These Clocks Helped Measure the World

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Adam Savage’s Tested

Adam Savage’s Tested

Күн бұрын

Пікірлер: 170
@devttyUSB0
@devttyUSB0 Жыл бұрын
Keith is a legend. Amazing to hear him tell these stories with Adam. Thanks Keith, and Adam!
@CC-gg4oj
@CC-gg4oj Жыл бұрын
Adam, as much as I love your build videos; I must say that these type of museum show and tell videos are the icing on the cake! Love the the Royal Society series. Cheers.
@stephenoran2019
@stephenoran2019 Жыл бұрын
"Longitude" by Dava Sobel is a great book about the development of reliable time devices and the reason they were so desperately needed.
@robertpearson8798
@robertpearson8798 Жыл бұрын
I remember it as a pretty good television series as well, with Michael Gambon as Harrison.
@gustavofigueiredo1798
@gustavofigueiredo1798 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for the tip!
@phmwu7368
@phmwu7368 Жыл бұрын
Even better = "The Quest for Longtitude" by William Andrewes (all lectures of the 1993 Longitude Symposium at Harvard University USA)
@fergusrandall7623
@fergusrandall7623 6 ай бұрын
Or just watch map men
@bluplacebo
@bluplacebo Жыл бұрын
I love Adams curiosity, fascination, enthusiasm and knowledge he brings to these videos. He has a tremendous respect for the objects and their history, and I believe that the Royal Institute recognizes those qualities and shows him the same respect. It's wonderful to see.
@asicdathens
@asicdathens Жыл бұрын
Harrison, the guy who invented the marine chronometers invented also the bimetallic pendulum as well ( actually he made the first usable one since the idea predated him). He fine-tuned his pendulums by having one in freezing cold (in the winter) and another one near a fireplace at full blast
@bonibroco1076
@bonibroco1076 Жыл бұрын
11:33 The "chain drive" is called a fusée. It compensates for the diminishing torque of the mainspring as it winds down maintaining the rate regardless of changes in the drive force.
@heiterkiter
@heiterkiter Жыл бұрын
^^ This. I was a bit shocked that the museum curator seemingly didn't know this, since it's such a fundamental feature in historic watches and spring powered clocks.. Also, none of the metals in a bimetallic pendulum contracts when the other expands. Both metals expand with rising temperatures, just like all metals do. But they are connected in a way that while the main pendulum rods push the weight down when expanding, a shorter, secondary set with a slightly higher expansion coefficient push it up by the same amount. So, even though both metals expand, the effective length of the pendulum doesn't change.
@beforever
@beforever Жыл бұрын
The fusee is the spindle around which the chain is wound, more correctly you would refer to it as a fusee and chain.
@ConardCarroll
@ConardCarroll Жыл бұрын
I was just watching another KZbinr talking about how the method for determining your longitude was found, and how much the Royal Society was involved. It really was some interesting science and interpersonal drama LOL I wish this series of Adam at the Royal Society would never end! More and more just keep showing up! Adam talking to museum folk never gets old, please keep doing more of these! And more of Adam creating something for the museums too. Did he create something for the book binding museum? I was so amazed at the machine that creates ledgers. Keep up the awesome work!
@TheTarrMan
@TheTarrMan Жыл бұрын
The Marine chronometer was invented by John Harrison in 1735. The chain is referred to as a "Fusee" (invented in 1525). Early spring/metal-alloy technology was still in its infancy and spring driven clocks from the era had the issue of running fast on a full wind and running slower as they unwind. To fix this they had these cone shape tracks for a chain to run on (with some clever math) to counteract that. (Think of it almost like a CVT transmission.) These chains were often hand built and assembled by orphans to earn their keep. These were very small parts and they needed people with good eyes and small hands. Lots of history there. (Keep in mind the industrial revolution didn't start until 1760'ish.)
@SolaceEasy
@SolaceEasy Жыл бұрын
Child labor?!? Cancel culture.
@erikdoer
@erikdoer Жыл бұрын
The book Longitude covers this story very well, at least from the perspective of having never known the history beforehand.
