h a l f b a k e r yThe embarrassing drunkard uncle of invention.
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I have been playing violin for 9 years now and metronomes (besides being incredibly annoying because unless you pay $150 for it you're going to play over it) are mainly digital, unless you have an old click-clack-click-clack type of model.
I was thinking it would be neat if there were anti-gravity
metronomes, where the same sort of back-and-forth pendulum type went "click-clack-click-clack" that was always going, because of a lack of gravity in some sort of vacuum. (see the law about motion that says an object in motion stays in motion unless acted upon by an outside force).
There would be a box (the vacuum) with a swinging pendulum screwed into either the top or bottom that would be put in motion during the manufacturing process (or there could be an on/off sort of button), with a small speaker hooked up to the box and that would be the beat. There would be a small knob to adjust the tempo. The only power that would be required would be for if there were playable pitches, as seen on most metronomes which at least give you a 440 A, and I'm sure a watch-sized battery would be fine for that.
It would be an ideal gift for your favorite eco-friendly musician.
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Sorry, I hit enter instead of tab when switching fields. |
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Two problems: running your metronome in a vacuum will not remove the gravity, but it will remove the click. So, sorry, it won't work. |
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(Incidently, as long as you do have a click, the metronome is losing energy and will run down.) |
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The box would be more of a visual sort of thing...My older, more notorious sister told me that vacuums are things without gravity, so I apologize about that bit. |
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hey guys...
take it easy on her. she's my kid sister. she's a smarty... a violin prodigy! me loves her. |
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true, vacuums have no gravity.
Because there is no mass in the vacuum itself, the vacuum itself does not generate gravitational force. However, the vacuum would still be on the earth and therefore would still be subjected to earth's gravity. |
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Vacuum is used to lift things (like fluff, carpets, and aeroplanes) by overcoming the gravitational force, not by cancelling it. |
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Gravity is a myth... The earth sucks. |
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