I go into your videos feeling cocky "Oh, I know how that works..." but dang it, I am humbled each time being surprised I learned something! Always a pleasure! Oh, did Bill take all his toys apart to see how they worked as a kid?
I got such a giggle out of the "pens" bit at the end. It is so humanizing to see that occasionally, even simple tasks can sometimes confound us ALL. Thank you for sharing that - you are so clever and intelligent that it can be intimidating; the ability to laugh at one's self is quite charming.
The ability to laugh at ourselves is the mark of a mature person IMO. Most kids, especially teenagers, can't deal with the thought that they're not perfect, ever notice that?
this is the result of a linguistic feature of some US accents where those two vowel sounds become very similar - often so similar as to be indistinguishable. It is, in fact, literally called the "pen-pin merger", because the pronunciation of those two words so readily demonstrates the phenomenon.
I always wondered what “the spinny thing” was! I just thought it was FOR stopping the music at will. I didn’t realize it was for controlling the speed! Wow! PHYSICS.
@@HoshiHikari On a gas engine, the governor controls the max rpm of the motor so that it does not over rev. Basically the same use as in this music box.
Well, in modern jewellery box, it can be interrupted by a stick with springs, with the top tip/end being weighed down by the box's lid/cover, which pops up and free when that lid/cover lifted up, and then automatically plays the music. Same way of how refrigerator light is activated by a switch near the door frame
Yes, afaik as I know the governor on a steam engine has got a built-in valve that is opened or closed depending on the speed of the rotation. The governor of the music box can also be compared with the escapement in a grandfather clock. It slows down the clock mechanism significantly. Without the governor the weight in the clock would rush down and the hands would spin like crazy.
Mechanized instruments, especially those that rely on metallurgy to function have always interested me. Also, I sure can relate to your dialogue screw ups at the end.
+Stephen Troyer I was in year 3 of my computer science degree when we started digging into the architecture of x86 processors rather than just high level programming. The level of complexity that exists between a simple Java program and the actual silicon of a CPU is both mind boggling and staggering.
+cbernier3 I'd wager tens of thousands, vs hundreds..You're right. But trying to grasp that level of complexity beyond the obvious is staggering. A modern computer is one of humanities greatest technological achievements, and it's used by people with grade 2 spelling to look at pictures of cats. :)
Not only are you really good at explaining all this, you have perfect animated CGI diagrams to make it even easier to understand and aid your explanation. You should have your own TV show. definitely subbed.
Thank you. I just got a music box today as an early Christmas present because it kept playing its song way too fast. I knew it wasn't broken, but the governor wasn't spinning. It is missing that curved gear that makes it spin. Thank you sir.
Now this is the way to make a TH-cam channel. Immediately begins with the point of the video. No intro graphics. No explaining why you're making the video. No subscription begging. Excellent.
I just restored an old music box that my nan gave me before she died, and I've finally heard the song she heard as a little girl, and it's beautiful. Thanks for this video :)
Trying to fix a music box and stumbled upon this video...just loved it! Nothing like actually finding out how something works! So intricate! Thank you!
Yes (Well, no. See EDIT), though it would still accelerate slower than if there were no governor at all (due to rotational inertia and the governor having mass). Also, it wouldn't make any sound unless it were physically touching something touching air (or touching a microphone). EDIT: Actually, no, this governor also uses friction. Notice @3:45 that the ends of the governor are connected at the top but not the bottom. When it spins fast enough, they rise upwards, rubbing on the top plate slowing it down.
***** Sure you would, if you put on your ear on it or touched it to your teeth. Though if you were in a vacuum you'd probably have bigger issues to worry about.
+MrTridac piano rolls do both of those too. some of the punched slots were wiggly to modulate the velocity. Control channels tho, were only printed instructions to the operator to pedal faster :)
@@engineerguyvideo wow just 1 day ago? I don't know if you'll ever read this. I meant to ask but I was discouraged by the oldness of the video. The governor's design doesn't seem like its purpose was to use air resistance, wouldn't it be more fan-like if so? Could it be that it's just using (non-air) friction mostly? It might be expanding or moving a bit upwards due to centrifugal force, touching just slightly the walls and reducing its speed. If not, why was it made like that? Why does its arm allow its edges/wings to move upwards? Notice that there are also some bumps/lumps on the top of its 'wings' (not a native speaker, sorry). Thanks for the great videos. I had as a kid an exact copy of this one, playing London Bridge.
i got this video in my recommandations and when i clicked i was surprised how well it is explained. plus no annoying intro, no generic background music. i love it, thanks!
Y'know... I used to love listening to the music boxes my grandmother had, and while I understood the basics of how the music was made [the comb's teeth and drum], I never gave much thought to how it was all put together. Thank you, both for reminding me of the simple pleasures I had as a child and for explaining how brilliant these little machines are.
Absolutely fascinating. Especially the part about the governor - I had no idea. This channel continues to underscore the brilliant engineering that goes in to what we think of as mundane, everyday objects.
AlbertaGeek 18th and 19th century science are a fascinating way to encourage high schoolers to take up science. And in senior year abruptly introduce them to quantum physics and calculus. Which they think is tough until they to engineering school. While people in theoretical physics classes think about suicide.
Thank you! This helped me repair a music box my parents gave when I was a girl that I have now handed down to my daughter! Somehow the governor had fallen out of place. I was at a loss but this was the perfect video! And fascinating!
I love this series and presenter. As an engineer, these are so fun to watch and appreciate, but in truth, this is great for all viewers. Thank you for these. 🤗☺️🌻
I played with music boxes as a kid and I was always fascinated by the spinning governor. I had no idea my entire adult life as to the role that clever mechanism played, but I did always wonder why the music did not speed up appreciably when I wound-up the spring very tightly before playing. It's brilliant that air resistance played a role--WOW! Thank you for making such a fascinating video!
Thank you SO much for making this video! I had a broken Anastasia music box (I believe it was severely overwound). Showing each individual part and its purpose helped me find that the problem with my music box was somewhere on the inside, as it would not wind at all, it got stuck. When you mentioned the governor, I started fiddling around with it and it slowly started spinning on its own until the music started playing for 2 minutes straight. Now it winds up just as it normally would! Thank you for saving me from having to buy a replacement box!!
