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5 Nov 2024 20:16:13 EST (-0500)
  Gears (Message 1 to 5 of 5)  
From:
Subject: Gears
Date: 17 May 2005 19:25:44
Message: <428a7d78@news.povray.org>
Lots and lots of gears.

Werner Vesteraas
Oslo, Norway


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From: Bob Hughes
Subject: Re: Gears
Date: 20 May 2005 20:53:40
Message: <428e8694$1@news.povray.org>

news:428a7d78@news.povray.org...
> Lots and lots of gears.

Thought-provoking image, Werner. Wanted to stop reading and looking at the 
group here and give yours a reply since no one had done so yet.

Makes me think of either infinity or what they could turning at the end. Or 
maybe more interesting... perhaps they don't move! Like some kind of trick 
of the mind, to think they are in motion but might actually be motionless, 
as is the image itself!

Bob Hughes


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From:
Subject: Re: Gears
Date: 22 May 2005 14:58:01
Message: <4290d639$1@news.povray.org>
Thank you for your reply, Bob!  I'm quite fascinated of gears and clocks. 
My image consists of 512 gears, each fitted with a pinion gear, where the 
ratio between the pinion gear and the drive gear is 12.

This means that you have to turn the first gear 12 times around to make the 
second gear rotate 360 (12^1) degrees.  To make the third gear rotate 360 
degrees, you have to rotate the first gear 144 times (12^2), and so on... 
And finally, to turn the last gear 360 degrees, you must turn the first gear 
12^511 times around...  A very slow movement!

Werner
Oslo, Norway

"Bob Hughes" <bob### [at] charternet> wrote in message 
news:428e8694$1@news.povray.org...

> news:428a7d78@news.povray.org...
>> Lots and lots of gears.
>
> Thought-provoking image, Werner. Wanted to stop reading and looking at the 
> group here and give yours a reply since no one had done so yet.
>
> Makes me think of either infinity or what they could turning at the end. 
> Or maybe more interesting... perhaps they don't move! Like some kind of 
> trick of the mind, to think they are in motion but might actually be 
> motionless, as is the image itself!
>
> Bob Hughes
>
>


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From: Jellby
Subject: Re: Gears
Date: 22 May 2005 15:40:05
Message: <gr17m2-h0h.ln1@badulaque.unex.es>


> Thank you for your reply, Bob!  I'm quite fascinated of gears and clocks.
> My image consists of 512 gears, each fitted with a pinion gear, where the
> ratio between the pinion gear and the drive gear is 12.
> 
> This means that you have to turn the first gear 12 times around to make
> the
> second gear rotate 360 (12^1) degrees.  To make the third gear rotate 360
> degrees, you have to rotate the first gear 144 times (12^2), and so on...
> And finally, to turn the last gear 360 degrees, you must turn the first
> gear
> 12^511 times around...  A very slow movement!

I saw this idea somewhere in a "modern" sculpture, it was a series of gears
(10 or 12?), on one end there was an electric motor rotating the first
gear, the other end was firmly attached to a concrete block. It said quite
a few (hundreds?) years had to go before this last end moved appreciably.

-- 
light_source{9+9*x,1}camera{orthographic look_at(1-y)/4angle 30location
9/4-z*4}light_source{-9*z,1}union{box{.9-z.1+x clipped_by{plane{2+y-4*x
0}}}box{z-y-.1.1+z}box{-.1.1+x}box{.1z-.1}pigment{rgb<.8.2,1>}}//Jellby


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From: Paul Fuller
Subject: Re: Gears
Date: 29 May 2005 08:53:54
Message: <4299bb62$1@news.povray.org>
Jellby wrote:

> 
> 
>>Thank you for your reply, Bob!  I'm quite fascinated of gears and clocks.
>>My image consists of 512 gears, each fitted with a pinion gear, where the
>>ratio between the pinion gear and the drive gear is 12.
>>
>>This means that you have to turn the first gear 12 times around to make
>>the
>>second gear rotate 360 (12^1) degrees.  To make the third gear rotate 360
>>degrees, you have to rotate the first gear 144 times (12^2), and so on...
>>And finally, to turn the last gear 360 degrees, you must turn the first
>>gear
>>12^511 times around...  A very slow movement!
> 
> 
> I saw this idea somewhere in a "modern" sculpture, it was a series of gears
> (10 or 12?), on one end there was an electric motor rotating the first
> gear, the other end was firmly attached to a concrete block. It said quite
> a few (hundreds?) years had to go before this last end moved appreciably.
> 
There is an exhibit at a science museum nearby where a series of gears 
and various mechanisms enthralls the kids (and some adults).  A handle 
at the right hand end must be rotated.

(From memory) Every ~10,000 revolutions a small marble drops down a 
chute to be collected.

Every ~100,000 revolutions a hammer falls and strikes a bell.

Every ~1,000,000 revolutions, another hammer smashes a lighbulb

etc.

I don't recall all of the 'rewards' but it certainly attracts you to 
turn that handle.


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