Describing the Working of a pendulum clock.
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As it swings from side to side, it rocks a lever called an escapement that locks and then unlocks the part of the mechanism driven by the falling weight. ... Photo: The escapement is a rocking lever that allows the gears in a clock to advance only at a certain rate, determined by the swings of the pendulum.
A pendulum is a rod hanging vertically from its top end (or a weight called a bob hanging from a string) that swings from side to side due to the force of gravity. As Italian scientist Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) discovered, the clever thing about a pendulum is that it always takes the same amount of time to make one complete swing. In theory, the only thing that affects how fast a pendulum swings is its length and the strength of gravity. For relatively small swings, the time (T) it takes to make one complete swing (known as the period) is given by this little equation:
A pendulum is a rod hanging vertically from its top end (or a weight called a bob hanging from a string) that swings from side to side due to the force of gravity. As Italian scientist Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) discovered, the clever thing about a pendulum is that it always takes the same amount of time to make one complete swing. In theory, the only thing that affects how fast a pendulum swings is its length and the strength of gravity. For relatively small swings, the time (T) it takes to make one complete swing (known as the period) is given by this little equation:

A pendulum is a rod hanging vertically from its top end (or a weight called a bob hanging from a string) that swings from side to side due to the force of gravity. As Italian scientist Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) discovered, the clever thing about a pendulum is that it always takes the same amount of time to make one complete swing. In theory, the only thing that affects how fast a pendulum swings is its length and the strength of gravity. For relatively small swings, the time (T) it takes to make one complete swing (known as the period) is given by this little equation:
A pendulum is a rod hanging vertically from its top end (or a weight called a bob hanging from a string) that swings from side to side due to the force of gravity. As Italian scientist Galileo Galilei (1564–1642) discovered, the clever thing about a pendulum is that it always takes the same amount of time to make one complete swing. In theory, the only thing that affects how fast a pendulum swings is its length and the strength of gravity. For relatively small swings, the time (T) it takes to make one complete swing (known as the period) is given by this little equation:

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Hey, here is your answer
It swings from side to side, it rocks a lever that locks and then unlocks if the mechanism driven by the falling weight. It is worked on oscillator motion.
HOPE IT HELPS YOU
It swings from side to side, it rocks a lever that locks and then unlocks if the mechanism driven by the falling weight. It is worked on oscillator motion.
HOPE IT HELPS YOU
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