A clock tower keeps time accurately by using gears that move smoothly and a big pendulum that swings like a playground swing.
Imagine you're on a swing at the park. You go up, come down, go up again, it’s rhythm. The pendulum in a clock tower works just like that. It swings back and forth, and every time it goes from one side to the other, it helps the gears turn a little more.
How the Gears Work
Inside the clock tower, there are many gears, some big, some small. They're like train cars connected together. When one gear turns, it makes the next one move too. These gears help the hands on the clock move slowly and steadily, just like how a train moves one car at a time.
The pendulum helps make sure the gears don’t go too fast or too slow, it’s like having a friend who counts each step so you don’t skip any.
That's why the clock tower can tell us what time it is, even if no one is there to check!
Examples
- A grandfather clock uses a swinging pendulum to keep time accurately.
- Clock towers have special parts that make sure they don’t get out of sync.
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See also
- What are escapement mechanisms?
- How Does Chapter 1 - How a Clock Works Work?
- How A Mechanical Clock Works?
- How Do ‘Clocks’ Keep Time and Why Are There 60 Seconds in a Minute?
- What are spring-driven clocks?