@@luccadeahl5340 Ok, but why? A clock has hands. What resembles hands more, in a pigeon? The wings, or the legs? Biologically, it's very clear that a bird's "arms" are its wings and not its legs.
I wish I was rich enough to have Uri build me odd mechanisms for a curiosity cabinet and see people struggle to work out the meaning / purpose of them all.
There was a website long ago called Gary's Wooden Clocks. It said that since clocks only rotate in one direction, only one surface of each gear tooth actually matters. Make the back of the pigeon head follow an accurate gear tooth profile. The other gear tooth surface can contain the pigeon's beak. The gear should operate as accurately as a traditional involute gear in one direction. You have to flip over all the gears that rotate counter-clockwise.
@@Zer0ji Sure, you could get it to work with the beak on the meshing face, but it won't be as efficient. The power transfer will vary depending on the position. Drive weight will need to be increased or runtime reduced for the clock to continue running through the weak phases. Running the pigeons backwards will have maximum efficiency through the complete rotation, so runtime can be increased.
Every 10 seconds it's one minute. Every 10 minutes it's one hour. Every 10 hour it's one day. Every 10 days it's one week. Every 10 weeks it's one month. Every 10 months it's one year. It all makes sense now
this thing is just fantastic in so many ways, it measures 44,5 seconds divided into tenths, and the second hand (or the two hundredths of 44,5 seconds-hand?) is a foot. And the only answer to the question "but why?" is "well you see, the gears are pigeons.." Bravo, sir
Funnily enough, 45 seconds is the amount of time you typically wait when blooming a pour over coffee. So essentially you've made a bloom clock! Congrats!
Met Uri at Maker Central last weekend. My meds were kicking my brains out my ears and I just gushed about loving his work and how it made me use more brass. He asked what projects, and for some reason I just stared and said "knives" in an unintentionally sinister moment of brain-fog (I do make other things I swear!). I went to leave before Uri called for security, but he stopped me and handed me a handmade paper postcard with a drawing of a pigeon he made. Everything Uri does is part of a wonderfully absurd world, and this clock is a perfect example of that.
This is the second best for me, first was an actual Pidgeon with a watch band i saw some homeless guy wearing the other day. This one took more craftsmanship for sure though
I just love the thickness of Uri materials. I'm going to make a delicate clock mechanism - and he whips out a piece of sea going brass a half inch thick! Truly a work of mechanical art as usual. Does it work? Yes it does. Does it have a purpose? Not in this universe ...
Not me giggling at this very silly concept for a clock on a day when I'm feeling extra crummy from migraines! Thank you for the giggles! It's beautiful!
By far the coolest metric (10 hour), single footed, Pigeon themed, interference pendulum non-clocks I have ever seen! As always, it was a great video. The perfectly timed comedic pause at "the pendulum swings between the legs" had me spurting orange soda out of my nose! Fantastic work all the way around.
@@TheGrinningViking OOOO, tricky. But there are 12 inches in a foot, not ten, and 12 hours on most clock faces, not ten. Sooo Metricerial? or Impetric?
I've learned over the years if you expect it to work the first time it rarely will. It's better to remain sceptical because life likes to prove you wrong. Great video.👍
Uri is awesome i started watching him many, many years ago. He shows his mistakes, issues, problems and shows that things don't always go smooth. The way his mind and humor is just what i need some days.
Just wanted to say, I love your shenanigans and your style. Your age old beauty and artistry which you build into your projects and your passion for the wood and metals you use, all of which represent your trademark, is lost in today’s manufacturing and design and your channel is certainly a breath of fresh air! Please keep your often quirky but very inspirational videos coming and don’t change a thing!❤
I saw this on Patreon and I couldnt help but watch it again here! Love the Clickspring-on-crack energy, Uri!! Really fills the Antikythera shaped hole in my heart! Another awesome project as always!
Clickspring is still working on the Antikythera mechanism, there was a very long time where there wasn't much video content on it as he was working on the paper he was writing regarding his discoveries over how it works. Now he is mostly done with that side of things, the pace is picking up on the mechanism itself and the video making, craftsmanship does take time though, I wonder how long it took to create the original mechanism?
Ive been looking at all of the updates on his patreon for a while, I am really getting excited to see what it will look like when its finished! I really cannot imagine how long it would have taken for an ancient craftsman to do!
