Pinion ,Wheel And LED.

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  • Опубліковано 29 жов 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 57

  • @Rhainee
    @Rhainee 8 років тому +4

    Always happy to see a new video from you on my subscriptions feed!

  • @enri_1986
    @enri_1986 7 років тому +3

    Brain food, I learn so much just watching Philip Stephens, thanks!

  • @LifeOfPabs
    @LifeOfPabs 8 років тому +5

    i love your videos
    they have some sort of therapeutic effect on me

  • @Box-of-hats
    @Box-of-hats 8 років тому

    Im always amazed at what you're able to achieve with such minimal tools. Keep up the great work!

  • @armanzd.i.y.511
    @armanzd.i.y.511 4 роки тому

    wow I learn a lot today just for a few minutes of watching...even without expensive power tools you manage to produce such simple machine..another great tutorial..make a gravity wheel Philip to complete your project...I think you can make one👍👍👍👍👍👍

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  4 роки тому

      Yes , I like the idea of gravity. That's what makes hydro systems work. It was the first clock energy storage method, and has potential to develop.

  • @mcraft1
    @mcraft1 7 років тому +1

    U r great👌👌👌👍👍👍

  • @juancarloszarko26
    @juancarloszarko26 8 років тому

    hola soy un gran admirador desde que vi uno de tu vídeos y como haces las cosa con pura creatividad y casi sin herramientas me sorprendí por tu gran ingenio gracias por compartir tu creatividad demuestra que no hay mejor herramienta que el ingenio y la creatividad.... I am suscrito

  • @GtaLcsFan
    @GtaLcsFan 8 років тому +1

    Nice video!

  • @matthanisch6743
    @matthanisch6743 8 років тому

    gracias por tomarte el tiempo de hacerlo y subirlo. buen aporte!

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому

      Con mucho gusto. Para que sabes, hago un canal espejo de este , en espanol en 'philipstephens007-espanol'

  • @continental_drift
    @continental_drift 6 років тому

    I love your video's, the how is always more interesting than the what. Perhaps they could be called "Practical Engineering".

  • @masterkit9517
    @masterkit9517 8 років тому +2

    fantastic work, very very interesting !!!! fantastic channel! international super video !!! ! best work! super technical research in this video !!! thank you for a video very much !!!

  • @gloriaolivia4153
    @gloriaolivia4153 7 років тому +2

    great work

  • @rob5i
    @rob5i 8 років тому +1

    Nice work Philip!

  • @dariosalgadomunoz7233
    @dariosalgadomunoz7233 8 років тому +4

    This video made my day💕

  • @AndrzejTop
    @AndrzejTop 8 років тому

    You have great passion within you, I admire that a lot. Keep doing your projects they're amazing, I'm cheering you from Poland!

  • @matdowall
    @matdowall 8 років тому +1

    You have a lot of patience cutting those by hand. You could really benefit from a bandsaw, or even a scroll saw

  • @PIPBOYPIICIROTELLO
    @PIPBOYPIICIROTELLO 6 років тому

    You're the best.

  • @pelasoto48
    @pelasoto48 8 років тому

    Muy buena idea de engranajes....

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому

      Pues estoy mejorando, pero no puedo decir que ha llegado a la perfeccion todavia. Pero por alli vamos. Bendiciones.

  • @mark879
    @mark879 8 років тому

    From one human being to another, I Love You Man! Thanks so much for this video. It looks like so much work. I keep wondering if off-screen you are using power tools. However, I absolutely adore that, on-screen, you are not. It's so fun to see this process without a bandsaw or jigsaw, or whatever other power tool you can think of. Thanks again!

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому +1

      Ha ha, no. Off screen I do not use power tools, or if I do, I show it. Off screen I just go through the process, so I don't have to bore everyone onscreen. One of the goals of this adventure is to do it without power tools, so it can be done out in the jungle or mountainside where there is no power... as well as I like to do it manually anyway. There is more of a sense of achievement using your hands, and almost no beauty in having a machine do it for you. ie: you have not actually done it, the machine did. I did manage to build this one within the day, so it is not as much work as it looks.

  • @frizzlefry1985
    @frizzlefry1985 8 років тому

    Thank God! I was due for a new video of yours!

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому

      Yes, this one took a while to do, it has not been a great month :). I hope the next month goes better . See you next time around.

    • @frizzlefry1985
      @frizzlefry1985 8 років тому

      Hope all is well man!

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому

      Just a yo-yo cold. Comes and goes, and comes back again,and saps your energy, but I am still on the planet. Thanks.

    • @frizzlefry1985
      @frizzlefry1985 8 років тому

      Never fun!

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому

      :)

  • @vinodasari8894
    @vinodasari8894 8 років тому

    Wow ! I have no words to express. Simple project no would touch it. you have taken so much pains to share it. Simple and lucid narration, easy to grasp. Are you a media person ?!!

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому

      Thanks for the compliments. Yes, I do do video, or media.

  • @jusb1066
    @jusb1066 8 років тому

    good way of thinking about the teeth on the cog without horrendous mathematics! great way to simplify it
    Question: in Bogota i am going to make the assumption that many people dont have access to the power grid, do you see small solar panel and car battery type solutions or homemade wind power around?

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому +1

      Ha, yes I am actually getting into the horrendous mathematics of cogs.(I have always loved clockworks) I learned recently that clock teeth are very different from the usual - it's fascinating. Bogota is a big 10 million population city, so it has electricity and all the mod cons, but go about three hours out of it, and its no grid. They just sold the local grid to foreign interests, and now buy from Ecuador, and sold hydro generating rights in parts of the country to the Chinese...par for the one world Govt of course.... and our electricity bill is our most costly service. The whole topic is criminal.

    • @jusb1066
      @jusb1066 8 років тому

      perhaps one day a wooden clock? reminds me of when a child , my big brother made a clock from the kit from Meccano, i believe it ran all day from the weights that run it, and held respectable time keeping at least for the day at a time.

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому +1

      I once made the escapement part of a clock out of matchsticks. As the weight was right on the escapement wheel, it clunked worryingly and did not tickfor very long before the weight ran out, and I never did get around to making extra cogs for it, but it did tick. A friend had Meccano, but we could not afford any , so I built my own. A kitchen stove repair man saved small nuts and bolts for me, and I scavenged metal strips from car coils, carved props and cut bases, etc. Fun days before computers.

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому +1

      By the way (forgot to answer your other questions. ) yes, I hope to implement some of this in some practical way out in the country for some indigenous tribes or country folk without electricity.

  • @eliaslazaro1405
    @eliaslazaro1405 8 років тому

    :0 uau perfeito faz lugar;.
    parabéns show ^^

  • @Thelegend-gt5lb
    @Thelegend-gt5lb 8 років тому +3

    Y not make a foot lathe

  • @DarcyWhyte
    @DarcyWhyte 8 років тому

    nice... I made one once but I used a piezoelectric instead of a motor...

    • @PhilipStephens007
      @PhilipStephens007  8 років тому

      cool. how did it work? Sounds interesting.

    • @DarcyWhyte
      @DarcyWhyte 8 років тому

      mambohead.com/2011/08/led-generator/mambohead.com/2011/08/led-generator/
      There's the link of picture. I'm going to do it again, I think it's compact approach...