My daughter’s wind up music box toy isn’t working, and I’ve spent about an hour watching other music box repair videos. Yours is the first to actually explain how they work and, for me at least, helps me understand what on earth I’m doing/need to do. Based on your video, I find it unlikely that there’s an issue with the clock spring mechanism (it seems rather straightforward in design). But there’s another video I saw that basically said apply some WD-40 to the governor and the base of the worm screw, so I’m going to go try that now... Your video was extremely informative, clear, and concise, and I sincerely appreciate it! Keep it up!
I want to try to make a music box. A few days ago I was at my great grandparents house. As me, my mom, sister and grandmother were looking though paper work, I told my sister about a music box that scared me out of my wits a while back. We looked around for a few minutes and found an old 18 note music box that was made in Switzerland and played “Annie’s song” by John Denver and now I want to make one (sorry for the paragraph and thank you so much if you read to the end 😊)
This is such a cool video! As born in 1986 i still remember my teddy bear who had a music box inside that was "charged" wit a cord coming out of his back. i couldnt sleep without him and listened so often to the music that i knew every tone. one day he stayed silent and it was a catastrophic event. but luckyly my mother opened up the bear, and discovered that some of his fillings were tangled inside the mechanism. she made him work again. Until watching this video i had no thought about this bear for probably 25-30 years, but now i somehow miss hin.
Noticed that if you watch the slo-mo of that plastic governor, as Dr. Bill mentions that air resistance slows it down, the plastic has actually bent enough to let the spinning governor gently drag against the case above it. The original style metal disks definitely worked only by air-resistance, but the new plastic ones appear to use both air resistance and friction at high enough speeds. Loved the video, thank you.
Wow! Absolutely brilliant indeed! I always loved winding and hearing music boxes ever since I was a kid. Got myself some recently and as I’m looking at it, I wanted to know how it works making me stumble upon this video! Your explaining is very straight forward, making it say to understand. Thank you for making the video!
This guy could explain how a computer works and make it make sense to an old non technical grandparent. Love your videos and learn so much from them. Just the other day watched your aluminum can video and have been hooked ever since.
Thank you so much for such a helpful video! I was really dumbfounded how windup mechanisms magically slow down the clock springs escape rate but this was a very helpful explanation!
Excellent video. Everything is clear and concise. I was searching for music box videos because I wanted to make a music box for my sister as a wedding gift, but after seeing this, I think I'll just buy her a coffee machine
I never realized that this is how people listened to music before the radio. Really makes me appreciate music boxes more. The thing about the weighted comb teeth decreasing the frequency really interesting too. Thanks!
I wasn't born in the era of music boxes, but the few I've had contact with growing up filled me with an indescribable joy. This video mad me very nostalgic.
+A Ramirez Poor engineerguy. It sounds like his dialect doesn't clearly distinguish between "pin" and "pen" there is a line the runs through the US and people on the southeast side have that problem. It is actually called the pin/pen merger by linguists.
I took apart my fiance's mom's vintage Japanese black lacquer music box with a ballerina as it didn't work. I'm NOT mechanical but figured You Tube would help me. I checked out a couple other videos but yours is the best for explaining exactly how the music box works. Thank you. That was very interesting! Also, my hat is off to the person who invented this. To get the music box to work I tried using the 'toothpick' method to just apply a tiny bit of lubricant on the base and top of the spinning part with the 'wings' (that is my vernacular as an 'artistic type!') It didn't work any better. Then I tried the 'what the heck it is broken anyway, why not just spray the whole darn thing directly and forget about moderation!' This WORKED ! Suddenly the 'box' began to play the tune effortlessly for the first time. Wonderment! Now, however, I am wondering if directly spraying the lubricant on all parts of the music box will be 'too much' for the poor mechanisms and totally overpower them and end up causing the thing not to work after a while? I used BoeShield T-9 lwaterproof lubricant. What do you think? I'm now in the process of uploading my first ever You Tube Video I am so proud that I actually got this working! YAY!
+Jude Lau Your skull works as a great radio amplifying dish too. That's how that "extend your car keyfob range by pressing it against your head" trick works.
+Jude Lau It only sounds horrifying. In case you would want to know something more about this subject google: Aftershokz Bluezb, Ishin-Den-Shin (Disney Research) or take a look how Google Glass speaker works. In my opinion it's very interesting technology.
Another excellent video about a simple device that doesn't seem so simple anymore. Great work and I look forward to the next one. By the way, I have never heard a difference between 'pin' and 'pen'. Let it pass!
+Lerkero I was unable to hear a different -- I was raised with a southern Indiana accent -- and said every -en as -in. I could not hear the difference. I worked with a voice teacher in Pittsburgh years ago and learned the difference, but now, if I'm tired I always say -en for -in.
+engineerguy My wife pronounces the difference between Laurie (law-ree) and Lori (low-ree) but I say both the same way - and I'm the word nerd of the family. *shrug* At some point you just have to ask yourself whether precise enunciation is important to your point.
+engineerguy I can clearly hear the difference but I'm also used to hearing different accents so I probably wouldn't have noticed no matter how you'd said it. I guess not having a local English dialect or accent to overshadow others helps in that regard. We're taught Oxford English in Swedish schools but grow up on mix of American, British and Australian movies and TV-series with all manner of different accents. There's no right or wrong. Just different! =)
Just amazing works of art! Great video very well done. I’ve been fixing music boxes over a year and it truly makes me so happy! I salvage them from thrift stores and call them projects I’m basically a music box doctor lol.. I love a good challenge and I have had some in really bad condition which is so sad. I also carry spare turn keys, I see quite a few missing them.
It's a friction governor, you can see it @3:47, at a specific speed the top mounted weights lift up and start rubbing on the upper frame (note the protrusions on each weight, designed to extend the wear if the governor without increasing the area coming in contact with the frame), the higher the rpm the more friction to resist the rotation... otherwise the governor would be just a set of vertical flaps, if it was only air then no need for the weights, odd mounting geometry and the extra materials ;) You can test this by flattening the upper frame or shifting the governor down on it's shaft, the speed should increase until the weights start hitting the bushing to the left of the image.
+Alex Naanou The patent mentions both air resistance and friction. In our high speed footage we didn't notice it touching. Your idea to test it by slipping it down the worm screw is a good idea.
+Alex Naanou At 5:15 you can see a pure air resistance governor. It looks like a fan blade :) I always wondered a kid why these things had a little fan in them. Likely I assumed it was for cooling hehe.
+engineerguy Is air resistance really that significant a factor? Isn't it just that the gear train reduces the torque delivered to the governor so much that it is very slow to accelerate? The weights then increase the moment of inertia exaggerating that effect. Then again, I do suppose that air resistance and friction would be the factors limiting the top angular velocity of the governor. So it has those two dual functions.
