Motion Solution for MA Sculpture Student

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An MA sculpture student is seeking to incorporate motion into a wooden piece designed to rock, with the mechanism hidden inside the curved beam. A suggested solution involves using a small motor to rotate an egg-shaped disc, creating a tipping motion as it contacts the ground. Concerns about friction and balance were raised, with alternatives proposed such as using rollers or adjusting the center of gravity. Essential components for the project include a battery, motor, gear system, and an on/off switch. Additional ideas include using a drum cam or linear actuator to create more dynamic and unpredictable rocking motions.
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I am an MA sculpture student. i want to put motion into a piece i am working on. It involves a 7x7x60 cm solid wooden curve that's made of pine and wood glue in a ply-like style. Its curve means that either ends are aprox 40cm from the ground. I would idealy like to display the piece on the studio floor.
I want to cause a rocking motion in it, but make it so the locomotive is unseen, inside the curved beam, perhaps in a dug out hollow. Therefor it needs to be battery powered.
My tutor has surgested to me to use a small motor to power an egg shapped disc to rotate, tipping the beam into a rocking motion every time the tip of the egg shape touches the ground.
Is this a good solution, and what components would i need to create such a circuit?
Any help on the subject would be hugely appriciated, I'm currently studying in Paris and don't speak french well enough to relay my concept to anyone helpfull.

I just added photos of the piece so for, hope this helps.
 

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It would help if you could post a sketch of what the sculpture looks like and how it is displayed. For example is it on the ground, on a table or a stand, suspended from the ceiling, etc...

One problem with your idea is that there may be friction between the disk and whatever it is pushing against as it tries to rotate. You could fix that by making the disk push against another disk or a roller that was part of the stand for the structure.

The disk idea could also work without touching anything, by moving the centre of gravity if the structure was balanced like a see-saw.

You would need a battery, a motor, probably a large ratio gear like a worm gear to slow down the motion, and an on/off switch.

How much motion you could get depends on the size and shape of the thing and how it is supported, so without a drawing it's hard to make any more comments.

EDIT: In case it's not obvious to new readers of ths thread, I posted this before seeing the pictures.
 
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I would suggest placing the battery and motor in one arm of the thing, connected by a drum cam or other reversing linkage to an equal weight in the other arm. Moving the weight farther in or out on the linkage will alter the centre of gravity and cause a rocking movement.
 
Another idea would be to use a linear actuator (e.g. a solenoid) inside the object, to move a weight suddenly between two positions. That would give you a rocking motion which would die away slowly after each move. If the electrical circuit flipped the weight back and forth at a suitable frequency, the motion could be quite complex and unpredictable - in fact, chaotic, in the mathematical sense of the word.
 
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