@Mr.Fabulous-1990
@Mr.Fabulous-1990 Жыл бұрын
Slight note, the chain isn't called the 'Fusee', the cone is. The chain is referred to as the 'Fusee chain'.
@TheTarrMan
@TheTarrMan Жыл бұрын
@@Mr.Fabulous-1990 Thank you.
@popefacto5945
@popefacto5945 Жыл бұрын
One of my favorite pocket watches has a fusee movement. It keeps surprisingly good time.
@agimasoschandir
@agimasoschandir Жыл бұрын
For those not in the know, Brady Haran has many a youTube channel, including one called Objectivity which deals with objects or other works at The Royal Society
@mrb.5610
@mrb.5610 Жыл бұрын
A few years ago, I saw a collection of chronometers at Greenwich ... and to me, the most noticeable one was slightly battered as it was the actual one that Shackleton had taken on his rescue voyage from Elephant Island to South Georgia ! Absolutely amazing piece of history !!
@jllaine
@jllaine Жыл бұрын
The chain drive is wrapped around the spring barrel in a tapering helix. A wound up spring exerts a lot of force, so the chain starts in a track with a wide radius. As the spring unwinds, its pull reduces, so the helical track's radius diminishes to allow consistent tension on the chain.
@echoewest2685
@echoewest2685 Жыл бұрын
The purpose of the changing radius on the chain drum is to offset the reducing torque produced by the mainspring as it unwinds.
@Mr.Fabulous-1990
@Mr.Fabulous-1990 Жыл бұрын
I've wound hundreds of clocks in my lifetime so far, but I've never seen anyone so excited to wind a clock as Adam. I'd love to have him visit our clock workshop at some point.
@1dgram
@1dgram Жыл бұрын
I love this kind of content! It combines science, engineering, technology, craftmenship, history, exploration, and the human spirit into a captivating story. Thank you, sir!
@jamesjudge3891
@jamesjudge3891 Жыл бұрын
As a navigator, this was even more fascinating to me than a lot of your amazing content. When I'm at sea, besides the nav system, I have an independent GPS tracking Apple Watch and two very accurate Timex IronMan watches that I consult. Nowadays, the other watches are really just to make sure GPS time (which all mariners use these days as their timestamp) is accurate to your position.
@thefrenchguard6999
@thefrenchguard6999 Жыл бұрын
I love old science stuff. This was so cool to see. I hope I'm able to get a one on one tour of the RS some day. Im a physics major so its not 100% impossible that they will want me there some day lol.
@samisiukola2772
@samisiukola2772 Жыл бұрын
These Royal Society videos are just fascinating!
@jackroom1261
@jackroom1261 Жыл бұрын
The chain is called a fusee, it wraps around the “fusee cone” which is a tiered cone which was used to level out the torque from the mainspring as mainsprings of this period weren’t made as consistently as they are today, it essentially works the same way gears work on a bicycle. It succeeded the stackfreed which was another attempt at providing more consistent torque to the escapement, which was essential for the type of escapement this chronometer used.
@iandeare1
@iandeare1 Жыл бұрын
It's even identical, but tiny, to a bicycle chain... and then you see a fusee watch 😮
@Mr.Fabulous-1990
@Mr.Fabulous-1990 Жыл бұрын
Small note, the cone is called the "fusee" and the chain is called "fusee chain". Apart from that you're correct
@mikeymad
@mikeymad Жыл бұрын
When I hear Keith talk I always am looking for Brady. But I cannot get enough of Keith and the Royal Society stuff. - cheers
@unlokia
@unlokia Жыл бұрын
I’m honoured that you paid a visit to our shores, dear Adam. GOD bless you.
@cliveloosley8018
@cliveloosley8018 Жыл бұрын
I spent many many hours as a child in the clock room at the Greenwich Maritime Museum in London after school, just watching John Harrison’s superb chronometers… And although they are works of art in their own right, it was the obvious tiny modifications, alterations, and tool marks that told the real story of their development…
@bwhog
@bwhog Жыл бұрын
I've always loved these sort of mechanical clock mechanisms (the ship's clocks). I've been dying to be able to find a good replica of these sorts of things (so i can use them and handle them and examine them without fear of damaging something historic) along with a few other types of mechanical clocks. These things are just absolutely marvels of engineering and manufacturing!
