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How Nozzles Work

Husky Corporation · Youtube · 4 HN points · 4 HN comments
HN Theater has aggregated all Hacker News stories and comments that mention Husky Corporation's video "How Nozzles Work".
Youtube Summary
Have you ever wondered how the pump knows to shut itself off when you fill the car with gas? Husky Corporation President Grenville Sutcliffe explains how gasoline fueling nozzles operate. He also explains many of safety features that Husky builds into fueling nozzles. Husky is a leader in petroleum dispensing products, including nozzles.

A leader in innovation and safety, Husky offers a peek behind the technology behind one of things we encounter from day to day. To learn more about nozzles and other Husky products please visit the website: Husky.com.
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Hacker News Stories and Comments

All the comments and stories posted to Hacker News that reference this video.
Here's a much better (visual) description. Interesting.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3phjAQZdGg

Newer nozzles allow far more dispensing accuracy:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=mZI_mNlzWTA

Here's a different design with a more graphical presentation:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a1-X7VIxFIo

Comment: I don't understand whey companies (and people) insist on adding annoying music to their videos.

Here's a video of a fuel dispenser, opened up, with an engineer explaining it. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3phjAQZdGg

Really helped me understand what was going on.

Funny, I found myself asking this question recently too. Also, who made them.. I wish some of these industrial everyday products had the name of the designer attached. Found a video which has a nice nozzle teardown [1].

Another interesting thing is the story of self-fueling, an study in slow adoption. Apparently, the current state of affairs was reached by 1980s or so [2].

I remember driving from California to Oregon, getting to a gas station and trying to pump my own gas... the clerk almost jumped to my neck (in my memories at least :-p).

1: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q3phjAQZdGg

2: https://www.convenience.org/Topics/Fuels/The-History-of-Self...

TedDoesntTalk
New Jersey still does not allow self-pumping and never did, by law. I think the idea is to preserve jobs.
RandallBrown
Oregon doesn't either (except in certain rural areas at night and that just changed a year or two ago.

It's super annoying, unless it's raining or really cold out.

animationwill
Is there an expectation to tip or is it included?
kube-system
Not anymore.

It used to be commonplace to tip gas station attendants everywhere in the US back when boomers were growing up; full-service was the norm and the attendants would check your oil and clean your windows.

myself248
These days I arrange my fill-ups to avoid New Jersey. Last time I stopped there, I had to haggle with the guy to put the last 4 gallons in my 12-gallon tank, because the wonky fuel neck would trip the auto-shutoff prematurely and he thought it was done. I knew how much fuel I'd burned and I could look at the counter and know it wasn't done, but Professor Petroleum was having none of it.

I don't care what the idea is, it's annoying, insulting, and backwards.

kabdib
Not a problem if you're on a motorcycle.

Me, from out of state: "I'd like to pump my own gas, please". In other words, I do not want some stranger accidentally dousing my bike with gas or scratching the tank.

Attendant: "You bet you are."

Nice to be in violent agreement sometimes :-)

LolWolf
Yup, they still do! If it wasn’t for my girlfriend (who is a Portland native) wouldn’t have been with me, I might have ended up with some bruises...
jholman
Enjoyed that youtube explanation (3 minutes, clear explanation). Just a comment to encourage later readers to follow the link, if they were on the brink of doing so.
ConcernedCoder
"the clerk almost jumped to my neck"

Thanks for this, I'm always amused at how certain phrases and sayings get twisted-up a bit during translations between languages, but I'm sure you actually meant "jumped down my throat"...

jaclaz
In Italian "saltare al collo" (literally "jump to the neck") can be used to mean a form of physical aggression (but normally used metaphorically) in English it would be more like "grab by the throat", I believe.

Viceversa to "grab by the throat" translates literally to "prendere per la gola" that actually means to "Tempt through food".

petervm
Don't know what's their native tongue but at least in Portuguese we have a saying that would translate literally to "jumped to my neck". I also love these language things :)
emmanueloga_
haha indeed! thx for the tip
IncRnd
That "jumped to my neck" threw me for a loop! Once I saw you point out the proper idiom I was able to breathe easily again. I've tried to find the origin of this idiom, but I've come up dry as a bone.

It's strange, but I come across these idioms from other cultures back-to-back as I read stories on HN. That's most likely due to the blood, sweat, and tears people put into communicatng on here. Or, maybe language is a bone of contention, and the idioms are simply a breath of fresh air that grabs us by the nape. Whatever the cause, the languages differences sometimes chill me to the bone, maybe they even cause a gut feeling as they hit a raw nerve.

I suppose it's better to be up your ears in idioms, rather than waiting with bated breath.

Thanks for letting me go off on a tangent!

sizzle
What it the idiom "threw me for loop" referring to?

Non native English speakers struggle to grok these sayings...

myself248
I've also heard it as "knock me for a loop", and I think it calls back to "feeling loopy" as a sort of "dizzy", so to throw/knock someone for a loop is to metaphorically hit them so hard as to make them dizzy or disoriented.
ConcernedCoder
https://www.phrases.org.uk/bulletin_board/15/messages/437.ht...
monadic2
It doesn't refer to anything that I am aware, it simply has the connotation of "looping" back, much like "doing a double take".
IncRnd
Until now, I had been unaware of the earliest usage shown below, and I had always understood the boxing reference to be the origin. Live and Learn!

-

To be “thrown for a loop” or “knocked for a loop” refers to being bewildered, dazzled, disoriented and shocked by some event (“AT&T and T-Mobile were thrown for a loop last week when the Department of Justice sued to block AT&T’s planned acquisition of T-Mobile,” CNET, 9/5/11). The phrase first appeared in print in the 1920s, and comes from what the Oxford English Dictionary terms “a centrifugal railway,” but which is, no doubt, better known as a “roller coaster.” The “loop” on roller coaster runs is the point where the coaster arcs upward through a complete circle, leaving passengers upside down at its apex. The term was initially used in the literal roller coaster sense and then to describe aerobatic maneuvers by pilots “looping the loop,” and finally in boxing to mean a powerful punch that downed an opponent, before acquiring its modern “OMG!” usage.

http://www.word-detective.com/2012/04/knock-for-a-loop-knock...

And here’s another video explaining the safety features: https://youtu.be/q3phjAQZdGg
Nov 26, 2019 · 2 points, 0 comments · submitted by notelonmusk
Nov 25, 2019 · 1 points, 0 comments · submitted by notelonmusk
Feb 18, 2019 · 1 points, 0 comments · submitted by kibwen
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