Grandfather Clocks: Why do they Keep Going?

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The discussion revolves around the mechanics of grandfather clocks and their operation, particularly focusing on the misconceptions about perpetual motion and the effects of friction and air resistance on timekeeping mechanisms.

Discussion Character

  • Conceptual clarification, Assumption checking, Mixed

Approaches and Questions Raised

  • Participants explore the differences between grandfather clocks and anniversary clocks, questioning the role of vacuum and friction in timekeeping. There are discussions about the theoretical implications of a pendulum in a vacuum and the practical aspects of energy loss due to friction.

Discussion Status

The conversation includes various perspectives on the mechanics of pendulums and the implications of friction on their operation. Some participants offer insights into the design considerations for minimizing energy loss, while others delve into the mathematical aspects of pendulum motion.

Contextual Notes

Participants note the distinction between different types of clocks and the assumptions regarding their mechanisms. There is an ongoing exploration of the effects of air resistance and friction, with no consensus reached on the practicalities of achieving ideal conditions for pendulum operation.

whozum
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Why do grandfather clocks keep going? The only way I see htis working is if the chamber has no air (vacuum).
 
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The ones I know of are all wound. I am assuming you are referring to, what I know as, "anniversary clocks" because they were wound once a year. The dome is definitely not sealed. The rotating ball mechanism is simply a rotating pendulum that is more efficient than a standard pendulum.
 
Grandfather clocks are not perpetual motion machines! The "true" grandfather clocks operate on weights that have to be raised (once a week for an "eight day clock"). Anniversary clocks (those little things in the glass dome- NOT grandfather clocks) operate on springs that have to be wound regularly). Some "fakes" operate on batteries.

By the way, a vacuum would not be enough for a "perpetual motion" clock- there would still be friction in the gears and other operating parts. I have a grandfather clock sitting about 10 feet from me right now that is rubbing somewhere and I can't find it! I wonder if a good hard kick would help?
 
Slightly deviating: Provided a simple pendulum in vacuum, would it swing forever? Close to?

From there, is it not possible to create a detective system (probably optic) to sense the completion of a period and link that to a clock?
 
whozum said:
Slightly deviating: Provided a simple pendulum in vacuum, would it swing forever? Close to?
In the absence of any kind of friction, it would never lose energy, so yes, in theory. Of course, no real pendulum can ever be totally free of all friction, so no, in practice.

- Warren
 
Im saying putting it in a vacuum, as close a vacuum as possible. There will be an extremely small bit of friction from possibly stray air molecules, and some from the junction of string and ceiling.

My question is in a practical sense, are those small enough to neglect for a certain time (that is reasonable for a clock of such delicate construction) before recalibration? I'm talking at least a week or so. We can attribute the error in the correct time to the energy lost in friction.

But even if some energy is lost, is the period of a pendulum not the same regardless of the displacement from equilibrium? If not, perhaps we could adjust our detector to compensate for such effects?
 
whozum said:
Im saying putting it in a vacuum, as close a vacuum as possible. There will be an extremely small bit of friction from possibly stray air molecules, and some from the junction of string and ceiling.
Precisely.
My question is in a practical sense, are those small enough to neglect for a certain time (that is reasonable for a clock of such delicate construction) before recalibration? I'm talking at least a week or so. We can attribute the error in the correct time to the energy lost in friction.
Sure, you can spend some engineering effort to design a pendulum support that will allow the pendulum to lose only a specified amount of its energy in a specified time. For example, you could design a pendulum that would only lose 1% of its energy to friction in a week, but that design will be more difficult than one that loses 10% of its energy in a week. There is, however, no practical way to design a pendulum that never loses any energy.
But even if some energy is lost, is the period of a pendulum not the same regardless of the displacement from equilibrium? If not, perhaps we could adjust our detector to compensate for such effects?
The period does not stay exactly the same when its displacement changes. That approximate relationship is due to taking the "small angle approximation" of the sine function:

[tex]\sin \theta \approx \theta \,\, \textrm{for small angles}[/tex]

- Warren
 
I don't know what this rotating ball thing is which Fred mentioned, but in a grandfather clock the long case is designed specifically to exploit the 'small angle' observation which chroot noted.

Whozum, air resistance is not really a factor in determining the accuracy of a mechanical clock. It would be pretty pointless to use a string (rather than a bar of some kind) as a pendulum, but even so, mechanical resistances are largely the cause of energy losses, traditionally accounted for by using a falling weight.
 
For an ideal mathematical pendulum (meaning no friction),it can be shown that the period of oscillations,though depending of amplitude for big angles,is independent of time.That means the oscillations are tautochrone...

One of favorite formulas is this

[tex]T_{pendulum} (\alpha,l) =4\sqrt{\frac{l}{g}} \int_{0}^{\frac{\pi}{2}} \frac{d\varphi}{\sqrt{1-\kappa^{2} \sin^{2}\varphi}}[/tex]

,where

[tex]\kappa^{2} = \sin^{2}\frac{\alpha}{2}[/tex],where [itex]\alpha[/itex] is the angular amplitude of oscillation.

Note that the modulus of the complete elliptic integral of the first kind is always less than unity which can be used for a series expansion and a proof of the intimate connection between elliptic integrals and Gauss hypergeometric functions.

Incidentally

[tex]T_{pendulum} (\alpha,l) =2\pi \sqrt{\frac{l}{g}} \ _{2}F_{1}\left(\frac{1}{2};\frac{1}{2};1;\kappa^{2}\right)[/tex]

Daniel.

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Bibliography:
Mocioaca,Ghe.,Functii speciale,Ed.Tehnica,Bucuresti,1983.
 
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  • #10
Here you go Brewnog...The anniversary clock has a rotating pendulum. Those are the ones I was referring to.
 
Last edited:
  • #11
FredGarvin said:
Here you go Brewnog...The anniversary clock has a rotating pendulum. Those aer the ones I was referring to.

Cheers for that Mr G, I like the cut of your jib. But not a grandfather clock...
 

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