@MrPossumeyes
@MrPossumeyes Жыл бұрын
Fascinating. Folks interested in the development of accurate timekeeping could read Dava Sobel's "Longitude" - it focuses on Harrison's work.
@warwickritch
@warwickritch Жыл бұрын
Really interesting. Enjoying these visits
@v2gbob
@v2gbob Жыл бұрын
Wonderful! I hope you have another segment showing and talking about John Harrison's work at creating the first clock able to solve the problem of Longitude. It's an amazing story! It blows my mind that those craftsmen were able to build such accurate timepieces with little more than simple hand tools.
@robertbackhaus8911
@robertbackhaus8911 Жыл бұрын
One correction - when they arrived to make their measurements, they established true time by taking observations of the Moons of Jupiter. They made tables that accurately predicted when a moon would move behind or in front of Jupiter, and could establish time, and know the rates of the clocks and chronometers from there. They needed the chronometers at sea because you needed a high magnification to observe Jupiter that accurately, and you couldn't establish that on a moving ship. But if the chrometers stopped, say, because of an unreliable midshipman, and you were near to shore, you could take your telescope, land, and take the needed observations to re-establish the time. The big regulator clock is needed because the occultation of a Moon of Jupiter might happen days or weeks before your scientific observation, so you needed to maintain the time you established. You might also want to confirm and refine your established time by making multiple observations over multiple occultations.
@RollaArtis
@RollaArtis Жыл бұрын
Great to see all these important timekeepers. FYI the Regulator is a clock for use on land, it was developed by George Graham around 1725, his later clocks were made by Shelton. This one is fitted with a Harrison bimetallic pendulum. The two 'Chronometers' by Arnold here are two of his earliest known productions and are experimental. These were for use on the sea in order to determine longitude and they immediately followed Harrison's highly complex but successful timekeeper 'H4'. Arnold, not Harrison was in fact the inventor of the 'Chronometer' , a term invented by him in 1779. His was a completely different machine to Harrison's and importantly, could be produced in numbers. Arnold's patented inventions became the basis for both the precision watch and the later Marine Chronometer. Between C.1780 - C.1795 just about all the marine chronometers used on ships were produced by him.
@theHardChargerVids
@theHardChargerVids Жыл бұрын
I just find every one of these Royal Society videos fascinating
@MorrisonManor
@MorrisonManor Жыл бұрын
"I mean, then, slicing time into precise increments is literally like, one of the oldest human endeavors." That was beautiful. You should study up on fusees. It's a fascinating method for equalizing power for a spring wound watch across the duration of the wind. In watches, the chains were made by children in many cases because adults had trouble with vision and fine motor skills.
@wilkmarton
@wilkmarton Жыл бұрын
This series feels like a cover album of Objectivity's greatest hits (in a good way). Bet the treasure chest is next.
@anthonyvancampen6729
@anthonyvancampen6729 Жыл бұрын
The chain drive on the two small chronometers is called a fusee. The purpose of the fusee is to compensate for differences in power when the spring is fully wound and when it has run down. You probably noticed that one side of the chain is on a cone and the other side is a cylinder. The cylinder side has the mainspring, when fully wound the chain is fully on the cone.
@griffhawkins8909
@griffhawkins8909 Жыл бұрын
I'm sure that Technology Connections Alec would be very excited about the bi-metal mechanism in this video. In fact, legend has it that if you utter the phrase "Bi-Metallic Strip" three times in a row while holding a rice cooker, he will instantly appear in front of you like Beetlejuice.
@robertbackhaus8911
@robertbackhaus8911 Жыл бұрын
Which is weird, because rice cookers don't use bi-metallic strips.
@janilohtander5808
@janilohtander5808 Жыл бұрын
This guy has a fantastic voice and way of speaking , very friendly and welcoming :) Two grayfoxes marveling old timers :P pun intended
@Kirt-Davis
@Kirt-Davis Жыл бұрын
I wanted to learn something new this winter, and I learned how to repair clocks.... I have more than 20 ticking in my house now, and have done a few for others. It's really fascinating!
