. Disputes raged over who was at fault - there was even a libel
case. One theory is that the massive hammer, at 6.5 hundredweight, was
too heavy - at least for the particular alloy the bell was made from
(seven parts tin to 22 of copper). The foundries which cast the bells
had always argued this material was too brittle. The second bell was not
replaced (it is still cracked), just rotated by an eighth of a turn.
The hammer, however, was replaced by a lighter one.
6. Stonehenge model
In the 1984 mockumentary This is Spinal Tap, the members of a
fictional rock group order a model of a Stonehenge megalith for their
stage show - but the note written on a napkin mistakenly asks for a
model 18 inches tall, instead of 18 feet. Curiously, and probably
coincidentally, the British rock band Black Sabbath had experienced the
opposite problem during its Born Again tour in 1983. Its replica of
Stonehenge was so big, it got in the way of the band, and very few of
the "stones" would fit on the stage. One version of the story says there
was a mix-up between metres and feet.
7. The Laufenburg bridge
What is sea level? It varies from one place to another, and
different countries use different benchmarks. "For example, Britain has
measured height in relation to mean sea levels in Cornwall, while France
measures height in relation to sea levels in Marseille," says Dr Philip
Woodworth, of the National Oceanography Centre Liverpool. Germany, for
its part, measures height in relation to the North Sea, while
Switzerland, like France, opts for the Mediterranean Sea. This caused a
problem in Laufenburg, a town that straddles Germany and Switzerland. As
two halves of a new bridge grew closer to one another in 2003, it
became clear that, instead of being at the same height "above sea
level", one side was 54cm higher than the other. Builders knew that
there was a 27cm difference between the two versions of sea level - but
somehow it was doubled, rather than cancelled out. The German side
reportedly had to be lowered before the bridge could be completed.
8. Scott's diet
The polar explorer Robert Falcon Scott made a fatal
miscalculation about the amount of food his men would need on their
1910-1912 expedition to the South Pole. They were given rations of 4,500
calories per day, which is now known to be insufficient when hauling
sledges, and especially at higher altitudes. According to Dr Mike
Stroud, a polar veteran and expert in nutrition, the explorers were
getting some 3,000 calories per day less than their bodies needed, and
would have lost about 25kg of body weight before they reached their
destination and started the return journey. Scott and his companions on
the trek to the pole are now assumed to have died of starvation.
9. The Sochi biathlon track
The day before the opening of the Sochi Winter Olympics, it was
discovered that the biathlon track - which should be a loop of 2.5km
(1.6 miles) - was 40m (130ft) short. Competitors in 7.5km events would
have covered less than 7.4km, while those in 12.5km events would have
done 12.3km. Some hasty repair work ensured the track was the right
length for the first event three days later. Lengthening a biathlon
track is clearly easier than lengthening a swimming pool. It's often
been reported that 50m swimming pools at Crystal Palace in London and
Leeds were made a few centimetres too short - sometimes, it's said,
because the designers forgot about the thickness of the tiles. These
stories, however, appear to be urban myths. A similar report about
Portsmouth's Olympic pool in 2011 also turned out to be incorrect.
10. The Millennium Bridge
To mark the new millennium, London got a new footbridge in June
2000, linking the newly opened Tate Modern art gallery, on the south
bank of the Thames, with the north bank near St Paul's cathedral. But
people noticed that the 350m-long structure wobbled alarmingly as they
walked across. One of the difficulties of designing a footbridge is the
"synchronised footfall" effect - as the bridge begins to bounce or sway
people adjust their footsteps to the rhythm of the bridge's movements,
inadvertently magnifying them. In this case, the designers took account
of the up-and-down synchronised footfall, but not the side-to-side
effect. The following year, work began to install dampers, like car
shock absorbers, to reduce the rocking. It was reopened in February
2002.
Reporting by Helier Cheung and Stephen Mulvey
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