To those who know Frankenmuth, MI, it is generally as “Little Bavaria,” the German-themed vacation town of quaint houses and shops; of cheese, wurst, beer, Christmas ornaments, and Oom Pa Pa bands. I know it in a slightly different way as the only town to get your helium leak detector repaired. There are at least three shops in Frankenmuth that repair helium leak detectors (or make new specialty versions), and this is the source of the reference leaks that most qualified shops use. So I was here yesterday and today, both for the World-class snow sculpture contest, and to get my helium leak detector looked at. It was acting funny; it turns out there was a leak in the leak detector plus a bad potentiometer on a switchover circuit. The leak is already fixed, and I should have it back in my shop next week (Wednesday).
Category Archives: Sculpture
How much wood could a woodchuck chuck?
“How much wood could a woodchuck chuck, if a woodchuck could chuck wood?” It’s a classic question with a simple answer: The woodchuck, also known as a groundhog or marmot, is a close relative to the beaver: it looks roughly the same, but is about 1/5 the weight (10 pounds versus 50 pounds), and beavers do chuck wood, using their teeth to pull the logs and throw-pile it onto dams. I’ll call the tooth piling process chucking, since that’s what we would call it if a person did it by hand.

A beaver dam. From the size of this dam, and the rate of construction (one night) you can figure out how much wood a beaver could chuck, and from that how much a woodchuck could.
Based on the weight difference, my estimate is that a woodchuck would chuck about 1/5 as much wood as a beaver does. You might think this isn’t very much wood — and one “scientific” blogger claimed it would be less than 1/2 lb., but I’m certain he’s wrong. A beaver is able to build a dam like the one shown in a single night. Based on the size of the dam and the speed of building, we find that the beaver chucked about 1000 lbs of wood in a single night (beavers work at night). To figure out how much wood a woodchuck would chuck, divide this 5. I estimate that a woodchuck would chuck some 200 lbs per day, if it could and chose to.
Woodchucks don’t chuck wood, nor do they build dams or lodges. Instead they live in burrows in the ground. We have one living near my house. Woodchucks do kick up a lot of dirt digging a burrow, as much as 700 lb/day of dirt, but the question-language implies that this kicking activity should not be considered “chucking”. Well, now you know: it’s 200 lbs/night.
Robert Buxbaum. This post is revised January 30, 2020. My original estimate, from January 2013 was half the value here. I’d come to believe that wood-chucks/ groundhogs are 1/10 the size of a beaver, so I’d estimated 100 lb/night. I now know they are heavier.
REB Research periodic table cup
Some 20 years ago I designed this periodic table cup, but with only the 103 named elements that existed then. In part this was done because I wanted a good, large, white coffee cup, in part because I often found I needed a periodic table, and didn’t like to have to look one up, and in part to people how much more area you get on a cylinder than on a flat sheet (roughly 3.14 times more area). To show that, I put all the side elements (rare earth lanthanides, and actinides) where they belonged, and not off on the side. I also put hydrogen in twice, once as a metal (HCl) and once as a non metal (NaH). The color I chose was Tryian Blue, a key color of Biblical Tyre, what you get from male purpura mollusks (the females give a shade of red that I also try to associate with REB Research).
I’ve updated the cup to add more elements: I think it’s great. You can buy it for $45 through our web-site, or for $40 by e-mailing me (reb@rebresearch.com). Or if you do something really cool, I may send you one for free.
By the way, I only use 4 digits for the atomic weight; I can think of no application where a normal person needs more.