@_BADCHESS
@_BADCHESS Жыл бұрын
This was awesome to watch.
@maj1285
@maj1285 Жыл бұрын
I saw some of those working clocks during my trip to Greenwich Observatory in 2014.
@nonenowherebye
@nonenowherebye Жыл бұрын
Timekeeping is still incredibly important in ship's Navigation. GPS positioning is all about time keeping. The satellites have incredibly accurate clocks onboard (corrected for relativity too), and broadcast the exact time and their exact orbital data. Your GPS receiver in turn receives all these different times, and in turn can work out the distance to each of the satellites, where exactly each satellite is at any given time, and thus figure out where the receiver is. On ship, other kinds of fixings are also all dependent on when the fix was taken, as the ship is always in motion. So even hundreds of years after Harrison, it still all comes down to time.
@surplushunter
@surplushunter Жыл бұрын
Very, very cool Adam!!!!!
@chumleyk
@chumleyk Жыл бұрын
It's true what they say that people usually end up looking like what others expect people in a particular career to look like.
@edgeyt1
@edgeyt1 2 ай бұрын
There's a very good chance the fusee chain was made by children as they were the ones who had good enough eyesight (until the work damaged it) and small enough fingers to make them. The chain was used as a means to help maintain consistent power from the spring.
@Trustno1jed
@Trustno1jed Жыл бұрын
I love time keeping even though time is not real. I see you have an Apple Watch. I have the Apple pocket watch(aka iPhone). You have other watches SKX and such. Please do a video showing your watches or other timing devices. Thank so much for the years of education and entertainment. Love MB’s and your channel.
@garychaiken808
@garychaiken808 Жыл бұрын
Thank you 😊
@LollipopUnicorny
@LollipopUnicorny Жыл бұрын
they look like brothers
@stnylan
@stnylan Жыл бұрын
Adam really ought to go see the Harrison clocks at Greenwich. Wonderful things.
@igotapochahontas
@igotapochahontas Жыл бұрын
Remember those pop quizzes in school that you felt totally unprepared for? That's how this curator feels about Adams questions. Lol. But he's doing great
@sacundim
@sacundim Жыл бұрын
1:44: Mixes up regulators (very precise pendulum clocks, like the John Shelton at the beginning of the video) and chronometers (very precise oversized balance wheel clocks, like the Arnolds later in the video) 3:48: Adam says one metal expands as the other contracts with temperature... but of course both metals expand with temperature! The trick is that one metal expands more than the other for the same temperature change, but the gridiron pendulum arranges the rods so that one metal expands downward and the other upward. Wikipedia has a good diagram: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gridiron_pendulum 6:20: That topic of how they managed to travel the sea with a clock like this packed up is magnificently illustrated in a video that Dr John Taylor has posted here to KZbin of another Venus transit regulator, this one by Ellicott, in which video Dr. Taylor demonstrates how the case in that one was specifically designed for transporting it. In fact I wonder if the case in this Shelton regulator is original, Dr. Taylor's video of the Ellicott Venus transit regulator illustrates for example how that one's case had brackets built in to secure the pendulum bob during transport: kzbin.info/www/bejne/eqOsdaeleaatitU 9:27 and 13:32: A crucial bit of context that's missing here is that during Cook's voyage marine chronometers were still experimental devices. These two Arnold chronometers and a few others were sent literally as a practical test of the concept and the specific designs. Arnold's chronometers in fact as I recall worked poorly in that trip, but the star of the show worked out to be Larcum Kendall's copy of Harrison's H5-the Board of Longitude wasn't happy just yet to award Harrison the Longitude prize unless a second watchmaker like Kendall could actually construct one on their own. The primary time standard in the field for this voyage would have been astronomical observations with the observatory set up at the destination-use the sun to establish what the local time is, and the time of the transits of Jupiter's moons to establish the Greenwich time (they had printed almanacs saying at which dates and times they would happen). Using marine chronometers as the time standard and taking three on board so you could tell which was the bad one when one malfuctioned really only became standard procedure some 25-40 years later-at this point they were still in the process of inventing practical marine chronometers! In the meantime during these trips they were also testing out on-ship methods based on observing the moon with sextants (the lunar distances method). 