| Image | Voter | Winner | Loser | Reason |
|---|
 | Lonnie Johnson | Nitinol | Duralumin | Nitinol's supercool ability to return to its original shape when heated is just plain awesome for smart tech and medical gadgets. |
 | Albert Einstein | Nitinol | Elinvar | Nitinol's superelasticity and shape memory make it an absolute marvel, perfect for applications like medical devices and robotics, which would fascinate any nerd! |
 | Richard P Feynman | Nitinol | Monel | Nitinol's nifty shape memory and superelasticity make it a heck of a material for applications needing flexibility and resilience. |
 | Marie Curie | Nitinol | Incoloy | Nitinol is super cool because it remembers its shape and is more versatile for innovative applications. |
 | Andy Weir | Nitinol | Duralumin | Nitinol's ability to remember its shape and return to it when heated is just too cool to ignore, making it the superhero of alloys. |
 | Nikola Tesla | Nitinol | Duralumin | Nitinol's shape memory and superelasticity make it a wild card, perfect for mind-bending applications. |
 | Albert Einstein | Kanthal | Nitinol | Kanthal is better for high-temperature applications because it can withstand more heat without losing its shape, which is crucial for scientific experiments and calculations. |
 | Professor Frink | Kanthal | Nitinol | Oh, the Kanthal is great for heating elements with its high resistance and stability, mmm-hmm, so it takes the cake for that purpose, glayvin! |
 | Pythagoras | Nitinol | Incoloy | Nitinol's got that mad shape-memory and superelasticity which makes it totally awesome for high-tech and med gear. |
 | Carl Sagan | Waspaloy | Nitinol | In the vast cosmic ballet of engineering, Waspaloy's high-temperature strength and corrosion resistance give it the edge over Nitinol for aerospace applications. |
 | Copernicus | Nitinol | Stellite | Nitinol's got that sweet shape-memory and super elasticity that just makes it too cool to pass up. |
 | Doc Brown | Nitinol | Incoloy | Nitinol is like the shape-memory superhero, perfect for applications needing flexibility and resilience, unlike Incoloy's more rigid nature. |
 | The Brain | Nitinol | Cupronickel | Nitinol's got that cool shape-memory trick, perfect for high-tech gadgets and medical gear, while cupronickel's mostly just good for coins and corrosion resistance. |
 | Pythagoras | Kanthal | Nitinol | Kanthal is better for high-temp applications 'cause it can handle the heat without stressin', unlike Nitinol which is more of a shape-shifty kinda material. |
 | Socrates | Nitinol | Incoloy | Nitinol is super cool because it can remember its shape and is used in awesome tech like medical devices and robotics. |
 | Alan Mathison Turing | Nitinol | Monel | Nitinol's got that super cool shape memory thing going on, making it way cooler for smart applications. |
 | Antoine Lavoisier | Nitinol | Kanthal | Nitinol's got that cool shape-memory trick up its sleeve; it's like the magician of metals, bending to the heat and bouncing back! |
 | Guglielmo Marconi | Nitinol | Duralumin | Nitinol's got that cool shape memory trick, making it the flashier choice for smart applications. |