The eighth drop fell on 28 November 2000, allowing experimenters to calculate that the pitch has a viscosity approximately 230 billion (2.3×1011) times that of water. The ninth drop is expected to fall in 2012 or 2013.
Is it really the worlds longest running experiment? Well, it is recorded in the Guinness Book of Records as the world’s longest continuously running laboratory experiment, and it is expected that there is enough pitch in the funnel to allow it to continue for at least another hundred years. Ah but … this experiment is pre-dated by two other still-active scientific devices, the Oxford Electric Bell (1840) and the Beverly Clock (1864), so while it might indeed be the slowest, I don’t think it is the longest running.
Want to find out more? You can do so here.
Interested in watching? There have a webcam here (but don’t hold your breath waiting for a drop)
Timeline
Date | Event | Duration(months) | Duration(years) |
---|---|---|---|
1927 | Experiment set up | ||
1930 | The stem was cut | ||
December 1938 | 1st drop fell | 96–107 | 8.0–8.9 |
February 1947 | 2nd drop fell | 99 | 8.3 |
April 1954 | 3rd drop fell | 86 | 7.2 |
May 1962 | 4th drop fell | 97 | 8.1 |
August 1970 | 5th drop fell | 99 | 8.3 |
April 1979 | 6th drop fell | 104 | 8.7 |
July 1988 | 7th drop fell | 111 | 9.3 |
28 November 2000 | 8th drop fell | 148 | 12.3 |