11:37: The question/answer sequence makes it sound like the fusee chain is bimetallic and involved in the temperature compensation, but the bimetallic compensation is not in the fusee chain, it's a different part of the watch. 12:04: The reason the chain is wrapped around the barrel is because as the mainspring unwinds it pulls through that chain on another part called the "fusee" that acts as a sort of continuously variable transmission to change the leverage between the mainspring and the chronometer's gear train. The reason for this is that as the mainspring winds down its torque falls, so the fusee changes the gear ratio continuously to even out the force that is transmitted to the rest of the mechanism. It actually isn't exception that this chronometer had a fusee and chain, it used to be a standard feature in spring-driven clocks and watches; searching for "fusee clock" or "fusee watch" will turn up lots of examples (although often they used gut lines instead of chain). 12:50: There was indeed been a lot of handwork into making chronometers, but these Arnold chronometers specifically were part of the process whereby other watchmakers were working out simpler alternative designs to Harrison's pioneering but baroquely complex chronometers, and therefore leverage the established watch and clockmaking industry to manufacture them in bigger numbers. In fact, this ties up with what I mention in my 9:27 note above-this is why Arnold's chronometers were sent on Cook's voyage, to test alternatives to Harrison's design. As I mention above, Arnold's chronometers performed poorly on this trip, but by the 1780s he'd settled on a good design almost like what became standard in the 19th century. Again, these two Arnold pieces are not standard marine chronometers, they're part of the historical process that led from Harrison's pioneering chronometer of the late 1750s to the technologically mature chronometers of the 1780s and onward.
@collar1022
@collar1022 Жыл бұрын
Am I the only one that wants to sit with Keith and listen to him speak about.... ANYTHING? Anything that reminds him... "...Oh yes we have one of these things over here... and oh that reminds me of this thing... and this thing... and this person, and that event...." i want to be a part of his ' stream of conscientiousness'.
@idjles
@idjles Жыл бұрын
On Cook’s voyage to Tahiti (and NZ and Australia) the navigator messed up and both clocks stopped after the entered the Pacific by Chile. Cook was furious and reset the clocks using his own internal mental clock and that navigator never made that mistake again.
@jeffdroog
@jeffdroog Жыл бұрын
Classic colonizer,believing that their "mental clock" exists,and would in any way be accurate. A "primitive" on the other hand,just wouldn't know how to tell time of course lol I love how classic British all of this is.
@Pygar2
@Pygar2 Жыл бұрын
@@jeffdroog Aww, widdle Wokie can spell big words; maybe even understand them one day...
@jeffdroog
@jeffdroog Жыл бұрын
@Pygar2 LOL At least I'm not openly supporting murdering people,and colonizing.Good to know where you stand bud.
@Pygar2
@Pygar2 Жыл бұрын
@@jeffdroog I'm pretty sure no one alive today, deserves your scorn for it. They'd all be dead by now anyway. There's a reason they call it history. And remember, the Woke will be the scorned troublemakers, 200 years from now.
@michaelwright2986
@michaelwright2986 Жыл бұрын
I very much doubt that Cook used an internal mental clock. If you've got solid land, a telescope, and appropriate astronomical tables you can find the local time, and compare it with a remote reference (say, Greenwich). Some people thought that that would be the way the problem of longitude would be solved, and possibly one reason that Harrison had such a hard time getting his payment was that just having a very reliable clock wasn't the proper way to do it. There's actually an interesting contrast in the way two seafaring cultures did their navigation. Cook was a great practitioner of the Western mode, with the knowledge embodied in instruments like sextants (and their predecessors) and clocks and maps. Traditional Polynesian navigators internalized a great deal of knowledge about prevailing currents and sea states and winds, and also internalized a moving picture of the position of certain stars in the sky at different times of year, and as they apparently moved during the night. Ultimately the Western way was easier to transmit and extend--it didn't take as long to learn to navigate in the Western fashion as in the Polynesian way, and you could extend your charts more or less indefinitely; but Cook took Tupaia, a traditional navigator from Tahiti with him on one his first voyage to New Zealand. Maori, because Tupaia's cultural style was much more familiar, sometimes assumed that he was the leader of the expedition.