I cannot tell you how many times i giggled during this video. Please never change your personality in your videos, its so fresh and adorable and earnest! And your creativity is wonderful! I love the bent pendulum!
Gorgeous piece, love the bend in the pendulum actually, and I love that the pigeons actually have 3 stages: cavity entry, middle cavity, and cavity exit.
Aw man, this was a great video! Your eye for the absurd coupled with your sense of humor is just brilliant, like 14:18. I love it. And on top of that you are an excellent artist and craftsman. Also, props for the clocked screws!
Never have I ever felt like I could build a clock, until now. Ive watched people build clocks before but i still didnt understand how it worked. After wathing this, i have a much better grasp on the mechanics.
i am a watchmaker and loooove this. you are skilled and a great guy! all you have to set now is the "reperé" which is the same amount of time between the tic and tocs (bendulum swing left an right)
It was fun watching Uri do egregious things with hand tools, but I feel like getting real machine tools has truly unlock the shenanigan potential in him.
I have no clue what is happening or why this video sowed up in my feed but I am incredibly glad that it did. This is, single handedly,l the coolest video i have watched in a while! And all of the little birds have eyes! amazing!!
0:01 I mean... from a philosophical perspective, don't we all already exist as cogs in a capitalist consumption machinery for the benefit and enrichment of the already extremely wealthy?😅
I love your videos. So much skill and thought there, but the zany sense of humor just makes my week. "We'll have a hand, which obviously will be a leg". This will forever be stuck in my brain when I need a silent and private chuckle. Thanks.
Great build Uri! If you increase the length of your pendulum rod, it will slow down the beat (increase the time between beats). Then thread the end of the rod (maybe a couple inches) and get rid of the hook on the weight, drilling a through hole where the hook was. Now slide the weight onto the threaded rod and thread a decorative final onto the rod below the weight. This way, you can use the finial nut to fine tune the timing so that your 10 to 1 countdown timer can be any length of time you wish. Next thing would be to add a small bell that rings every time your timer hits 10 o’Tuchman!
First off, I love this, can't say that enough, it's a great piece and shows an awesome creative process. Though I'm not sure "clock" is the right word here, might I suggest calling it a timer. "Clock" to me has 12 hours, and runs "up" 1-2-3-4... Not down 10-9-8-7... Timer just seems more fitting here.
You can adjust the timing of the clock by lengthening/shortening the pendulum (seems like lengthening might be good in this case, in order to reach a minute), you could add in a threaded end to the tip of the current pendulum rod as an adjustment piece. Also, the inconsistent tics vs tocs can be adjusted by changing the equilibrium position of the pallet fork (or escapement fork) relative to the position of the pendulum. This is known as "beat error" in watchmaking. Having near zero beat error first before you adjust the rate is preferable since reducing the beat error will allow the amplitude of oscillation to be maximized. Very very cool stuff! Also I know you're not trying to make a fully functioning clock, but if you wanted to, and had sufficiently smooth mechanisms, you would be able to increase your power reserve too (time before your clock runs out of wind). But then you might also want to create a winding mechanism independent from the motion mechanism, but that's a whole slippery slope that you've now gone down hahaha.
Uri, I just want to say that I deeply appreciate your particular breed of insanity, level of commitment to absurdism, and all around funky point of view. Thank you for being you, and for sharing you wackiness with everyone!
I sware i saw clock mechanism and thought i was going to see you handcraft a clock. Didnt even think twice about it. I know how involved clock mechanisms are. The tiny details of every gear moving in harmony. This is how highly i think of your skill as a maker. This was amazing too. Its always a treat to see you in action and fun too.
I love showing all the errors and returns of your work, while cutting out any boring stuff. It is quite entertaining and educational at once. Nice work (and also the clock) .
It's soo cool that english is becoming more and more commonly spoken. Being able to watch and understand content from creators on the other side of the world is a real privilege. Great video!
I wonder if the pantograph could make guide templates for a turning engine like Clickspring's. Pigeon guilloche would be a really neat decorative element!
I saw a video about this by Matthias Wandel at least 10 years ago when I was in school. I used his guide to make a planetary gear set with very bizarre organically shaped gears, and always dreamed of making a useful mechanism like a clock to display this principle. Nice work!
Wow... I can only imagine if I knew you when I was building ridiculous doodads in art school metals class. You would have been my absolute hero, and I'd still be working in metals.