+benjamin mathon Works differently. It has a balance wheel. Just imagine the watch having a circular pendulum and instead of gravity there's a second small spring to make it oscillate.
+benjamin mathon I think the governor is at least also friction based. It bends and then it's rubber surface rubs against the housing. Look closely at the top of the weights at 03:32 there are even "brake pads".
+Cutter Slade Great catch. He definitely missed that on this device. He shows an image of another model at 05:15 which appears to genuinely only use air resistance.
+Cutter Slade I was thinking the same thing. If it was purely air resistance they wouldn't have made it of such flexible material, and there would have been no need for it to be so chunky, nor would each side be only supported by a thin bit of material at the top. It's definitely designed to flex and then rub against the top.
I love your videos because they concisely show the genius behind everyday items that you usually wouldn't look at twice in a way thats easy to understand
"Also, if you rest the music box gently against your teeth the music will resonate inside your skull." That sounds so metal and hardcore! The way you say it just makes it that much more extreme!
Am I wrong in thinking that the governor in that particular model works on friction between the tops of the rubber and the plastic case of the music box? The rubber seems to be specifically eccentrically connected at the top allowing for the bottom to rotate out while spinning. Also there seem to be raised pads at the top of said pieces that would limit the contact/friction with the plastic. Even in the slow motion you can see them rotate out as it gets up to speed. I have seen the usually flat and light metal governors that you showed in one of your older examples. I just thought they might be employing a slightly more involved process in this more modern version. Just a thought.
+Nicholas Viazzo The patent on this governor mentions both friction and air resistance. We used close up high speed video to see if it scraps along the top. To our eye it did not. A few eagle-eyed viewers have noted that to them the high-speed video we show in this version does show the governor contacting the top surface.
+engineerguy Cool, although I didn't actually see them touching, it did seem they had taken steps to account for it. It's interesting to know that the patent does actually call for both. Thanks for the response, and please keep up the great videos.
+engineerguy The amount of friction to maintain constant speed once the the governor spins up, deforms and makes contact with the round boss above it is infinitesimal. Since the molded frame is likely warped to some extent the contact probably happens at a single high point under the overhang, where it would be very hard to see. I was able to adjust the playback speed on similar music box by sliding the governor up and down on its steel shaft, changing how much it needed to deform before making contact, and thus the maximum speed that it could reach.
+engineerguy This should be fairly easy to test if air resistance is having an effect of the rotational speed of the governor. Place the music box in either a vacuum chamber or a pressure chamber with a camera and watch whether or not it speeds up or slows down.
+Nicholas Viazzo Very well noticed! I thought the design seemed a bit odd given it was intentionally and apparently purpose built to swing outwards and deform the top. I wasn't sure why that would just be by happenchance, and this comment made me feel less of a weirdo for wondering. :P
+engineerguy My first thought was to grind away some material from the governor but I guess that's because I own a grinder and not a vacuum chamber haha.
I haven’t yet watched all of your videos but all of the ones I have reviewed all been excellent. You have a very calming voice and presentation style which is appreciated. I share these with my two-year-old grandson to explain things as we find new things. Thank you for your work
+engineerguy I feel for you! As a non-native english listener, the difference between the sound of pin and pen was so small it was almost negligible. Props for taking so much time to say it right :)
+engineerguy Odd, usually the merger causes the e in pen to sound like the i in pin, but you are doing the opposite, making the i in pin sound like the e in pen.
+piranha031091 Probably laughably bad to our modern standards. But then again, we at one time thought 32 kbit/s encoded mp3s where the best thing ever, until we learned better.
+Greg Fraser they can't sound "bad to modern standards" since they are acoustic devices and we don't produce music boxes with the same complexity anymore.
+Greg Fraser Not necessarily bad. It's basically the classical version of 8/16-bit chiptune music, and we listen to that stuff all the time still. The indie game VVVVVV has a soundtrack I consider one of my all-time favorites, and it's done 8-bit style.
+piranha031091 you're on youtube and you want to know what something sounds like? kids these days; can never do anything for themselves th-cam.com/video/FpzG2m88nus/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/pgZs4aTMQqU/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/zdqpaEWqthU/w-d-xo.html
+japzone First off, I love chiptune music! Secondly, probably my words where not chosen ideally, what I meant was that people at that time would gather around the music box and believe that what they heard was the best quality possible. Which it absolutely was at that time. But nowadays with Dolby-Digital-Stereo-5.2-and whatnot-16-speaker-systems we are very much spoiled of how sound can be replicated. It's like expecting the most hi-fi experience possible and then getting the sound quality of a birthday card which upon opening squeaks "Happy Birthday".
Pen Pan -> Pin Post credit was fun to watch, thanks for including them. Would like more such unedited cuts in this channel. This is the best channel to appreciate engineering behind things around us.
This is amazing! I’ve seen this explained before and found it fascinating. I went to explain it to my daughter and found your video. This is the most comprehensive and easiest video! Thank you for posting! 😊
I'm having a deep fascination and admiration for music boxes since i was a kit. Not only because of that sweet sound they produce but also what a wonderful blend of many things it is. Clever Mechanisms, craftsmanship, creativity and beauty. My mother sometimes had one of these modern ones who play a 10-20 second loop with windup mechanisms and as a kid i even had one that play a good night melody. I kept listening to it till it slowly stopped and it was such a wonderful way to fall asleep to. Today i love using such mechanisms, working them into customized wooden boxes and using them in a creative way. I even like the handcrank ones even more as you can personally control the speed and how fast or slow the piece plays. The whole concept of music boxes is still one of the greatest things mankind has ever come up with and should i ever have to chose just ONE thing to represent mankind's talent to create something of beauty, i would always pick a Music Box.
+engineerguy Excuses are futile. It's GREAT to make mistakes because they are the essence of learning. Every day is a school day, and today is no exception. 8)
+pyro1324 "It stood out like a sore thumb to me, once someone pointed it out and I watched the moment over and over to see if it's true and it was, so that's why!" - there, FTFY. #Kappa
+Martin ᴿ' The Metric system is used in America. Everyone in the past 40 years or so has learned both the Metric system and the U.S. Customary system in school and is familiar with both sets of units.
I actually came from Wikipedia from the article `Music Box`. I am glad that I have encountered your video there and subscribed your channel as first thing after work. I dont know about the license or copyright issues, but your videos should be shown to public more than one channel. This is basically a charity for hungry minds. Admire the great work, please keep working for the greater good.