@jeromethiel4323
@jeromethiel4323 Жыл бұрын
Accurate timekeeping is taken for granted now, but it was hugely difficult and incredibly important for a great many scientific disciplines. Not to mention navigation. Hell, modern GPS is based almost entirely on super accurate timekeeping.
@jamieminton172
@jamieminton172 Жыл бұрын
I had the opportunity to work in a clock tower on a school in northern Illinois some years ago (installing first gen .11 2.4/5 Ghz transceivers). It was a pendulum clock that, as far as I know, is still functioning. I was threatened with torture and pain of death if I so much as looked at it sideways. There were two small stacks of coins covered in a century worth of dust that were the "Fine Tune" balance/adjustment. I follow a watchmaker's channel, Wristwatch Revival, and still find the precision fascinating.
@HildeTheOkayish
@HildeTheOkayish Жыл бұрын
this would be a really nice object to get a 3d model of, or a x-ray scan. so that you could really look at the internal mechanism. I'm personally curious about the function of the chain
@carbonr33
@carbonr33 Жыл бұрын
It feels like you are on cooks ship with the filming in this video
@Slithy
@Slithy Жыл бұрын
The legend of Keith continues!
@Aaron48219
@Aaron48219 Жыл бұрын
I'd be willing to bet Adam has an awesome watch collection and owns at least one Accutron.
@EpicMuttonChops
@EpicMuttonChops Жыл бұрын
i can only imagine they film like 4 different videos each day he's there, so they have to greet each other at least 5x a day lol
@garyowen9044
@garyowen9044 10 ай бұрын
Hamilton Watch Co of Lancaster, Pennsylvania won the contract to produce ship’s chronometers for US Naval vessels in WWII.
@SnaptrixGaming
@SnaptrixGaming Жыл бұрын
I had a clock like that at my childhood home
@Veptis
@Veptis 5 ай бұрын
You would also need a really accurate location. So just a compass isn't sufficient. You need very accurate maps too.
@Mr.Fabulous-1990
@Mr.Fabulous-1990 Жыл бұрын
A shame he didn't mention the maintaining power on the clock. The pin that was pushed down to be able to wind it not only opens up the winding hole, it also acts a driving force on the clock train, keeping it going. When a clock is wound, all tension is removed from the train and the clock stops for a few seconds (until it is wound). These clocks werr so accurate that this would actually make a difference. After maybe a minute or two the winding hole cover would come down again. This cover was to stop you from accidentaly winding the clock without engaging the maintaining power.
@nathkrupa3463
@nathkrupa3463 Жыл бұрын
Awesome video
@n8yt
@n8yt Жыл бұрын
Feels like an episode of "The Antique Roadshow"
@pumirya
@pumirya Жыл бұрын
Time really flew by while I was watching this video.
@Trying2show
@Trying2show Жыл бұрын
I see what you did there 😂
@IloveElsaofArendelle
@IloveElsaofArendelle Жыл бұрын
The title alone made me instantly think of the Harrison 2
@mytube001
@mytube001 Жыл бұрын
What material is used for the clock face? Looks like brushed and polished aluminium, which it clearly can't be given the age of the clock. Perhaps something ceramic?
@randomakerfilm
@randomakerfilm Жыл бұрын
it is very likely silvered Brass. Could also be solid depletion guilded Silver
@mytube001
@mytube001 Жыл бұрын
@@randomakerfilm Wouldn't silver have tarnished to a brownish black fairly quickly?
@cthulhu888
@cthulhu888 Жыл бұрын
Thought that was Bill Nighy for a sec there haha! 😆
@qwertyTRiG
@qwertyTRiG 5 ай бұрын
Arnold as in Arnold and Sons, who made the timepiece used by the Greenwich Time Lady?
@AnEntropyFan
@AnEntropyFan Жыл бұрын
Doesn't "the regulator" specifically denote that each degree (seconds, minutes and hours) of the timing is being displayed on a separate dial and axis (tho in this case only the sweep dial is separate, and the axis is the "same" as the minutes, or rather is coaxial with the minutes one)?
