Тёмный

The  

Clickspring
Подписаться 661 тыс.
Просмотров 642 тыс.
50% 1

The Antikythera Mechanism Episode 6 - Making The Metonic #Calendar Train, by Clickspring
In this video I make the gearing that drives the Metonic, Callippic and Olympiad pointers. If you're interested in a bit more detail on the ancient Greek approach to calendars, then I recommend this excellent article on the Athenian calendars - www.ancient.eu/article/833/th...
If you would like to help support the creation of these videos, then head on over to the Clickspring Patreon page: / clickspring
________________________________________________________
A very special thank you to Patrons:
Sinking Valley Woodworks (www.sinkingvalleywoodworks.com)
Glenn Trewitt
Christopher Warnock
Mike Manfrin
Steven Sladewski
Rollin W. Patrick, Jr.
Jim Popwell
Gary Levario
Pete Askew
Norman Lemke
Andre van Soest
Andrew Smith
Bernd Fischer
Rudolph Bescherer Jr
Sam Towne
Adam Slagle
Jack Cause
Jeremiah G. Mort
Dave Seff
Olof Haggren
Stassinopoulos Thomas
Florian Ragwitz
Larry Pardi
Samuel Irons
Tim Bray
________________________________________________________
You can also help me make these videos by purchasing via the following Amazon Affiliate links:
Cameras used in this video:
Panasonic GH5 - amzn.to/2rEzhh2
Panasonic X920 - amzn.to/2wzxxdT
Tools & Shop Products:
"Solidworks 2013 Bible": amzn.to/2FObS1D
"A Portable Cosmos: Revealing the Antikythera Mechanism, Scientific Wonder of the Ancient World" amzn.to/2NoLgIR
Dykem 80300 Steel Blue Layout Fluid, Brush-in-Cap (4oz): amzn.to/2HGPaJJ
Blue Matador Abrasive Paper - amzn.to/2IAFiBT
Dormer A190202 Jobber Drill Set, 1.0 mm - 6.0 mm x 0.1 mm Size: amzn.to/2DR5fdb
Dormer A190203 Jobber Drill Set, 6.0 mm - 10.0 mm x 0.1 mm Size: amzn.to/2ITfeTa
YG1 NC Spotting Drill 8% Cobalt HSS 1/8 to 1/2" 120 Degree 5 Pc Set CNC Machine: amzn.to/2G7ylv6
Hegner Scroll Saw: amzn.to/2IhteVW
Super Pike Saw Blades Size 4/0 pkg of 144: amzn.to/2IO6aPw
Abbreviated Transcript:
01:16 So ignoring sign convention for the moment, and viewed from the perspective of the pointers, the gearing ensures that a full turn of th Metonic pointer occurs once every 3.8 years. And you might notice that two of the gears cancel out in the train calculation, so they appears to be redundant. But as it happens a 53 tooth gear turns out to be essential for another part of the mechanism thats driven by the first section of this train, and I'll cover that in detail in a later video Now there's a small error in the Metonic cycle thats corrected in the Callipic cycle, by essentially multiplying the entire Metonic cycle by 4 to give a more accurate 76 year relationship. And finally the Olympiad pointer indicates the passage of the 4 year Games cycle. So there are 6 wheel assemblies to be made to complete this part of the mechanism, as well as a number of supporting components.
02:54 Some were evolutionary dead ends, and simply didn't make it. Some, like the single pivot idea were the origins of an idea that continued to evolve. And others were evolutionary winners from the very beginning. Travelling through time essentially unchanged, right up to the modern era. Now one idea that of course definitely evolved is the tooth profile. But that's not to say it wasn't largely effective as it was. Because despite its mechanical inefficiency, a triangular tooth profile brings a tremendous advantage when it comes to certain aspects of the build. Like for example, depthing.
04:39 In that instance the entire outside profile of one or even both of the wheels can be very slightly filed back, much like when the teeth were originally formed. So that the final stage of depthing essentially becomes an extension of the tooth forming process.
12:42 so next I moved on to the pointer components, starting with the support frame for the metonic pointer. And since I'll soon need a second one of these for the Saros pointer, I figured I'd better make both of them at the same time.
References:
Gears From The Greeks - Derek de Solla Price: amzn.to/2pii4ZD
The CT and PTM data that the AMRP have made publicly available can be found here: www.antikythera-mechanism.gr/data
Gear schematic can be found in Tony Freeth's 2012 research paper:
dlib.nyu.edu/awdl/isaw/isaw-pa...
The Athenian Calendar - www.ancient.eu/article/833/th...
