Over the years, Erector Sets have been used to prototype a variety of devices, including: • In 1949, an Erector set was used to build the precursor to the modern
artificial heart by William Sewell and Dr. William Glenn of the Yale School of Medicine. The external pump successfully bypassed the heart of a dog for more than an hour. • In the 1970s, information theory pioneer
Claude Shannon constructed a bounce-juggling machine from an Erector set. • In the late 1980s, with an Erector Set, various old toys, and bits of jewelry,
Jack Kevorkian jerry-rigged a machine he called the Thanatron (later renamed to the Mercitron). Three bottles were suspended from a rickety beam, one filled with a saline solution to open a patient's veins, another with barbiturates for sedation, and a third with potassium chloride to stop the heart. After Kevorkian connected the patient to an IV, he or she would pull a chain on the device to start the lethal medications flowing. He called it his "
Rube Goldberg suicide device." • In the late 1990s, engineer Mark Sumner used Erector to create a working model for "Soarin'", an attraction at Disney's California Adventure in Anaheim, California, and Walt Disney World's Epcot near Orlando, Florida. In 1990, Meccano S.A. built a giant
Ferris wheel in France. It was modelled after the original 1893
Ferris Wheel built by
George Washington Gale Ferris Jr. at the
World's Columbian Exposition at Chicago and was shipped to the United States to promote "Erector by Meccano" after Meccano S.A. had bought out the Erector brand name and began selling Erector by Meccano sets in the U.S. It went on display in New York City, after which it was purchased by
Ripley's Believe It or Not! and put on display in their
St. Augustine, Florida museum. The model, the largest in size at the time, is high, weighs , was made from 19,507 pieces, 50,560 nuts and bolts, and took 1,239 hours to construct. At this mass and size, some deviation from Erector by Meccano-only parts was a necessity, to prevent it collapsing (mainly in the structural spokes). The largest model by mass would certainly be in contention, but some models have topped . == See also ==