@jonbruford7950
@jonbruford7950 Жыл бұрын
Welp! now chris clickspring knows how we all feel watching his videos :D brilliant.
@nathanfisher1387
@nathanfisher1387 Жыл бұрын
I'm sorry I have to say something. He's wearing those purple gloves so he can handle artifacts without seriously contaminating them from things like dirt, dead skin cells, and oil from his hands. THEN HE SHAKES HANDS while wearing the gloves, contaminating them with Adam's hand dirt, skin cells, and oil, then immediately handles the artifacts. (and it was SO much worse in the video where he just immediately started handling that telescope!) Are any other conservationists here in the comments also screaming at the screen right now?
@ChickenPermissionOG
@ChickenPermissionOG Жыл бұрын
Why do the seconds not line up exactly.
@catatonicbug7522
@catatonicbug7522 Жыл бұрын
A man with one watch always knows what time it is. A man with 2 watches is never sure..
@markscureman5278
@markscureman5278 Жыл бұрын
Apologies for straying way off topic, but does anyone know what flashlight it is that Adam pulls out at @11:19 to look at the ships timepieces?
@Trying2show
@Trying2show Жыл бұрын
Looks like a mini tactical right angle flashlight
@Heretic_Dezign
@Heretic_Dezign Жыл бұрын
Your best video to date, but as an engineer and a horologist I am biased, thank you.
@ghrrum
@ghrrum Жыл бұрын
I want one of Adam's flashlight.
@glennac
@glennac Жыл бұрын
I see Adam has “dressed up” to visit the RAS. 😄❣️
@shansp4354
@shansp4354 Жыл бұрын
The Marine Chronometer looks like the mechanism of a 18th Century Pocket Watch.
@drtrustrum
@drtrustrum Жыл бұрын
Someone get Keith to start his own channel please!
@christianweagle6253
@christianweagle6253 Жыл бұрын
Notice how Adam is keeping one or both hands behind him; classic "don't touch' behavior.
@jeffdroog
@jeffdroog Жыл бұрын
Funny,because the reason this exists was so that British empire could exercise their awesome right to literally touch,and take everything that WASN'T already theirs.This was literally used for a trip to go murder people,and take their stuff lol Classic British empire.
@OhHeyTrevorFlowers
@OhHeyTrevorFlowers Жыл бұрын
Clock content FTW!
@RealHogweed
@RealHogweed Жыл бұрын
Was the big clock mounted on a gimbal on the ship to keep it from rocking?
@RubyMarkLindMilly
@RubyMarkLindMilly Жыл бұрын
Yes
@svgalene465
@svgalene465 Жыл бұрын
No, the clock wasn’t used aboard the ship. They unpacked it when they got to their destination and set it using their ship’s chronometer.
@Pagliacci_Rex
@Pagliacci_Rex 7 ай бұрын
Keith is like Adam's British twin brother.
@lutzderlurch7877
@lutzderlurch7877 Жыл бұрын
I really wish there was someone making true replicas of some 18th C. marine chronometers. :(
@SideWalkAstronomyNetherlands
@SideWalkAstronomyNetherlands Жыл бұрын
Finely some thing about clocks again, still waiting for videos about watches...
@truevulgarian
@truevulgarian Жыл бұрын
Does the length of the pendulum really matter? I thought the period of a pendulum was the same regardless of the length.
@Michael75579
@Michael75579 Жыл бұрын
The period of a pendulum is proportional to the square root of its length but independent of the mass.
@Watchmaker_Gereon-Schloesser
@Watchmaker_Gereon-Schloesser Жыл бұрын
yes it matters a lot. Also the altitude is changing the movement/time. A close meter is the typical lenght for a second of time in one swung. In german called Sekundenpendel = Second pendulum.
@MrWhiterunGuard
@MrWhiterunGuard Жыл бұрын
Are these things even COSC certified?
@iandeare1
@iandeare1 Жыл бұрын
It's only a clock if it chimes... otherwise it's a timepiece My father was a Watchmaker to trade, technically a scientific precision engineer one of two at Timex, Dundee, Scotland,1946 when they first started, and were called UK Time He was offered a job in New York by a senior partner... my mother wouldn't let him 😂
@joshhoman
@joshhoman Жыл бұрын
That clock needs some attention. The second pointer is a bit off.