The Callippic Cycle: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Callipp...
Meton Of Athens/Metonic Cycle: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meton_o...
MT Wright (2005) Counting Months and years: The Upper Back Dial of The Antikythera Mechanism
Credits:
Clips from "The 2000 Year Old Computer" courtesy Images First Ltd.
Digital image of the Back Dial of The Antikythera mechanism courtesy Tony Freeth, Images First Ltd
The Antikythera Mechanism Episode 6 - Making The Metonic Calendar Train, by Clickspring

Развлечения

Опубликовано:

 

19 июн 2024

Поделиться:

Ссылка:

Скачать:

Готовим ссылку...

Добавить в:

Мой плейлист
Посмотреть позже
Комментарии : 1 тыс.   
@XxMrDudexX
@XxMrDudexX 6 лет назад
I envy those who find these videos when the series is finished and can just binge it through in one sitting edit: lots people replying "this is me!". sorry to break it to you guys, but the series still isn't finished as of november 2020.
@charlesbronson3933
@charlesbronson3933 6 лет назад
Me too, but i envy those who find Project Binky when finished more..
@nrussell1945
@nrussell1945 6 лет назад
Charles Bronson you've just turned me on to what might become one of my favorite series on RU-vid! Thanks (but at the same time, I'm now in the same boat, even more waiting!!!)
@charlesbronson3933
@charlesbronson3933 6 лет назад
Down you go the endless rabbithole... I can't tell you how much enjoyment i got out of those series.
@nrussell1945
@nrussell1945 6 лет назад
Charles Bronson do you know of any more like it? I'm trying to learn as much as possible about car modification and building, and I'm always open for more content!
@Darkknight512
@Darkknight512 6 лет назад
I did that with the original clock build. It was amazing.
@ThisOldTony
@ThisOldTony 6 лет назад
brilliant as always.
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Thank you mate :)
@mwfolmar11
@mwfolmar11 4 года назад
@@Clickspring we need another ToT/Clickspring collab!!!!!!!
@damenekamel5063
@damenekamel5063 3 года назад
you too old tony
@demonshaz
@demonshaz 2 года назад
C'mon you old Tony. It's time you put down the RU-vid watching and got to work
@azadude18
@azadude18 6 лет назад
*Me, an ancient Greek craftsman assembling my masterwork*: Oh, I know it's not elegant, but I'll just sneak in one retaining pin between these two wheels, no one will ever know. 2100 years later: 8:11
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Ha ha! So true!!
@mort8568
@mort8568 4 года назад
lmao
@dreadbull5039
@dreadbull5039 4 года назад
“And I would have gotten away with it if it hadn’t been for that meddling machinist!”
@Nighthawkinlight
@Nighthawkinlight 6 лет назад
Come on RU-vid. I was not notified of this video, had to stumble on it through reddit like an internet hobo. Looking forward to watching shortly...
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Yes hearing this a lot today...
@JuryDutySummons
@JuryDutySummons 6 лет назад
NighHawkInLight, the internet hobo, with a bindle full of memes.
@BOBBERtheKID
@BOBBERtheKID 6 лет назад
Same here!!
@tomaszkozien5596
@tomaszkozien5596 6 лет назад
Me too!!! I was like Clickspring uploaded 8 hours ago?
@Jockulation
@Jockulation 6 лет назад
Yep. No notification. Doesn't matter though, I'll watch it regardless
@jasonp.1195
@jasonp.1195 4 года назад
As a not especially mathematically oriented person, I really enjoyed seeing the ratios of gears with each gear labeled. I believe you called it the gear train calculation. I stopped the video there and did something I've never done, tried to figure out the relations between the teeth and those calculations. Really eye opening for me. Thankyou.
@martinjones6694
@martinjones6694 6 лет назад
what knobheads down-voted this awesome video? Clickspring has to be one of the best video producers on RU-vid. production quality and content quality is second to none.
@DrewLSsix
@DrewLSsix 6 лет назад
Martin Jones ancient craftsmen bitter about his access to modern machine tools...
@petergregory5286
@petergregory5286 6 лет назад
And, and they probably watched it right the way through before deciding. Knobheads doesn’t really describe them.
@ianc4901
@ianc4901 6 лет назад
Not enough kittens for some people !
@davidbrydon3969
@davidbrydon3969 6 лет назад
Exactly, I'd give this 3/5 stars if RU-vid allowed it. While I appreciate the detailed discussion of how this device was designed by the original craftsmen, I cringe whenever he uses a modern device for the fabricating. What's the point of going through the effort of doing this reconstruction if you are not going to observe the same limitiations the original builders faced? Of course he can build the device using lathes, drill presses, etc. So what? It's essentially the diffrence between The New Yankee Workshop and The Woodrwright's Shop.