I keep thinking of TOT, and his involute gear video. This is the involute of a pigeon. Too funny. You are my favorite kind of crazy person. I would love to hang out with you. This is awesome.
Negative pigeon space is the most Terry Pratchet sounding term I've heard all week
Fitting, because he looks JUST like I imagine Rincewind
Uri has serious Leonard of Quirm vibes
@@carrik_caser but sometimes a bit of Bergholt Stuttley Johnson shows through =D
@@kgbhuiI think all great inventors need a little bit of B. S. Johnson in their makeup.
It connects all the places in the universe where there aren't any pigeons.
I love the evolution of "Can I make a gear with pigeon heads as teeth?" to "Oops, I accidentally made a clock"
#featurecreep
It's a cooo-cooo clock
Okay that was a good one😂@@keilafleischbein59
6:30 "Let's not forget the hand of the clock which, obviously, is going to be a leg"
Dammit Uri. I love you so much.
he is the best 💪
Shouldn't it be wings or feathers maybe?
@@Nonononono_Ohno leg
@@luccadeahl5340 Ok, but why? A clock has hands. What resembles hands more, in a pigeon? The wings, or the legs? Biologically, it's very clear that a bird's "arms" are its wings and not its legs.
@@Nonononono_Ohno that's the joke, it's the exact last thing you'd expect as a hand.
It is accurate! It clearly shows how fast time flies in the shop! Best video I've seen all month (or probably longer).
Thank you! Since it's only a minute dial, the weight falls all the way down in like 6 revolutions, so I have about 4 minutes to enjoy the ticking😅
@@urituchmanpigeon perfect to time an egg
It's also counting down! Adding a bell to bottom of the weight or a periodic chime at 10 would be fun
How is your pantograph practice sessions going so far?
This is like watching Clicksprings, but from a parallel universe.
Iknow he’ said bobs his uncle but if he starts to make his aunty kythera im out of here
CrackSpring
Assisto assiduamente o Uri Tuchman e Clicksprings. Ambos são ótimos.
Back Alley Clickspring.
Iknow that uri said that bobs his uncle but I can’t wait for him to start to make his aunty kythera
I wish I was rich enough to have Uri build me odd mechanisms for a curiosity cabinet and see people struggle to work out the meaning / purpose of them all.
"I'm not a watch maker" ?.
You make us watch!.
Your videos are compelling.
A make watcher
There was a website long ago called Gary's Wooden Clocks. It said that since clocks only rotate in one direction, only one surface of each gear tooth actually matters.
Make the back of the pigeon head follow an accurate gear tooth profile. The other gear tooth surface can contain the pigeon's beak. The gear should operate as accurately as a traditional involute gear in one direction. You have to flip over all the gears that rotate counter-clockwise.
That was my first thought - follow an involute pattern only on meshing surfaces
To keep the spirit of the clock, the pigeon should be on the meshing face, and the perfectly fine gear surface should stay unused!
@@Zer0ji Sure, you could get it to work with the beak on the meshing face, but it won't be as efficient. The power transfer will vary depending on the position. Drive weight will need to be increased or runtime reduced for the clock to continue running through the weak phases.
Running the pigeons backwards will have maximum efficiency through the complete rotation, so runtime can be increased.
@@stevesclocks
That's the joke
Finally, a metric clock! Great work!
How can it be metric? It uses feet!
@@nknk314 Yes but the foot counts in 10 toes and middle phalanges.
@@nknk314 Comedy gold
@@nknk314 🤣🤣🤣
Every 10 seconds it's one minute.
Every 10 minutes it's one hour.
Every 10 hour it's one day.
Every 10 days it's one week.
Every 10 weeks it's one month.
Every 10 months it's one year.
It all makes sense now
this thing is just fantastic in so many ways, it measures 44,5 seconds divided into tenths, and the second hand (or the two hundredths of 44,5 seconds-hand?) is a foot.
And the only answer to the question "but why?" is "well you see, the gears are pigeons.."
Bravo, sir
Funnily enough, 45 seconds is the amount of time you typically wait when blooming a pour over coffee. So essentially you've made a bloom clock! Congrats!
Mine's more like 30 seconds. But really, I just wait until the foaming stops.
And it's counting down, this would fit perfectly in an indie coffee place or just as a very interesting, questionably useful, fun item
a longer pendulum would make it go slower.
This is definitely the best video on TH-cam about using pigeon-shaped gears in approximately a clock.