I saw in a video of LearnEngineering that a worm gear can spin a worm wheel, but not the other way around. This is how wrenches work. (letting you make the wrench wider or narrower but staying stuck when you actually turn something with it). But here the worm wheel is spinning the screw (worm gear) of the governor. How is it different to let the worm wheel spin the screw?
+Ciroluiro If i remember correctly, there is limit in the size of the angle of the thread. If it is bigger than the limit value (around 6 or 10 degrees), the system won't work both ways (you also need to take the friction into account). check this link (in french but well illustrated) pierreprovot.wordpress.com/les-engrenages/les-engrenages-roue-et-vis-sans-fin/
+Ciroluiro Also the load on the worm gear matters, since the torque output is so much smaller than input. This works because the governor is very lightweight.
My daughter has a music box, and just tonight she asked me if you changed out the drum, would it play a different song. That preschool-aged girl has looked at that music box, and played with it, and studied it, and understood the drum is what, "stores," the music. I didn't know until now the comb makes a difference too. I will have to show this video to my little engineer in the making. Interesting this video is suggested, coincidentally, just a few hours after our talk.
the upward force of the plastic tooth pushing the aluminum screw is stronger than the friction that slows it down, this and the air resistance is used to make the governor rotate at a constant speed
You can see that worm used in music boxes has very steep threading compared to threading in usual screws or in worms from elevator mechanisms. This way self-locking doesn not occur (criterion for self-locking is when tangent of thread angle is lower than friction coefficient).
I'm so glad I found this video! It really helped me to understand what was keeping a music box I just got recently from working. The governor wasn't working properly (meaning it kept getting stuck). Unfortunately, after my stepdad accidently broke the spinner the governor is attached to while trying to fix it, I must find another one.
Went into it thinking I knew how they worked - ended with mind blown over the reverse-driven worm gear and differently cut combs. Fantastic!
I thought the same thing😂😂
Same!
maker's muse!!!!
Your production quality is excellent. Animations are very clean and informative. Keep up the good work.
+Nikola Tesla Steve does those with Cinema4D. He is masterful at creating them.
+engineerguy They are excellent!
Nikola Tesla i am your great fan😘😘
you know your videos are good when they are praised by Nikola Tesla himself
Yes..it's very clear ..now i now
How i going to fix my music box thankksss😊😊
I go into your videos feeling cocky "Oh, I know how that works..." but dang it, I am humbled each time being surprised I learned something! Always a pleasure! Oh, did Bill take all his toys apart to see how they worked as a kid?
TAOFLEDERMAUS WHY ARE YOU HERE
Hi there
What was the purpose of him not being able to say a SIMPLE word . It really annoyed me
Why are u here
You here too?!? O.O
I got such a giggle out of the "pens" bit at the end. It is so humanizing to see that occasionally, even simple tasks can sometimes confound us ALL. Thank you for sharing that - you are so clever and intelligent that it can be intimidating; the ability to laugh at one's self is quite charming.
The ability to laugh at ourselves is the mark of a mature person IMO. Most kids, especially teenagers, can't deal with the thought that they're not perfect, ever notice that?
this is the result of a linguistic feature of some US accents where those two vowel sounds become very similar - often so similar as to be indistinguishable. It is, in fact, literally called the "pen-pin merger", because the pronunciation of those two words so readily demonstrates the phenomenon.
@mumblepunk6003 I was in my 30s before I realized there were two different sounds
I always wondered what “the spinny thing” was! I just thought it was FOR stopping the music at will. I didn’t realize it was for controlling the speed! Wow! PHYSICS.
it's the same idea as governers on steam engines.
@@sheilaolfieway1885 that would be so cool to know if I ever even heard of that
@@HoshiHikari On a gas engine, the governor controls the max rpm of the motor so that it does not over rev. Basically the same use as in this music box.
Well, in modern jewellery box, it can be interrupted by a stick with springs, with the top tip/end being weighed down by the box's lid/cover, which pops up and free when that lid/cover lifted up, and then automatically plays the music. Same way of how refrigerator light is activated by a switch near the door frame
Yes, afaik as I know the governor on a steam engine has got a built-in valve that is opened or closed depending on the speed of the rotation. The governor of the music box can also be compared with the escapement in a grandfather clock. It slows down the clock mechanism significantly. Without the governor the weight in the clock would rush down and the hands would spin like crazy.
Mechanized instruments, especially those that rely on metallurgy to function have always interested me.
Also, I sure can relate to your dialogue screw ups at the end.
o/ hello ,wasn't expecting to see you here !!!
love your vids I'm currently working on making myself the mortar you made :-)
+NightHawkInLight If you were ever around Wisconsin, you'd enjoy visiting House on the Rock. They have a massive collection of mechanized instruments.
I often look at things and think, "How did someone come up with this?" This guy answers those questions thoroughly and clearly. That is awesome.
+Stephen Troyer I was in year 3 of my computer science degree when we started digging into the architecture of x86 processors rather than just high level programming. The level of complexity that exists between a simple Java program and the actual silicon of a CPU is both mind boggling and staggering.
+Sean It's a lot, but to be fair, hundreds of people were involved. It's not like someone engineered the whole thing themselves.
+cbernier3 I'd wager tens of thousands, vs hundreds..You're right. But trying to grasp that level of complexity beyond the obvious is staggering. A modern computer is one of humanities greatest technological achievements, and it's used by people with grade 2 spelling to look at pictures of cats. :)
What is a good book to start with to understand the computer from a physical point of view . From the silicon to programming as we are taught?
Not only are you really good at explaining all this, you have perfect animated CGI diagrams to make it even easier to understand and aid your explanation.
You should have your own TV show.
definitely subbed.
Yes, I wish I had him as a grade school and high school teacher. He does an excellent job teaching!
This is amazing. I never realized the mechanics of a music box was so complex.
As someone who is trying to figure out how to repair a vintage music box, this video was very informative! Thank you!
Thank you. I just got a music box today as an early Christmas present because it kept playing its song way too fast. I knew it wasn't broken, but the governor wasn't spinning. It is missing that curved gear that makes it spin. Thank you sir.
music box nightcore
Now this is the way to make a TH-cam channel. Immediately begins with the point of the video. No intro graphics. No explaining why you're making the video. No subscription begging. Excellent.
"..The music will resonate inside your skull." *Peers into soul*
This is what I came here for.