@shazam6274
@shazam6274 6 лет назад
It would take more than 10 times longer! Would you dedicate over 10,000 hours to make a clock? The ancient craftsmen did not work alone, usually having several assistants to do the repetitive, time consuming, fabrication work.
@Wintergatan
@Wintergatan 6 лет назад
AAAAAAA love it so much.
@srenhaandbk7904
@srenhaandbk7904 4 года назад
Why does this not surprise me... Brilliant! :3
@tybronx2446
@tybronx2446 2 года назад
This is the best comment to come across EVER 😂
@WildBoreWoodWind
@WildBoreWoodWind 6 лет назад
Clickspring is amazing but how amazing were those ancient Greeks, not only for the engineering but for the maths behind all of this - mind-blowing!
@GeorgeTsiros
@GeorgeTsiros 5 лет назад
also... how would you describe the arithmetic behind it without using any roman mathematical symbols? 0..9, +-*/ ?
@Oberon4278
@Oberon4278 5 лет назад
@@GeorgeTsiros Maybe I'm misunderstanding you, but 0 is an idea of Arabic origin, and those numerals are Arabic, not Roman. Roman numerals are terrible for doing math. As for ancient Greek arithmetic -- iirc they had a very good grasp of the math of ratios, and I imagine that just working out the ratios of all the different rates of rotation would get you very close to perfect, if not spot on, for counting the teeth needed for each wheel. You can do a surprising amount of "arithmetic" with just a straight edge and compass. You can even perform some algebraic proofs (most famously the Pythagorean theorem) with nothing more than a straight edge.
@Oberon4278
@Oberon4278 5 лет назад
What's fun for me to think about here is how much technology the Greeks may have been "standing on" when they did this. Surely all of this wasn't developed in a single generation, yet no record of clockwork earlier than this survives. I would be very interested to revisit ancient artifacts with an eye to elements in their design or construction which may point to the use of unexpected technology. For example -- and I'm just making this up -- we might find ancient chariot wheels where the spokes are arranged in a way that seems nonsensical, but if you "allow" that the builders may have had such-and-such technology then suddenly the design makes sense because building them that way is much easier.
@GeorgeTsiros
@GeorgeTsiros 5 лет назад
@@Oberon4278 i mean: they did all the math *without* using the common mathematical notation we are used today. Everything was expressed in common language.
@jpdemer5
@jpdemer5 2 года назад
@@GeorgeTsiros The Greeks used letters to represent numbers ("Greek numerals"), with a positional system similar to the decimal system of today. Archimedes, who's often credited with designing the Antikythera mechanism, developed a base-8 system using the Greek letters, which served him just as well in calculations as today's Arabic base-10 system.
@BobbyDukeArts
@BobbyDukeArts 6 лет назад
This is my kind of ASMR
@rogersmith1430
@rogersmith1430 6 лет назад
Such perfection I feel humbled to watch. As an ex TOOLMAKER and engineer I really appreciate the skill levels demonstrated. Keep up the good work! Roger
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Cheers Roger!
@elistevens6366
@elistevens6366 6 лет назад
This is the first video I've found of this channel, and I am blown away! How did I not hear about this channel sooner!? I sat completely transfixed watching, as the video is super high quality, and sets the bar super high for other channels like it. This is like "How It's Made", but way better quality and research, and what is being built is so incredibly badass! Seriously, love it! I subscribed to your RU-vid, and pledged $3 a month on your patreon. Keep up the great work!
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Thank you Eli, I appreciate your support :)
@tomcummings3471
@tomcummings3471 6 лет назад
Aw man! You get to see the WHOLE CLOCK BUILD at your leisure *envy*
@elistevens6366
@elistevens6366 6 лет назад
Dude, seriously...I've been watching this channel for the last hour straight. I haven't even started the clock build yet! That sounds incredible!
@HarryCrackz
@HarryCrackz 6 лет назад
I envy you. You can binge alllll his videos for the first time
@ericgillespie2812
@ericgillespie2812 6 лет назад
Lol if you think this episode was good I just wish I could see your expression when you the video of him making all the precision files required for this mechanism. :)
@oswaldjh
@oswaldjh 6 лет назад
Mesmerized? Transfixed in amazement? In total awe? Yes, all of the above.