Great, the Monty Python of metal work 😀
I thought the same thing, love this
Met Uri at Maker Central last weekend. My meds were kicking my brains out my ears and I just gushed about loving his work and how it made me use more brass. He asked what projects, and for some reason I just stared and said "knives" in an unintentionally sinister moment of brain-fog (I do make other things I swear!). I went to leave before Uri called for security, but he stopped me and handed me a handmade paper postcard with a drawing of a pigeon he made. Everything Uri does is part of a wonderfully absurd world, and this clock is a perfect example of that.
"I promise I'm not high" had me dead
I'm not sure i believe him. ...
As a watchmaker who built several clocks I can say, this is really great work!
This is without a doubt one of the nicer pigeon-themed clocks ive seen.
Easily in the top 10 pigeon-themed clocks.
This is the second best for me, first was an actual Pidgeon with a watch band i saw some homeless guy wearing the other day. This one took more craftsmanship for sure though
@@SirTomFoolery i dont think that it took much craftsmanship, the only thing you need to have is the will to do so and the speed to catch a pigeon.
It's nice watching an original genius at work. You read the books and immediately threw them all out.
This could totally be a timer. The coolest timer ever. Forget cube timers now we have pigeon timers.
Ideal for cooking pigeon eggs perhaps?
A prank timer that looks like it counts down from 10 but actually takes 44.5 seconds
I just love the thickness of Uri materials. I'm going to make a delicate clock mechanism - and he whips out a piece of sea going brass a half inch thick! Truly a work of mechanical art as usual. Does it work? Yes it does. Does it have a purpose? Not in this universe ...
Not me giggling at this very silly concept for a clock on a day when I'm feeling extra crummy from migraines! Thank you for the giggles! It's beautiful!
I cured my migraines with CoQ-10.
By far the coolest metric (10 hour), single footed, Pigeon themed, interference pendulum non-clocks I have ever seen!
As always, it was a great video. The perfectly timed comedic pause at "the pendulum swings between the legs" had me spurting orange soda out of my nose!
Fantastic work all the way around.
It's clearly imperial, it uses foot based measurements
@@TheGrinningViking OOOO, tricky. But there are 12 inches in a foot, not ten, and 12 hours on most clock faces, not ten. Sooo Metricerial? or Impetric?
I love that it counts 10 amounts of time 😆
It’s a bendulum!!! 🥰🥰🥰 It turned out awesome!
That hurts so good.
I cant express how organic and natural this channel and man is, its just perfect!
Amazing how you managed to model the abrupt head movements of pigeons 😂
It’s sweet, and clever, and I already looking forward to whatever you do next!
I've learned over the years if you expect it to work the first time it rarely will. It's better to remain sceptical because life likes to prove you wrong. Great video.👍
Uri is awesome i started watching him many, many years ago. He shows his mistakes, issues, problems and shows that things don't always go smooth. The way his mind and humor is just what i need some days.
The precision machining capabilities of your shop continue to improve, very well done! Love the pendulum.
Uri, the most chaotic and brilliant creator online😂😉
I love the learning/mistakes, a clock, turning from 10-1, with an upside down 6 as 9❤️
"Thank you very much for watching"....should Uri have said...Thanks very much for Clocking!
If I ever have money I'm going to build myself a workshop like this. The fact that you make your own screws blows my mind
Saw the thumbnail and I was sure its clickspring, and then I see a Uri in its natural habitat :p
Just wanted to say, I love your shenanigans and your style. Your age old beauty and artistry which you build into your projects and your passion for the wood and metals you use, all of which represent your trademark, is lost in today’s manufacturing and design and your channel is certainly a breath of fresh air! Please keep your often quirky but very inspirational videos coming and don’t change a thing!❤
I saw this on Patreon and I couldnt help but watch it again here! Love the Clickspring-on-crack energy, Uri!! Really fills the Antikythera shaped hole in my heart! Another awesome project as always!
One day he will, on a whim decide to re-make the Antikythera Mechanism. It'll happen, give him time.
@@MoonLitChild I cant wait to see that
Clickspring is still working on the Antikythera mechanism, there was a very long time where there wasn't much video content on it as he was working on the paper he was writing regarding his discoveries over how it works. Now he is mostly done with that side of things, the pace is picking up on the mechanism itself and the video making, craftsmanship does take time though, I wonder how long it took to create the original mechanism?
