by Julius Aldoid on February 26th, 2011, 8:52 am
"Ah yes but of course," his looking off, trying to figure out just what Hadrian was talking about, the mentioning of any void having created one his head.
'What the hell is a void,' he thought, a shiver crawling up his spine, his imagination filling in a gap.
Looking about, he spotted two barrels sitting in an alleyway, and so leaned on one, setting his curry down for a moment, after having a heaping spoonful.
"Ther murst imperdrd thughg," his words a mush thanks to the curry in his mouth, which was promptly swallowed, "the most important thing as my teacher once said to me, is understanding one thing: power. Where is it going?" He waved the little clockwork at Hadrian.
"These guys live only when some form of power is taken from one place, and spent in another. In this case, the key."
He spun the little guy around, showing a little L-shaped bar jutting from his back.
"I twist the key with my hand. That key juts into space in a gear."
The metal of the dandy quickly turned translucent, showing a series of gears. the metal glistened with its bronze luster, the teeth of each looking shaking and ill-formed. The key quickly began to turn a blue color, and as he turned the gear it was set in, it turned blue too.
"The motion of this gear winds a mainspring. The mainspring is what allows us to store energy. If want to make other things, then say these dandies, you can alternatively use weights instead of springs. Weights are easier to make, easier to use, but springs can store more energy. Also, I am not quite sure how to work pulleys, but I am sure they work like gears. My old teacher also mentioned something about keeping the energy of a spring even, but I am still having a hard time grasping what he had been talking about."
"Ya see, springs have these little, well it would be best to show you."
The dandy grew in size until it was sitting in Juli's lap, this gear skeleton put on display. In it, it was quite evident that this little spring was a fairly complex thing. A razor-flat piece of metal that was coiled so it almost looked solid. in the center of it, sat a little cam, with the center of the spring feeding to it. this cam branched up to the center of a gear, and the other side of this gear is where the key was set. A little scythe-like arm extended to the side of this gear.
"With springs, you have to have something in place, otherwise energy will feed backwards, and you will never be able to wind your spring. It will untangle from both sides. So that little scythe acts as a catch, preventing the gear from turning backwards. As the energy can’t feed back, it instead pushes and rotates against the gear it is housed in, called a barrel. That is basically how they work. My teacher used to call the system a ‘mortal coil’. It is the soul of the thing, and with it, and the right transmission, you can make anything you want. In this case, it causes his feet to wiggle, making the dapper gentleman about town strut his stuff.”
And it a puff of smoke, there was just a simple, small dandy sitting in his hands.
“See, you didn’t have to break your dandy,” he chimed.