@josephd.5524
@josephd.5524 6 лет назад
I love ancient history, and watching the Antikythera mechanism being built so painstakingly with all the modern tech we got... it just boggles my mind to think of the artisan who made the first mechanism. What mad genius of mathematics and metalwork was even able to conceive of, let alone build, with nothing more than his two hands and determination. Did he consider the abacus a tremendously useful tool, or did he consider it cheating? Did he live to hear that his masterpiece of exquisite human engineering sank to the bottom of the sea? Could this have caused a war? So many questions.
@HandToolRescue
@HandToolRescue 6 лет назад
Always love these!
@adamcain4603
@adamcain4603 6 лет назад
I have been a tool maker for half my life and every time I watch your videos I feel like I need to redo my apprenticeship. The things you make with your hands is amazing.
@aoiattentiononinvention8031
@aoiattentiononinvention8031 6 лет назад
adam cain me too
@tybronx2446
@tybronx2446 2 года назад
I keep thinking of old masters and young apprentices hunched over their tables doing all this, with no power tools. Painstaking and slow work. And I'm just so in love with humanity...
@EcoMouseChannel
@EcoMouseChannel 6 лет назад
How he doesn't have over a million subscribers at this point is beyond me!!
@b_mb4948
@b_mb4948 6 лет назад
Almost 23 minutes of pure bliss have unfortunately come to an end... Until next month we shall have to wait with bated breath!
@thethomasbuilderrblx6273
@thethomasbuilderrblx6273 6 лет назад
i bet there will be people complaining about how late this was uploaded like it takes quite long to find and refine gold
@SABER_Knight-King
@SABER_Knight-King 2 года назад
This video series deserve to get over 10 million views for me because the quality of everything is all professional level, from the engineering to the editing everything is simple amazing I have no words, & it's so fascinating to see this device builded today from scratch, the usual thing that everyone wonder as they watch this I wonder myself also, how ancient Greeks was able to build this over 2000 years ago? the one who did it was definitely a genius like no other, someone of unparallel skill & knowledge, I mean what kind of tools they had back then? this is so crazy to the point that it makes no sense, the kind of tools you need to build this mechanism didn't exist back then, how did they overcome all those obstacles of the limitations of their time, I don't know what to say it makes you thinking that this was not made by humans...
@ikegel1923
@ikegel1923 6 лет назад
dude i was literally on your channel yesterday looking for an update, the machining gods have spoken lol
@sepiathesquirrelofmistmant1516
I came a couple minutes ago looking for an update as well... So glad I found one!!!
@nyccnc
@nyccnc 6 лет назад
Spectacular work, Chris!
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Thank you mate!
@justinmorris4457
@justinmorris4457 6 лет назад
your craftsmanship in building each part is just as beautiful as the end result.
@adamv242
@adamv242 2 года назад
I've just discovered this channel in late 2021 and it is an absolute joy to watch. Much respect for your skills and craftsmanship.
@zgecko6668
@zgecko6668 6 лет назад
I love Clickspring, immediate pause on any current video.
@Ben_Fett
@Ben_Fett 6 лет назад
YES! Finally another episode! My life was incomplete for too long.
@mort8568
@mort8568 4 года назад
I don't think that it'll ever be apparent to us just what an extraordinary achievement this is for someone (or a group of people) from 100 BC to come up with. because we grew up with all kinds of advanced technology, we're always going to take for granted the early science that went into the mechanism
@seasonedtoker
@seasonedtoker 6 лет назад
Your videos are the best therapy a man needs
@domesday1535
@domesday1535 6 лет назад
It blows my mind how workable brass is by hand. I'm surrounded by so much steel that sometimes I forget how soft some metals are. Frankly it looks like a perfect balance between strength/stiffness and machine ability for a bronze age mechanism. I'd be curious if you think softer would be more preferable given all the filing involved in this project and it doesn't seem like this particular mechanism really needs much strength to function
@NautilusGuitars
@NautilusGuitars 5 лет назад
I'm pretty amateur in regard to metalworking, so don't take this as gospel, but I think anything softer would actually be more difficult to work. This kind of bronze and free machining brass are a perfect balance as you stated. Softer metals will gum up files and grab bits. Even yellow brass has this problem and it is only slightly softer of a metal. The nice thing about the type of bronze he's using is that it makes clean chips/shavings when milling/turning/filing it. This lets the heat of cutting it leave with the chips/shavings, and allows the tools to stay sharp and clean. Yellow brass, for example, will gum up files very quickly and will grab bits, which can be quite dangerous and destructive to the parts.