Ive been looking at all of the updates on his patreon for a while, I am really getting excited to see what it will look like when its finished! I really cannot imagine how long it would have taken for an ancient craftsman to do!
I cannot tell you how many times i giggled during this video. Please never change your personality in your videos, its so fresh and adorable and earnest! And your creativity is wonderful! I love the bent pendulum!
14:17... I'm... I can't stop laughing... My sides... 😂
XD I didn't even have to click on the timestamp, I knew exactly what this was referring to. That part was so good!
“Blalalalulululululuululululululu”
It's amazing how you can be so scatterbrained and so precise at the same time :)
Out of literally anything this ma could have made he made a gear out of pigeons.
Total legend.
Gorgeous piece, love the bend in the pendulum actually, and I love that the pigeons actually have 3 stages: cavity entry, middle cavity, and cavity exit.
Aw man, this was a great video! Your eye for the absurd coupled with your sense of humor is just brilliant, like 14:18. I love it. And on top of that you are an excellent artist and craftsman.
Also, props for the clocked screws!
WOW I just discovered your channel and my heart is fulfilled. The brilliant creations, the impeccable editing, your personality and voice! I love it!
Amazing job, this is One of my favorite channels !
Never have I ever felt like I could build a clock, until now. Ive watched people build clocks before but i still didnt understand how it worked. After wathing this, i have a much better grasp on the mechanics.
This gear design would be perfect to make a hand cranked whisk.
i am a watchmaker and loooove this. you are skilled and a great guy! all you have to set now is the "reperé" which is the same amount of time between the tic and tocs (bendulum swing left an right)
It was fun watching Uri do egregious things with hand tools, but I feel like getting real machine tools has truly unlock the shenanigan potential in him.
Listen I love pigeons but that pendulum arm is SENDING ME. Flipping brilliant little art piece
WOOOO You rock Uri!
Very good show buddy. I'm a machinist by trade and I admire watching you work and love that you talk about your mistakes as well. 😊
Well done.
I have no clue what is happening or why this video sowed up in my feed but I am incredibly glad that it did. This is, single handedly,l the coolest video i have watched in a while! And all of the little birds have eyes! amazing!!
God Bless you Uri, you're an agent of chaos and I am all for it.
45 seconds on 10 segments means it reaches one minute at 3 ⅓ segments after one full rotation, I'm in love with this beautiful child of chaos.
19:10 dont worry, I never forget to schngrerlzh
Using a polarizing filter helps a lot with reflections, I'm pretty sure clickspring does that, that and big light boxes for soft lighting
0:01 I mean... from a philosophical perspective, don't we all already exist as cogs in a capitalist consumption machinery for the benefit and enrichment of the already extremely wealthy?😅
you have a knack for finding the perfect middle ground between over complicating it and just winging it
also that pantograph is very clever!
I love your videos. So much skill and thought there, but the zany sense of humor just makes my week. "We'll have a hand, which obviously will be a leg". This will forever be stuck in my brain when I need a silent and private chuckle. Thanks.
Great build Uri!
If you increase the length of your pendulum rod, it will slow down the beat (increase the time between beats). Then thread the end of the rod (maybe a couple inches) and get rid of the hook on the weight, drilling a through hole where the hook was. Now slide the weight onto the threaded rod and thread a decorative final onto the rod below the weight. This way, you can use the finial nut to fine tune the timing so that your 10 to 1 countdown timer can be any length of time you wish.
Next thing would be to add a small bell that rings every time your timer hits 10 o’Tuchman!
I love this man and his silly contraptions! They videos never fail to entertain, fascinate, and educate me!
First off, I love this, can't say that enough, it's a great piece and shows an awesome creative process. Though I'm not sure "clock" is the right word here, might I suggest calling it a timer. "Clock" to me has 12 hours, and runs "up" 1-2-3-4... Not down 10-9-8-7... Timer just seems more fitting here.
The bend in the pendulum bar looks soo cool, really adds to the whole bizzare nature of the whole thing
I just wanted to say, your selection of music over the machining segments is FANTASTIC.
I thought so, too.
I love how the numbers are organized counterclockwise where as the hand goes clockwise, also only goes up to 10
Watching not a clock maker make sort of clock was riviting, cheers for the mighty fine reel, Uri...