@Watchmaker_Gereon-Schloesser
@Watchmaker_Gereon-Schloesser Жыл бұрын
it's friction coupled. You can move the hands on the pin. Done in a few seconds (normally xD )
@joshhoman
@joshhoman Жыл бұрын
@@Watchmaker_Gereon-Schloesser Thank you, sir. I don't study clocks much.
@johanlahti84
@johanlahti84 Жыл бұрын
This Keith guy looks like you would think a guy like him would look like.
@JoshFlorii
@JoshFlorii Жыл бұрын
They look like long lost brothers
@donaldasayers
@donaldasayers Жыл бұрын
Slightly painful to listen to two non clock experts getting it not wrong but also not completely right. For instance no ship's chronometer is ever wholly original, in use they will have been serviced every time the ship docked back at home port, often the ones in use being swapped out and serviced ones replacing them. A service might entail replacement of worn parts, replacement of that fusee chain and mainspring, and rebushing of pivots. Many saw service for a hundred years and became a Trigger's broom with parts replaced wholesale. For this reason Harrison's H4 at Greenwich is not run, to preserve the 'as made by Harrison' condition.
@kingjames4886
@kingjames4886 Жыл бұрын
it's not really that surprising that people were able to make something like that by hand if you think that people have been making intricate jewelry for a lot longer which uses a lot of the same processes like working with sheet metals, shaping small details in symetrical patterns, etc.
@jeffdroog
@jeffdroog Жыл бұрын
It's not so much the ability to work with those materials,but rather what work they were able to do with those materials.The surprising part is that someone was able to figure out exactly what types of gears,and other mechanics of it would need to be specifically machined,and to what to dimensions,to get the desired results.
@michaelwright2986
@michaelwright2986 Жыл бұрын
@@jeffdroog The Antikythera mechanism is instructive. According to some accounts (on KZbin) the mathematics embodied in the gears is capable of remarkable precision; but the limits of accuracy in hand working gear teeth meant that the mechanism couldn't have actually reproduced the calculations.
@jeffdroog
@jeffdroog Жыл бұрын
@michaelwright2986 ...I was referring to the clocks that are still in working condition,but THANKS for just assuming shit lol
@michaelwright2986
@michaelwright2986 Жыл бұрын
@@jeffdroog Don't worry, you'll grow out of it.
@jeffdroog
@jeffdroog Жыл бұрын
@michaelwright2986 I'm pretty grown as it is.Left an abusive home at 14 years of age,with nothing but the pair of jeans,and shirt I was wearing,and the pair of rollerblades on my feet,and bought my first house at 24 lol You appear to literally in your 70's,and haven't achieved anything.
@kchiem
@kchiem Жыл бұрын
I thought Brady Haran looked weird at first.
@stampydragon2739
@stampydragon2739 Жыл бұрын
You still in London
@Budisgud69
@Budisgud69 Жыл бұрын
What do you think you pleb 😂
@rococoblue
@rococoblue Жыл бұрын
😂 I'm a fan of clocks and regulators...they are also an inside joke for time travelers.😂👍
@flaggerify
@flaggerify Жыл бұрын
Stop shaking his hand, Adam. He can't use those gloves now. 😛
@alphamegaman8847
@alphamegaman8847 Жыл бұрын
At 12:41 Am I the only one thinking how Catastrophic that would be if he dropped the mechanism and it bounced off the table, over the Abyss, and to the floor below? 😱😁 Mike in San Diego. 🌞🎸🚀🖖
@austinpatrick2682
@austinpatrick2682 Жыл бұрын
I have my volume all the way up and can't understand him
@craigcooknf
@craigcooknf 5 ай бұрын
With a bit of training, you might have a stunt double!
@jaimeworld3679
@jaimeworld3679 Жыл бұрын
Sup
@Silvergum
@Silvergum Жыл бұрын
You just making objectivity videos now? could have given brady a shoutout, internet wouldn't be the same without Brady Harran
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