@jpdemer5
@jpdemer5 2 года назад
@@NautilusGuitars He's using brass, not bronze. Probably C360 brass, which is pretty much ideal for machining.
@sporkeh90
@sporkeh90 6 лет назад
I bet even the Artisan who made this so many years ago would enjoy watching this video!
@mxcollin95
@mxcollin95 6 лет назад
You sir are amazing. I know you whipped this project up in your home shop and it’s probably still sitting there, but I think this project and video series should be sitting in some machining hall of fame somewhere.
@superiormusic
@superiormusic 6 лет назад
Clickspring; the only RU-vidr who can make 23 minutes feel like four. Amazing work as always.
@glenralph5123
@glenralph5123 6 лет назад
1 vid every 2 months is seriously driving me insane with anticipation for the next vid. The up side is that I have watched through all your vids a second time.
@RRINTHESHOP
@RRINTHESHOP 6 лет назад
Thank you for sharing your patience. Your videos are awesome.
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Thrilled to have you watching Randy :)
@paulnorton5670
@paulnorton5670 6 лет назад
hear, hear.
@Simrasil_
@Simrasil_ 6 лет назад
this machine is blowing my mind.. whoever built this originally was a fricking genius
@rmt3589
@rmt3589 4 года назад
You are now one of my favorite channels! Let me back up a bit. I've always been fascinated by clockwork. Be it music boxes, or plastic mechanical toys. After wandering about how the toys turned a constant motion into steps, I discovered the Geneva device. I found the maker's muse what had to be years ago from that, and followed them because of the clockwork stuff they did. Today, I watched a video from them that mentioned you, and I got excited. More so when seeing the Antikythera mechanism as soon as I went on your channel. See, I'm also passionate about ancient artifacts, and Greek history in general (mostly around mythology, Apollo, and Greek fire), and this mechanism crossed into all three worlds. I had already had my season where I became obsessed with it, researched it intensely, then moved on years ago. Seeing it built step-by-step, and shown how to make the gears and everything in modern times is astounding! It's a world I'd love to join, and now plan to become a patreon once I can! (I think that's 4 I actually plan to become a patreon of, instead of the hundreds I hide behind my legitimate excuse)
@kookyflukes9749
@kookyflukes9749 6 лет назад
And relax.....ahhhh clickspring. Awesome warm fuzziness as usual. This channel should be prescribed for the stressed.
@darcksage1
@darcksage1 6 лет назад
Hell yeah more machining pr0n!
@xursoo6464
@xursoo6464 6 лет назад
Darcksage YEAH 😂😂
@inserstnamehere
@inserstnamehere 6 лет назад
Aw fuck yeah
@darcksage1
@darcksage1 6 лет назад
mxerable wat?
@1337fraggzb00N
@1337fraggzb00N 6 лет назад
aww yiss, motherfucking machining ♥
@nodariel
@nodariel 6 лет назад
Can I like twice? Heck, a 20 minute click spring, so satisfying to watch 😍
@MattH-wg7ou
@MattH-wg7ou Год назад
Brass is just such a beautiful material IMO.
@charltonwang
@charltonwang 6 лет назад
I'm sure you're rather sick of these sorts of comments but absolutely stunning work as usual. Production quality is impressively high!
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Very much appreciate the kind words, and that you tune in each release Charlton, thank you :)
@stormqueen29
@stormqueen29 6 лет назад
This series has to be the most interesting thing I've ever watched. Seeing you do this with modern tools is completely absorbing, I can't imagine if you tried to do it using only the tools the original maker would have had access to. Although, the fact that this mechanism exists at all challenges a lot of what is accepted about ancient civilizations. I look very much forward to following the further building of this amazing project.
@rcbprk
@rcbprk 6 лет назад
Just incredible work. This series blends two of my favourite things - ancient archaeology and masterful craftsmanship. Thank you for offering such an accessible, high quality and enthralling insight into your work, and the work of the ancient Greeks.
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Terrific to have you watching mate :)
@nigelft
@nigelft 6 лет назад
You know when a channel is epic when other hobbyist channels in the same/similar vein are not only subed to it, but leaves comments of well-deserved praise ... Well done, Chris: Clickspring is the channel that RU-vid needs, but doesn't deserve ... P.S:- if any one dare calls you a bogan, just chuck a tinnie of Fosters at their head ... Bet yet, get a certain mad German to build a tinnie-fireing crossbow for ya ...
@gladwyng1234
@gladwyng1234 6 лет назад
Mind. BLOWN. Thank you!