I DO NOT HEAR ""WILL"" MAY BE BAD PRONUNCIATION OR IS OTHER SCARIE TIPICAL CONTRACTION
I never I saw or I read ""skull"
it resonated in my skull when he did that
My nerodiverce brain wanted to prove that and he may NOT be kidding
I just restored an old music box that my nan gave me before she died, and I've finally heard the song she heard as a little girl, and it's beautiful. Thanks for this video :)
Trying to fix a music box and stumbled upon this video...just loved it! Nothing like actually finding out how something works! So intricate! Thank you!
Me too. Mine broke and i needed to know what to look for to fix it.
The clock spring broke but i was looking up curled peices of metal 😂
So if you were to put a music box in a vacuum it would play too fast?
Yes (Well, no. See EDIT), though it would still accelerate slower than if there were no governor at all (due to rotational inertia and the governor having mass). Also, it wouldn't make any sound unless it were physically touching something touching air (or touching a microphone).
EDIT: Actually, no, this governor also uses friction. Notice @3:45 that the ends of the governor are connected at the top but not the bottom. When it spins fast enough, they rise upwards, rubbing on the top plate slowing it down.
It would, but you wouldn't be able to hear it, anyway.
***** Sure you would, if you put on your ear on it or touched it to your teeth. Though if you were in a vacuum you'd probably have bigger issues to worry about.
Unless you hold it in your teeth.
Yes and also you wouldn't hear any sound. Well done we're proud of your deductive skills.
I love how perfectionist you are. Not enough effort is put into the production value on other channels.
19th century version of the MIDI audio format
+Jack Mcslay Beat me to it.
+Jack Mcslay Forgive my pedantry, but MIDI isn't an audio format. It's performance data.
+Jack Mcslay Yep, and we added variable gate length and velocity :))
And control channels :D Yay MIDI \o/
+MrTridac piano rolls do both of those too. some of the punched slots were wiggly to modulate the velocity. Control channels tho, were only printed instructions to the operator to pedal faster :)
MDCCCL, not MIDI.
Roman numerals for 1850...
Pens..
Hi I luv ur vids
Not dead, just slow
@@engineerguyvideo
Hmm yes
I finally get noticed
Hooray
@@engineerguyvideo wow just 1 day ago?
I don't know if you'll ever read this.
I meant to ask but I was discouraged by the oldness of the video.
The governor's design doesn't seem like its purpose was to use air resistance, wouldn't it be more fan-like if so?
Could it be that it's just using (non-air) friction mostly? It might be expanding or moving a bit upwards due to centrifugal force, touching just slightly the walls and reducing its speed. If not, why was it made like that? Why does its arm allow its edges/wings to move upwards?
Notice that there are also some bumps/lumps on the top of its 'wings' (not a native speaker, sorry).
Thanks for the great videos.
I had as a kid an exact copy of this one, playing London Bridge.
i got this video in my recommandations and when i clicked i was surprised how well it is explained. plus no annoying intro, no generic background music. i love it, thanks!
That blooper expose' was hilarious!
Y'know... I used to love listening to the music boxes my grandmother had, and while I understood the basics of how the music was made [the comb's teeth and drum], I never gave much thought to how it was all put together. Thank you, both for reminding me of the simple pleasures I had as a child and for explaining how brilliant these little machines are.
Absolutely fascinating. Especially the part about the governor - I had no idea. This channel continues to underscore the brilliant engineering that goes in to what we think of as mundane, everyday objects.
AlbertaGeek 18th and 19th century science are a fascinating way to encourage high schoolers to take up science.
And in senior year abruptly introduce them to quantum physics and calculus. Which they think is tough until they to engineering school. While people in theoretical physics classes think about suicide.
Thank you! This helped me repair a music box my parents gave when I was a girl that I have now handed down to my daughter! Somehow the governor had fallen out of place. I was at a loss but this was the perfect video! And fascinating!
This science behind the construction makes me love music box even more
These videos are always so high in quality, never fail to amaze me.
And the bloopers had me rolling XD
The inclusion of bloopers on this video made it all the better. Thank you for making these wonderfully educational videos.
I love this series and presenter. As an engineer, these are so fun to watch and appreciate, but in truth, this is great for all viewers. Thank you for these. 🤗☺️🌻
You introduced so much effort for a beautiful piece of engineering art
I played with music boxes as a kid and I was always fascinated by the spinning governor. I had no idea my entire adult life as to the role that clever mechanism played, but I did always wonder why the music did not speed up appreciably when I wound-up the spring very tightly before playing. It's brilliant that air resistance played a role--WOW! Thank you for making such a fascinating video!
Loved the outtakes at the end.
That blooper shows the enormous effort put into the making of this very informative n concise video:-)
Thank u!
I love the out takes at the end!
Thank you SO much for making this video! I had a broken Anastasia music box (I believe it was severely overwound). Showing each individual part and its purpose helped me find that the problem with my music box was somewhere on the inside, as it would not wind at all, it got stuck. When you mentioned the governor, I started fiddling around with it and it slowly started spinning on its own until the music started playing for 2 minutes straight. Now it winds up just as it normally would! Thank you for saving me from having to buy a replacement box!!
My daughter’s wind up music box toy isn’t working, and I’ve spent about an hour watching other music box repair videos. Yours is the first to actually explain how they work and, for me at least, helps me understand what on earth I’m doing/need to do. Based on your video, I find it unlikely that there’s an issue with the clock spring mechanism (it seems rather straightforward in design). But there’s another video I saw that basically said apply some WD-40 to the governor and the base of the worm screw, so I’m going to go try that now... Your video was extremely informative, clear, and concise, and I sincerely appreciate it! Keep it up!
I want to try to make a music box. A few days ago I was at my great grandparents house. As me, my mom, sister and grandmother were looking though paper work, I told my sister about a music box that scared me out of my wits a while back. We looked around for a few minutes and found an old 18 note music box that was made in Switzerland and played “Annie’s song” by John Denver and now I want to make one (sorry for the paragraph and thank you so much if you read to the end 😊)
Me too
1:53 ... "Hey, that doesn't sound half bad."
1:59 ... "Oh."
Right
This is the best comment of the video. You should be higher in the list my friend.
This is such a cool video! As born in 1986 i still remember my teddy bear who had a music box inside that was "charged" wit a cord coming out of his back. i couldnt sleep without him and listened so often to the music that i knew every tone. one day he stayed silent and it was a catastrophic event. but luckyly my mother opened up the bear, and discovered that some of his fillings were tangled inside the mechanism. she made him work again.
