[HN Gopher] The modern clock; a study of time keeping mechanism ...
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The modern clock; a study of time keeping mechanism (1905)
Author : Tomte
Score : 33 points
Date : 2021-01-28 07:49 UTC (15 hours ago)
(HTM) web link (archive.org)
(TXT) w3m dump (archive.org)
| RicoElectrico wrote:
| Kind of weird that in the chapter about mercurial pendulum they
| switch to metric system.
| mhh__ wrote:
| I love the typesetting on old books like this.
|
| I bought a truckload of old Radar and microwave engineering
| books, and they're remarkably useful even today (the fundamentals
| of information theory haven't change since 195-whatever for
| example). Obviously computers were out of reach, so lots of
| integration tricks and awful rules of thumb in places.
| RicoElectrico wrote:
| I wonder why there are no tables in places there could be one -
| like in the list of metal expansion coefficients or
| gravitational acceleration by location.
| mhh__ wrote:
| People had books for that stuff back then, so I imagine it
| wasn't worth the considerable effort typesetting them.
|
| I also have a book of data from way back, and since its still
| fairly accurate, it's still alarmingly easier just to look
| something up than Google it i.e. there doesn't seem to be one
| repository for (say) resistivity coefficients in one place
| alongside magnetic moments.
| MaxLeiter wrote:
| Huge long shot, but do you happened to have a copy of
| Radargrammatry by Daniel Levine?
| mhh__ wrote:
| By the looks of googling, all of mine are about 30 years
| older on average. They're mostly tripe, i.e. books that
| aren't classics for a reason, but sometimes it's nice to see
| engineering as done in the past (if I'm ever a billionaire
| I'm going to buy a jet fighter just to get access to the
| manuals and take it to bits)
|
| My earliest maths book was an algebra problems book from the
| late 1800s but I gave it away to my maths teacher when I left
| for university as recompense for not turning up and generally
| being a shit student.
| mhh__ wrote:
| Just found a book on raytracing from 1951!
| ffhhj wrote:
| Also very interesting this NAVY manual on mechanical computers:
|
| https://archive.org/details/mechanical-computer-technical-ma...
|
| There is an old book on building analog computers at home, but I
| can't remember the title.
| fanf2 wrote:
| There's lots of good information about the Trinity College clock
| at http://trin-hosts.trin.cam.ac.uk/clock/main.php
|
| The current clock dates from 1910 (a few years after this book)
| and it has a similar design to Big Ben's clock in the Palace of
| Westminster.
| zokier wrote:
| While watchmaking has enjoyed great reneissance lately, I find it
| curious that full-sized clockmaking still seems pretty dead
| field, at least comparatively. There is no popular reimagings of
| grandfather clocks or other household timepieces like there are
| watches.
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