Which detail best supports Kamen's opinion that he was
hooked on making things out of metal?
Read the excerpt from "On Becoming an Inventor" by
Dean Kamen.
My next challenge was that I wanted to make things out
of metal, so I became interested in how to use a lathe, a
milling machine, and so on. I went to buy this new
equipment I thought I'd need and met a man who had a
machine shop of his own who was about to retire and
move to Florida. He allowed me to visit him after school
and on weekends to observe how he used all his tools. I
was hooked. When he retired I bought not only all his big
equipment but all his little toolboxes as well--they were
treasures!
O He allowed me to visit him after school and on
weekends to observe how he used all his tools.
O When he retired I bought not only all his big
equipment but all his little toolboxes as well they
web treasures!
O One, his shop wouldn't fit in our basement, and two,
there was no way the lathe, weighing fifteen hundred
pounds, and the milling machine... could be carried
into the basement.
O At the time I was making enough money from my
electronic devices to pay for all of this.
I decided to put his entire machine shop in our
basement, but there were two problems... One, his shop
wouldn't fit in our basement, and two, there was no way
the lathe, weighing fifteen hundred pounds, and the
milling machine, weighing two thousand pounds, could