Until watching this video i had no thought about this bear for probably 25-30 years, but now i somehow miss hin.
Noticed that if you watch the slo-mo of that plastic governor, as Dr. Bill mentions that air resistance slows it down, the plastic has actually bent enough to let the spinning governor gently drag against the case above it. The original style metal disks definitely worked only by air-resistance, but the new plastic ones appear to use both air resistance and friction at high enough speeds.
Loved the video, thank you.
Wow! Absolutely brilliant indeed! I always loved winding and hearing music boxes ever since I was a kid. Got myself some recently and as I’m looking at it, I wanted to know how it works making me stumble upon this video! Your explaining is very straight forward, making it say to understand. Thank you for making the video!
As always, I love these videos. You explain everything so well, and all without treating the viewer like an idiot. Please don't stop!
love the slow mo's - they show exactly what the viewer needs to understand.
Want to convey my sincere thanks to you for making this video so professionally. It exactly what was needed.
This guy could explain how a computer works and make it make sense to an old non technical grandparent. Love your videos and learn so much from them. Just the other day watched your aluminum can video and have been hooked ever since.
Thank you so much for such a helpful video! I was really dumbfounded how windup mechanisms magically slow down the clock springs escape rate but this was a very helpful explanation!
I don't know why this was in my recommendations but I'm oddly happy it was
Me too
So "pens" is why videos are taking so long to make
hahahahaha
I think "penterest" will really catch on
TehMonkey Probably the heavy duty animation.
TehMonkey.
@Shrey Rupani r/woosh it was a joke
*puts music box on my teeth*
My skull: oh shit! It's a bop!
Excellent video. Everything is clear and concise.
I was searching for music box videos because I wanted to make a music box for my sister as a wedding gift, but after seeing this, I think I'll just buy her a coffee machine
I never realized that this is how people listened to music before the radio. Really makes me appreciate music boxes more. The thing about the weighted comb teeth decreasing the frequency really interesting too. Thanks!
I wasn't born in the era of music boxes, but the few I've had contact with growing up filled me with an indescribable joy.
This video mad me very nostalgic.
Pens, Pins, Pans, Pens......
+A Ramirez Puns
+A Ramirez A very diverse fern.
+A Ramirez Poor engineerguy. It sounds like his dialect doesn't clearly distinguish between "pin" and "pen" there is a line the runs through the US and people on the southeast side have that problem. It is actually called the pin/pen merger by linguists.
+A Ramirez puns
and im from the southeast usa.
"These modern music boxes then,are a charming vestige of a past filled with brilliant engineering,and craftsmanship."
Wow, when I accidentally discovered youtube video about music boxes, I did not expect something so in-depth with such production value. Amazing stuff!
I took apart my fiance's mom's vintage Japanese black lacquer music box with a ballerina as it didn't work. I'm NOT mechanical but figured You Tube would help me. I checked out a couple other videos but yours is the best for explaining exactly how the music box works. Thank you. That was very interesting!
Also, my hat is off to the person who invented this.
To get the music box to work I tried using the 'toothpick' method to just apply a tiny bit of lubricant on the base and top of the spinning part with the 'wings' (that is my vernacular as an 'artistic type!') It didn't work any better. Then I tried the 'what the heck it is broken anyway, why not just spray the whole darn thing directly and forget about moderation!' This WORKED ! Suddenly the 'box' began to play the tune effortlessly for the first time. Wonderment! Now, however, I am wondering if directly spraying the lubricant on all parts of the music box will be 'too much' for the poor mechanisms and totally overpower them and end up causing the thing not to work after a while? I used BoeShield T-9 lwaterproof lubricant. What do you think? I'm now in the process of uploading my first ever You Tube Video I am so proud that I actually got this working! YAY!
"The music will resonate inside your skull"
+Klauskii that sounds horrifying
+Jude Lau Your skull works as a great radio amplifying dish too. That's how that "extend your car keyfob range by pressing it against your head" trick works.
+Jude Lau That's what happens when you speak or sing as well: the vibrations of your vocal cords are resonating inside your skull.
+Kymberly Sangalang And that's why we find our voice odd when we record it and play it back?
+Jude Lau It only sounds horrifying. In case you would want to know something more about this subject google: Aftershokz Bluezb, Ishin-Den-Shin (Disney Research) or take a look how Google Glass speaker works. In my opinion it's very interesting technology.
Another excellent video about a simple device that doesn't seem so simple anymore. Great work and I look forward to the next one.
By the way, I have never heard a difference between 'pin' and 'pen'. Let it pass!
+Lerkero I was unable to hear a different -- I was raised with a southern Indiana accent -- and said every -en as -in. I could not hear the difference. I worked with a voice teacher in Pittsburgh years ago and learned the difference, but now, if I'm tired I always say -en for -in.
+engineerguy My wife pronounces the difference between Laurie (law-ree) and Lori (low-ree) but I say both the same way - and I'm the word nerd of the family. *shrug* At some point you just have to ask yourself whether precise enunciation is important to your point.
+engineerguy I can clearly hear the difference but I'm also used to hearing different accents so I probably wouldn't have noticed no matter how you'd said it. I guess not having a local English dialect or accent to overshadow others helps in that regard. We're taught Oxford English in Swedish schools but grow up on mix of American, British and Australian movies and TV-series with all manner of different accents. There's no right or wrong. Just different! =)
Just amazing works of art! Great video very well done. I’ve been fixing music boxes over a year and it truly makes me so happy! I salvage them from thrift stores and call them projects I’m basically a music box doctor lol.. I love a good challenge and I have had some in really bad condition which is so sad. I also carry spare turn keys, I see quite a few missing them.
oh my gosh i was just looking at an old music box my daughter has and figuring out how it works. i’m so happy i found this channel.
After 26 years of my life, someone FINALLY describes how this beautiful box of my childhood works.
I love this channel, thanks for making these vids!
It's a friction governor, you can see it @3:47, at a specific speed the top mounted weights lift up and start rubbing on the upper frame (note the protrusions on each weight, designed to extend the wear if the governor without increasing the area coming in contact with the frame), the higher the rpm the more friction to resist the rotation... otherwise the governor would be just a set of vertical flaps, if it was only air then no need for the weights, odd mounting geometry and the extra materials ;)
You can test this by flattening the upper frame or shifting the governor down on it's shaft, the speed should increase until the weights start hitting the bushing to the left of the image.
+Alex Naanou The patent mentions both air resistance and friction. In our high speed footage we didn't notice it touching. Your idea to test it by slipping it down the worm screw is a good idea.