@vq37vhr12
@vq37vhr12 6 лет назад
Who likes before watching ? Chris never makes bad videos so I like them in advance hehe
@anonymousanonymity7346
@anonymousanonymity7346 6 лет назад
Clickspring has to be the finest example of quality over quantity. Each video is definitely worth waiting for.
@loversheretic
@loversheretic 6 лет назад
Blood brilliant, mate. This thing is really coming together. You're going to be a historical hero
@benh6064
@benh6064 4 года назад
These parts are so cleanly made I sometimes think I'm looking at CAD renders
@judyfps5059
@judyfps5059 4 года назад
Benjamin Hagerty that’s skill my dude. Easily the most talented and skilled machinist on RU-vid.
@ScrapwoodCity
@ScrapwoodCity 6 лет назад
Beautiful work as always!
@themastermason1
@themastermason1 6 лет назад
I had just finished watching an older Clickspring video only to find this in my subscription feed. I cheered.
@bobmackay1856
@bobmackay1856 6 лет назад
Thank you so much for these videos. I met Derek Price when I was a child, because he was a colleague of my father's. All I really remember about him was that he had an amazing wristwatch, showing the motions of the sun and the moon. I have been interested in this mechanism ever since.
@harveyquinones
@harveyquinones 6 лет назад
The quickest 23 minutes and 50 seconds of my whole life.
@KingPostTimberWorks
@KingPostTimberWorks 6 лет назад
bloody awesome!
@CLangbakk
@CLangbakk 6 лет назад
i came here after Alec Steele recommended you, after having watched everything you have i must say i do not regret it! you are truly a gift to the world! keep it up :)
@quantumvortex3942
@quantumvortex3942 4 года назад
Chris, you are genius! There is no other word for every part of what you do
@nrussell1945
@nrussell1945 6 лет назад
I absolutely love these videos! Keep up the good work and I'm super excited to see how this progresses! Best of luck going forwards!
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Cheers Nick, terrific to have your support mate :)
@TonboIV
@TonboIV 6 лет назад
As soon as it sees "Antikythera", RU-vid starts suggesting pure cancer: "Advanced stonework, impossible in ancient times!" "Things in space we can't explain!" Please no. "Not interested."
@williamdonahue2718
@williamdonahue2718 6 лет назад
This man has some SERIOUS PATIENCE!!!
@ralphf8951
@ralphf8951 6 лет назад
Unbelievable, incredible, gifted.
@phooesnax
@phooesnax 6 лет назад
Tremendous as always!! Jim Cheers
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Thank you Jim!
@afbennett3038
@afbennett3038 6 лет назад
For people who have never machined anything this may seem like it wouldn't take too long but trust me this kind of stuff takes hours upon hours
@MidwestVillain_Z
@MidwestVillain_Z 6 лет назад
Don't know much about machining so not sure if it's difficult or not but the way you make seams disappear is very satisfying
@DirtyRobot
@DirtyRobot 6 лет назад
This is fricking awesome and all that. But you have to remember that what Chris is doing was also done by awesome dudes some thousands of years ago. Those people did not have google for reference. Information traveled slower in those days, which is why Chris is really opening a window into the past that allows you to see what those people where capable of. Awesome!
@johnkelley9877
@johnkelley9877 6 лет назад
Incredible!
@aussiebloke609
@aussiebloke609 6 лет назад
It begins to take shape!!!!! Plenty more to go, of course, but this is quite the milestone in a build like this - and very nice work, Chris. :-)
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Thank you mate!
@joncummings8794
@joncummings8794 6 лет назад
What boggles my mind is how you designed this thing off of the scans of this device! All those different gears with different teeth numbers!!! I have a little bit of engineer in me, but not even close to what it would take to figure all that out! I'm amazed by your work and dedication to your craft! We'll done as always!
@burkemoras
@burkemoras 6 лет назад
This channel is so inspiring, I became a machinist because I wanted to make things like this and your clock. I've been working a year and I have newfound respect for your insane craftsmanship. Every part you make is immaculate and perfectly polished. I wish I had more opportunities to make brass parts because it's just so stunning!
@arnesandness7554
@arnesandness7554 6 лет назад
So the Metonic calendar train is essentially a spiral groove going around the dial with a needle following it? I guess the technology allowing the record player was invented long before we realized it, eh? AWESOME!!!
@josegomez6549
@josegomez6549 6 лет назад
Been waiting! God i love your videos!!!
@reychristophercastillo1062
@reychristophercastillo1062 6 лет назад
Woke up to this today. Today is a good day.