You can adjust the timing of the clock by lengthening/shortening the pendulum (seems like lengthening might be good in this case, in order to reach a minute), you could add in a threaded end to the tip of the current pendulum rod as an adjustment piece. Also, the inconsistent tics vs tocs can be adjusted by changing the equilibrium position of the pallet fork (or escapement fork) relative to the position of the pendulum. This is known as "beat error" in watchmaking. Having near zero beat error first before you adjust the rate is preferable since reducing the beat error will allow the amplitude of oscillation to be maximized.
Very very cool stuff! Also I know you're not trying to make a fully functioning clock, but if you wanted to, and had sufficiently smooth mechanisms, you would be able to increase your power reserve too (time before your clock runs out of wind). But then you might also want to create a winding mechanism independent from the motion mechanism, but that's a whole slippery slope that you've now gone down hahaha.
Uri, I just want to say that I deeply appreciate your particular breed of insanity, level of commitment to absurdism, and all around funky point of view. Thank you for being you, and for sharing you wackiness with everyone!
Unglaublich gut! Bin gespannt ob und wann eine "echte wunderschöne" Uhr kommt! 🤘🤘🤘
Fabulous, as usual. If I were your next-door neighbor, I would never leave your shop. I would watch you work all day long!
Excellent proof of concept. I like the stylized gears and bent pendulum arm solution.
Man, the things you did with that pantograph and lathe, I swear it's like watching magic being done.
every thing about your work is just amazing, the perfection, the dedication, and just pure beauty
your sense of humor is refreshing and hilarious, amazing creation and video btw. Can't wait to see more
And now we have "Tuchman Time" !!! Love it!!
Uri, you are a mad genius. I love your projects. Sometimes useful, often not, but always a work of art. I can't wait for your next one.
I sware i saw clock mechanism and thought i was going to see you handcraft a clock. Didnt even think twice about it. I know how involved clock mechanisms are. The tiny details of every gear moving in harmony. This is how highly i think of your skill as a maker. This was amazing too. Its always a treat to see you in action and fun too.
You are not only wonderful artist, you are a genius.
This was so whimsical and charming. I adore the weirdness and humor of it all. Very well composed video too! ❤
As always, very creative ideas, warped sense of humor (which I love) and great finished project....
This is what artists should look like in my mind. Huge respect, very cool.
I love showing all the errors and returns of your work, while cutting out any boring stuff. It is quite entertaining and educational at once. Nice work (and also the clock) .
You are a mad mad man. Love it, love the craftsmanship and tools.
Even just the first minute of the video I've already laughed 3 times! I have a very goofy sense of humor. Love this!!
The ghost in the machine has blessed me with this fine video from a delightful eccentric maker. Truly a blessed day this be!
I guess we can prove that you can make a clock mechanism out of any two gears that fit really great. Amazing video. 1,000/10
It's soo cool that english is becoming more and more commonly spoken. Being able to watch and understand content from creators on the other side of the world is a real privilege. Great video!
I recently discovered your channel. It is like a breath of fresh air. Amazing content. Love your videos
Did anyone notice his choise of music was quite funny in the way that suite his style and his personality well. Very enjoy on the video.
Uri, you inspire me so much! Thank you for making these videos and contraptions!
As someone who loves mechanisms and ticking of brass clocks, this made me very happy :)
I wonder if the pantograph could make guide templates for a turning engine like Clickspring's. Pigeon guilloche would be a really neat decorative element!
I saw a video about this by Matthias Wandel at least 10 years ago when I was in school. I used his guide to make a planetary gear set with very bizarre organically shaped gears, and always dreamed of making a useful mechanism like a clock to display this principle. Nice work!
Can't say I'm much interested in the subject matter but the talent, the camerawork and the editing make for an entertaining video.
Wow... I can only imagine if I knew you when I was building ridiculous doodads in art school metals class. You would have been my absolute hero, and I'd still be working in metals.
Super cool! I love the tooth profile idea, thinking outside the box. Congratulations on becoming a fully fledged horologistish.
This is the most delightfully Monty-Python thing I have seen in some time. Lovely. And lovely work too, as per usual.
Quick tip: You can fine-tune the clock by lengthening or shortening the pendulum. Nice project, I loved it.
I keep thinking of TOT, and his involute gear video. This is the involute of a pigeon. Too funny.
You are my favorite kind of crazy person. I would love to hang out with you. This is awesome.
500 years ago you would totally be a massively famous artist/inventor