+Alex Naanou At 5:15 you can see a pure air resistance governor. It looks like a fan blade :) I always wondered a kid why these things had a little fan in them. Likely I assumed it was for cooling hehe.
+engineerguy Is air resistance really that significant a factor? Isn't it just that the gear train reduces the torque delivered to the governor so much that it is very slow to accelerate? The weights then increase the moment of inertia exaggerating that effect.
Then again, I do suppose that air resistance and friction would be the factors limiting the top angular velocity of the governor. So it has those two dual functions.
+nutsandgum yep =)
An air resistant governor, I wasn't expecting that. I was more thinking about a centrifugal braking one
+benjamin mathon What system are they using for mechanical watches ?
+benjamin mathon
Works differently. It has a balance wheel. Just imagine the watch having a circular pendulum and instead of gravity there's a second small spring to make it oscillate.
+benjamin mathon I think the governor is at least also friction based. It bends and then it's rubber surface rubs against the housing. Look closely at the top of the weights at 03:32 there are even "brake pads".
+Cutter Slade Great catch. He definitely missed that on this device. He shows an image of another model at 05:15 which appears to genuinely only use air resistance.
+Cutter Slade
I was thinking the same thing. If it was purely air resistance they wouldn't have made it of such flexible material, and there would have been no need for it to be so chunky, nor would each side be only supported by a thin bit of material at the top. It's definitely designed to flex and then rub against the top.
I love your videos because they concisely show the genius behind everyday items that you usually wouldn't look at twice in a way thats easy to understand
Ok. Ok. I can also see how much effort has gone in to making this video. Appreciate it
"Also, if you rest the music box gently against your teeth the music will resonate inside your skull."
That sounds so metal and hardcore! The way you say it just makes it that much more extreme!
Am I wrong in thinking that the governor in that particular model works on friction between the tops of the rubber and the plastic case of the music box? The rubber seems to be specifically eccentrically connected at the top allowing for the bottom to rotate out while spinning. Also there seem to be raised pads at the top of said pieces that would limit the contact/friction with the plastic. Even in the slow motion you can see them rotate out as it gets up to speed. I have seen the usually flat and light metal governors that you showed in one of your older examples. I just thought they might be employing a slightly more involved process in this more modern version. Just a thought.
+Nicholas Viazzo The patent on this governor mentions both friction and air resistance. We used close up high speed video to see if it scraps along the top. To our eye it did not. A few eagle-eyed viewers have noted that to them the high-speed video we show in this version does show the governor contacting the top surface.
+engineerguy Cool, although I didn't actually see them touching, it did seem they had taken steps to account for it. It's interesting to know that the patent does actually call for both. Thanks for the response, and please keep up the great videos.
+engineerguy The amount of friction to maintain constant speed once the the governor spins up, deforms and makes contact with the round boss above it is infinitesimal. Since the molded frame is likely warped to some extent the contact probably happens at a single high point under the overhang, where it would be very hard to see. I was able to adjust the playback speed on similar music box by sliding the governor up and down on its steel shaft, changing how much it needed to deform before making contact, and thus the maximum speed that it could reach.
+engineerguy This should be fairly easy to test if air resistance is having an effect of the rotational speed of the governor. Place the music box in either a vacuum chamber or a pressure chamber with a camera and watch whether or not it speeds up or slows down.
+Nicholas Viazzo Very well noticed! I thought the design seemed a bit odd given it was intentionally and apparently purpose built to swing outwards and deform the top. I wasn't sure why that would just be by happenchance, and this comment made me feel less of a weirdo for wondering. :P
Fantastic video, I love explanations of things we take for granted. Great detail, keep up the good work !!
I have a small music box collection, I can definitely appreciate the fine craftsmanship in all of them now!
This might be the best video explaining how something works I've ever seen in my life.
would have loved to see how messing with the air resistance (different air pressure?) affected the sound
+Jim Nyenhuis We thought of putting it in a bell jar (vacuum) . . .
+engineerguy That would have been quite interesting. Seeing how the vacuum would influence not only the governor but also how the sound would travel.
attach a microphone to the soundbox itself, glued to it
Piezos
+engineerguy My first thought was to grind away some material from the governor but I guess that's because I own a grinder and not a vacuum chamber haha.
Fascinating video and the bloopers at the end about the pens was hilarious.. err I mean pins. :-)
Where I'm from, Pin and Pen are pronounced the same.
Gonna assume Ohio :D
@@wraithgames Nope - NC!
@@LeahDay I thought NZ.
Same here in the midwest.
Well obviously where you are from, people don't speak proper english :D
Wow! 🤯 I had no idea how complex these music boxes are! I'm staring at one while watching. Awesome video! 👍
I haven’t yet watched all of your videos but all of the ones I have reviewed all been excellent. You have a very calming voice and presentation style which is appreciated. I share these with my two-year-old grandson to explain things as we find new things. Thank you for your work
Looks like the pin-pen merger area is expanding...
I'm wondering where that merger has happened. I grew up in central California and i pronounce them identically. Maybe I'll look it up.
+darkridge For me it is from my southern Indiana accent ....
+engineerguy I feel for you! As a non-native english listener, the difference between the sound of pin and pen was so small it was almost negligible. Props for taking so much time to say it right :)
+engineerguy Odd, usually the merger causes the e in pen to sound like the i in pin, but you are doing the opposite, making the i in pin sound like the e in pen.
+eduardog3000 Indeed. I grew up with the only the -in, learned the -en late in life and now find it hard to say the -in.
Are you still active/coming back soon? Your videos are amazing!
I wonder what those "top notch" end of the 19th century music boxes sounded like...
+piranha031091 Probably laughably bad to our modern standards. But then again, we at one time thought 32 kbit/s encoded mp3s where the best thing ever, until we learned better.
+Greg Fraser they can't sound "bad to modern standards" since they are acoustic devices and we don't produce music boxes with the same complexity anymore.
+Greg Fraser Not necessarily bad. It's basically the classical version of 8/16-bit chiptune music, and we listen to that stuff all the time still. The indie game VVVVVV has a soundtrack I consider one of my all-time favorites, and it's done 8-bit style.