@Betruul
@Betruul 6 лет назад
ok but dude whoever does your editing is a GOD
@Marco-tr3bx
@Marco-tr3bx 6 лет назад
Bravo pour tout ce travail. J’apprécie beaucoup tes vidéo et je suis toujours presser de voir la suivante
@xursoo6464
@xursoo6464 6 лет назад
Marc-Henri Poublanc ENFIN UN FRANÇAIS OAIS !!!!!!!!!!!! PS: Chris est anglais ou Australien je sait pas mais c'est un des deux
@brianwarburton4482
@brianwarburton4482 6 лет назад
Moi aussi
@Marco-tr3bx
@Marco-tr3bx 6 лет назад
Cool
@alexanderhiller883
@alexanderhiller883 6 лет назад
I guess I can study for my calc exam later!
@royreynolds108
@royreynolds108 6 лет назад
Use calc to figure that spiral.
@orehcele
@orehcele 6 лет назад
Where has this channel been in my entire life !?
@EleanorPeterson
@EleanorPeterson 6 лет назад
Utterly brilliant. It doesn't get any better than this. Thank you!
@More-Space-In-Ear
@More-Space-In-Ear 6 лет назад
If I had the money I would pay you to make this for me, you are one hell of a craftsman. Your care in the making, your knowledge needed in the making of not just this but your other work too and your beautiful explanation of the videos...you are brilliant my friend....I’ve certainly missed your uploads. Glad your still doing them. Cheers 👍🏼😊
@Noble909
@Noble909 6 лет назад
Oh buddy. The next 23 minutes are gonna be good
@SnowblindOtter
@SnowblindOtter 6 лет назад
There's only one way to describe this: Friggin' _obscenely_ cool. I envy your skills so intensely.
@glenralph5123
@glenralph5123 6 лет назад
SnowblindOtter - The thing that blows my mind is that he doesn't just know how to machine/fab these pieces but grasps the knowledge of why they are designed that way. I don't feel I conveyed what I'm meaning precisely, eh, i tried.
@ahmedengineer5778
@ahmedengineer5778 6 лет назад
there is something beautiful and comforting about mechanical precision
@kmonnier
@kmonnier 4 года назад
Every time I hear him say B1 I think of bananas in pajamas.
@unvergebeneid
@unvergebeneid 6 лет назад
I only understood half if what you were saying but it was still endlessly fascinating!
@AJB2K3
@AJB2K3 6 лет назад
Every time I see a new episode, I am more and more amazed how complicated the device is and how they managed to build it without modern tools.
@dennyskerb4992
@dennyskerb4992 6 лет назад
You make it look so easy, my scrape bin would be full of brass by day's end.
@pratap3369
@pratap3369 6 лет назад
AvE can wait....
@petergregory5286
@petergregory5286 6 лет назад
Chris, another brilliant video for us to salivate over. One point did occur to me. The assembly is based on square shafts, therefore the relationships between the various gear teeth was fixed before installation. Does out of alignment matter or is there adjustment later in the build? Looking forward to No 7. Regards.
@jasondoe2596
@jasondoe2596 6 лет назад
Peter Gregory, excellent question, I wondered the same...
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Hey Peter, the pointer orientation wrt B1 is all that matters and that orientation is set during assembly. It becomes a bit more complicated when setting the planetarium tho, more detail in later videos - Cheers :)
@njwaskow
@njwaskow 6 лет назад
Completely in awe of your craftsmanship and patience!
@AshlarTrystan
@AshlarTrystan 3 года назад
Oh my word I've held my breath for two years. Can finally breathe again! Wonderful, thank you, please accelerate the series.
@pjhalchemy
@pjhalchemy 6 лет назад
Thank You Chris, Excellent episode, beautiful work and videography/graphics as always! Better every time!! Had to watch it again this morning because I got caught up in counting wheels and No. teeth hand cut plus all the other delicate profiling...mind boggling and my fingers started aching and right eye drooped just thinking about it. @¿~ Those that complain about time between videos should give it a try, IMHO. Couple of questions for you about how you keyed (layed out) the squares to teeth (on your board?) and then the overall timing of the three trains to get the pointers synced? Always appreciative of the links to research and of course the Squeak. Thanks Much...such a pleasure! ~PJ
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
Thank you PJ! - My fingers are a bit sore after this episode too!! Re the square layout - The arbor squares are laid out without any particular reference to the teeth - its a bit like a clock mechanism in the sense that all that really matters is the relationship between B1 and the output pointers. That relationship is set at assembly - B1 is set to a particular day, the train assembled, and then the last assembly carrying the pointer is dropped into position pointing where it needs to relative to the dial. (In some cases it can also be done by removing an assembly a little further up the train: eg remove the L assembly, orient the Metonic pointer, and then reinsert the L assembly). This gets a lot more complicated for the planetarium - not only the position in the ecliptic needs to be set, but also the pin/slot followers need to be set to the correct point in the objects synodic cycle - Setting the mechanism would most definitely have been a job for an expert from the Ancient workshop - Cheers mate :)
@pjhalchemy
@pjhalchemy 6 лет назад
Thanks Chris - makes sense now! Looking forward to seeing the planetarium and laying out and cutting the spiral! Cheers!
