Some hacks just tickle the brain in a very particular way. They’re, for a change, not overly engineered; they’re just elegant, anachronistic, and full of mischief. That’s exactly what [Frans] pulls off with A Gentleman’s Orrery, a tiny, simple clockwork solar system. Composed of shiny brass and the poise of 18th-century craftsmanship, it hides a modern secret: there’s barely any clockwork inside. You can build it yourself.
Peek behind the polished face and you’ll find a mechanical sleight of hand. This isn’t your grandfather’s gear-laden planetarium. Instead of that, it operates on a pared-down system that relies on a stepper motor, driving planetary movement through a 0.8 mm axle nested inside a 1 mm brass tube. That micro-mechanical coupling, aided by a couple of bevel gears, manages to rotate the Moon just right, including its orientation. Most of the movement relies on clever design, not gear cascades. The real wizardry happens under the hood: a 3D-printed chassis cradles an ESP32-C6, a TTP223 capacitive touch module, STSPIN220 driver, and even a reed switch with magnetic charging.
You can even swap out the brass for a stone shell where the full moon acts as the touch control. It’s tactile, it’s poetic, and therefore, a nice hack for a weekend project. To build it yourself, read [Frans]’ Instructable.
How long do you have to spin it before a months-long total blackout?
Frans’s orreries seem very popular here…
https://hackaday.com/2023/09/09/ceiling-mounted-orrery-is-an-excercise-in-simplicity/
https://hackaday.com/2023/05/09/tiny-orrery-keeps-the-planets-in-their-places/
Absolutely beautiful!
That’s a combination lock inside out.
Aaand I bet that the operating sound will be featured in a next “Whats that Sound”.
Wow, that is an amazing work of craftsmanship. And I thought an orrery was just a brothel.
I thought a planetarium was something else. Did you mean an orrery?
Every orrery is a planetarium, although nowadays the name planetarium is more associated with a dome and (digital) projectors. I call my mechanism a planet spinner. An orrery (every?) shows the relative speed of motion of the planets. When the planet spinner stops moving, it looks like an orrery, but unlike an orrery it shows the correct orientation of the planets.