+piranha031091 you're on youtube and you want to know what something sounds like? kids these days; can never do anything for themselves
th-cam.com/video/FpzG2m88nus/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/pgZs4aTMQqU/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/zdqpaEWqthU/w-d-xo.html
+japzone First off, I love chiptune music! Secondly, probably my words where not chosen ideally, what I meant was that people at that time would gather around the music box and believe that what they heard was the best quality possible. Which it absolutely was at that time. But nowadays with Dolby-Digital-Stereo-5.2-and whatnot-16-speaker-systems we are very much spoiled of how sound can be replicated. It's like expecting the most hi-fi experience possible and then getting the sound quality of a birthday card which upon opening squeaks "Happy Birthday".
Pen Pan -> Pin
Post credit was fun to watch, thanks for including them. Would like more such unedited cuts in this channel. This is the best channel to appreciate engineering behind things around us.
This is amazing! I’ve seen this explained before and found it fascinating. I went to explain it to my daughter and found your video. This is the most comprehensive and easiest video! Thank you for posting! 😊
Hold up: Are you telling me that a music box will play faster at high elevations? 🤯
Also: I appreciate that TH-cam suggested this to me next. Well played, algorithm. th-cam.com/video/MhVw-MHGv4s/w-d-xo.html
Yes. Music will play faster at higher elevations. It is such a beautiful mechanism!
It will play faster inside a helium balloon too
If you put the music box on your teeth it will resonate in your skull... So appreciate it :)
Son: "I want to become a musician"
Mother: "it is decided that you'll become an engineer"
The son when he becomes an engineer:
Beautifully done. Thank you Bill Hamok the engineer guy and the people behind the scenes.
I'm having a deep fascination and admiration for music boxes since i was a kit. Not only because of that sweet sound they produce but also what a wonderful blend of many things it is. Clever Mechanisms, craftsmanship, creativity and beauty. My mother sometimes had one of these modern ones who play a 10-20 second loop with windup mechanisms and as a kid i even had one that play a good night melody. I kept listening to it till it slowly stopped and it was such a wonderful way to fall asleep to. Today i love using such mechanisms, working them into customized wooden boxes and using them in a creative way. I even like the handcrank ones even more as you can personally control the speed and how fast or slow the piece plays. The whole concept of music boxes is still one of the greatest things mankind has ever come up with and should i ever have to chose just ONE thing to represent mankind's talent to create something of beauty, i would always pick a Music Box.
+engineerguy 4:34 Oops... In this slow-motion excerpt, the dark-green gear attached to the drum appears to be rotating in the wrong direction.
+Spoif good spot!
+Spoif Yep. We didn't think anyone would notice because it moves so slow.
+engineerguy Excuses are futile. It's GREAT to make mistakes because they are the essence of learning. Every day is a school day, and today is no exception. 8)
+Spoif It stood out like a sore thumb to me!
+pyro1324 "It stood out like a sore thumb to me, once someone pointed it out and I watched the moment over and over to see if it's true and it was, so that's why!" - there, FTFY. #Kappa
Lol the end was hilarious. Do you have a producer or is it just you and the editor?
thanks for using the metric system and not the american one
+Martin ᴿ' Anyone who is serious about measurements would do that.
+Martin ᴿ' Even in America I commonly see metric in engineering contexts.
+Martin ᴿ' Or the dreadful "football fields" unit of length
+Martin ᴿ' The Metric system is used in America. Everyone in the past 40 years or so has learned both the Metric system and the U.S. Customary system in school and is familiar with both sets of units.
+vwestlife US Customary? As a foreigner, I always thought that is called 'Imperial'. Is there a difference?
I actually came from Wikipedia from the article `Music Box`. I am glad that I have encountered your video there and subscribed your channel as first thing after work. I dont know about the license or copyright issues, but your videos should be shown to public more than one channel. This is basically a charity for hungry minds.
Admire the great work, please keep working for the greater good.
thank you for the detailed explanation of how the music box works, you are great 🙂
I saw in a video of LearnEngineering that a worm gear can spin a worm wheel, but not the other way around. This is how wrenches work. (letting you make the wrench wider or narrower but staying stuck when you actually turn something with it). But here the worm wheel is spinning the screw (worm gear) of the governor. How is it different to let the worm wheel spin the screw?
+Ciroluiro If i remember correctly, there is limit in the size of the angle of the thread. If it is bigger than the limit value (around 6 or 10 degrees), the system won't work both ways (you also need to take the friction into account). check this link (in french but well illustrated) pierreprovot.wordpress.com/les-engrenages/les-engrenages-roue-et-vis-sans-fin/
+Nath ! I think I understood what you mean. So the angle in the worm wheel determines if there is reversibility. Thanks!
+Nath ! thanks for the link
+Ciroluiro Also the load on the worm gear matters, since the torque output is so much smaller than input. This works because the governor is very lightweight.
Love the videos, love the topics, LOVE the engineer guy.
Just wish they didn't put so much damn makeup on him.
+Sam G You should see me without it!
Ahahahaha fair enough.
+Sam G Didn't notice it until you pointed it out
+Sam G it's needed so it reduces reflections of light on his forehead and he will look like he's sweating.
+engineerguy LOL. This makes up for everything. Engineer guy ftw!
“Wind it up and it plays a tune”
*roll credits*
Ive NEVER felt so calm while learning new things. I love you Bill!!
My daughter has a music box, and just tonight she asked me if you changed out the drum, would it play a different song. That preschool-aged girl has looked at that music box, and played with it, and studied it, and understood the drum is what, "stores," the music. I didn't know until now the comb makes a difference too. I will have to show this video to my little engineer in the making. Interesting this video is suggested, coincidentally, just a few hours after our talk.
"The music will now resonate inside your skull" sounds like a horror story plot
Wait, but how does a spur gear turn a worm gear, shouldn't
that not be possible?
+Michael Pressman we too were surprised by this ...
+engineerguy is there any explination? maybe the spur gear teeth have an angle to them?
Google it
the upward force of the plastic tooth pushing the aluminum screw is stronger than the friction that slows it down, this and the air resistance is used to make the governor rotate at a constant speed
You can see that worm used in music boxes has very steep threading compared to threading in usual screws or in worms from elevator mechanisms. This way self-locking doesn not occur (criterion for self-locking is when tangent of thread angle is lower than friction coefficient).
pens, pens, pens, pins, pens
Pan.
pinaple
Pancake
Pineapple pen
Pan Penapple Apple Pin
Excellent video which does justice to history of this forgotten piece of music history.
I'm so glad I found this video! It really helped me to understand what was keeping a music box I just got recently from working. The governor wasn't working properly (meaning it kept getting stuck). Unfortunately, after my stepdad accidently broke the spinner the governor is attached to while trying to fix it, I must find another one.