@flatblack39
@flatblack39 6 лет назад
Exactly what I wanted answered!
@motorv8N
@motorv8N 6 лет назад
Just incredible....and a question from a novice...what's the advantage of that wobbly drill marking tool that you stabilize with the pencil? Wouldn't an inflexible punch in the chuck achieve the same thing?
@chrish5231
@chrish5231 6 лет назад
That's a centre finder and allows you to zero in to the exact centre of the punch mark on the plate below, your drilled hole wil lthen be exactly where it should be.
@Freid123
@Freid123 6 лет назад
This is among the most amazing things I've ever seen! I absolutely love the Clickspring channel!
@rdspeedfab
@rdspeedfab 6 лет назад
What a joy to watch this come together. Thank you!
@uhhhhh262
@uhhhhh262 6 лет назад
Does the central square need to be aligned with the teeth at all? Like a top dead centre?
@potatoepotato6562
@potatoepotato6562 6 лет назад
Almost 30 minutes long?!? I must be dreaming
@BlokeOzzie
@BlokeOzzie 6 лет назад
I'd forgotten all about this project of yours, and then stumbled across it again, and berated myself soundly for forgetting in the first place. This is just brilliant work.
@Chris.Davies
@Chris.Davies 2 года назад
Thank you so much, Chris. I wish I had a dozen RU-vid accounts so I could upvote these videos with all of them. I find watching them to be as close to a religious experience as I have ever had. When I say "religious", what I mean is the mindful worship of man (and woman!) and his genuine abilities, as opposed to gods we invented and the false powers we endowed them with. Because our relentless humanity needs to be celebrated by ourselves in an almost religious way. The difference is, we have every right and reason to celebrate our humanity, and absolutely no reason to celebrate fake gods. If we all truly celebrated our humanity together, the world would be an infinitely better place I think.
@shpinak
@shpinak 6 лет назад
Finally!
@Clickspring
@Clickspring 6 лет назад
In this video I make the gearing that drives the Metonic, Callippic and Olympiad pointers. If you're interested in a bit more detail on the ancient Greek approach to calendars, then I recommend this excellent article on the Athenian calendars - www.ancient.eu/article/833/the-athenian-calendar/ Thanks very much for your patience and support folks!
@treavormiller9552
@treavormiller9552 6 лет назад
Clickspring took you long enough
@mickenoss
@mickenoss 6 лет назад
Just a thought, what if the original was a painstaking remake of an even older lost mechanism from even longer ago! =O
@bbgun061
@bbgun061 6 лет назад
Amazing work as always! You are a true craftsman. Please ignore Treavor.
@More-Space-In-Ear
@More-Space-In-Ear 6 лет назад
mickenoss now that would be very interesting considering the lost civilisation of around 10,500-12,800 years ago....I swear historians/religion are keeping certain information away from us after all these years....
@More-Space-In-Ear
@More-Space-In-Ear 6 лет назад
Benjamin Brooks I’m sure Trevor was only saying that in jest..well I hope he was!..it has been some time since the last upload.....😉😊
@jthepickle7
@jthepickle7 4 года назад
Compass to mark out teeth in a small gear: A center point (as usual) and a lateral triangle on the other arm the exact profile of the file to be used. The compass marks not with a scratch but creates a tiny landing for the file.
@TheWinning247
@TheWinning247 6 лет назад
The Bob Ross of engineering strikes again! Incredible as always.
Далее
The courier saved the children
00:33
Просмотров 1,2 млн
Stray Kids "ATE" Trailer
02:42
Просмотров 1,9 млн
Antikythera Mechanism V2: A Modernized Reproduction
31:43
How these impossibly thin cuts are made
9:37
Просмотров 11 млн
The Chris Ramsay Playing Card Press
21:27
Просмотров 2,5 млн
Яблоко от яблони
0:33
Просмотров 966 тыс.
До конца😂😂😂😂
0:19
Просмотров 4,7 млн
Проверил, как вам?
0:51
Просмотров 1,4 млн