Make Pendulum Wall Clock With Thermocol Step By Step For School Project

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 7 ก.พ. 2025
  • Hello friends, here I show you how to make a Pendulum wall clock step by step with thermocol and other objects. please see carefully and make it. It is helpful for students to make this easily for school project. Thank you.☺
    Materials Required: thermocol, glue, pin, scale, knife, pen, Black art paper, Mount board, sand paper.
    If you want, I make other projects like this then you comment me in comment box.
    HISTORY OF WALL CLOCKS
    Clocks are interesting devices, they are made in many different ways, from mechanical, to digital, and atomic. I will explain how each type of clock is different, how it keeps time, and why this method it used over others.
    First let’s look at how clocks came to be. The first clocks had been Shadow clocks made first by the Egyptians and Sundials made by the Greeks as well as many others. They used this to mark the hours of the day. Simply by using the shadow the sun cast on the clock would indicate the proximate time. This of course only worked to the nearest hour. Another big flaw in these types of sun powered clocks is in itself, just that. They do not work at night!
    The next clock to be invented was the Clepsydra, also known as a water clock. Using a very large bucket and filling it with water, a tiny hole was cut in the bottom the let water passes out. Every hour was marked with a line as it passed. Once this was done, the clock could be set and the time could be kept. Over time, a flaw was found in this clock as well. Water flows at different speeds depending on the temperature. It would freeze in the cold, as well as evaporate when it was hot. Then there was a solution, the Hourglass, or Sand clock was created.
    Mechanical clocks came into play using a weight that would fall slowly, turning the hands of the clocks. These of course could only be built in tall towers, since the weights needed to fall great distances in order to keep time for long periods. These clocks usually only lost 2 hours a day, that was really good for the time they had been used in. Some of those clocks are still working today, due to how well they had been made. Two examples would be in England, the oldest clock built in 1386 as well as in France, a clock built in 1389.
    The next big jump in clocks would be the pendulum in 1581 by Galileo. He discovered that even though the clock would eventually run out of energy, the clock would keep accurate time up to that point, and if the pendulum was reset before then, the clock would stay accurate till the pendulum was not reset. Lots of people love this kind of clock and still use it today.
    A problem arose keeping time out at sea, traveling North and South sailors could use the north star to tell where they were they are, but going East to West was a different story. In 1707 this problem became more apparent when four ships crashed killing thousands. The British government offered twenty thousand pounds to the one who could build a clock that could keep time accurately at sea so no more lives would be lost.
    A man by the name of John Harrison found out about the contest in 1728 and started working on a clock. After thirty-three years and building three enormous clocks later, his fourth tiny clock was tested. The crew tested the clock on a trip to Jamaica. They arrived 161 days later, the clock was only five seconds off. John received his reward and was seventy-nine years old.
    Email: gavirmalo007@gmail.com

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