- Bookwheel
The bookwheel, an alternative version of the
revolving bookstand , is a device designed to allow one person to read a variety of heavy books in one location with ease. The books are rotated vertically much like aFerris wheel (as opposed to a flat, rotating table surface). This device was invented by Italianmilitary engineer Agostino Ramelli in 1588. To ensure that the books remained at a constant angle, Ramelli incorporated anepicyclic gear ing arrangement, a complex device that had only previously been used in astronomical clocks. Ramelli undoubtedly understood thatgravity could have worked just as effectively (as it does with aFerris wheel ), but the gearing system allowed him to display his mathematical prowess.Ramelli's design was copied by subsequent authors. It appears in
Heinrich Zeising 's "Theatrum machinarum " (1611 ), printed byHenning Gross and possibly engraved by a youngAndreas Bretschneider . It also appears in a German copy of Ramelli's work appearing in 1620. It too was printed by Gross and engraved by Bretschneider although the plate clearly differs from Zeising's edition. The book wheel was copied once again in a Chinese work edited by theJesuit missionaryTerrence Schreck . This Chinese copy is notable because it misrepresents Ramelli's original epicyclic gearing arrangement, perhaps indicating a lack of mechanical competence on the part of the engraver. The book wheel makes a final appearance in 1719.Grollier de Serviere criticized Ramelli's overly complicated design and presented a much simpler gimballed design.References
*Rybczynski, Witold. "One Good Turn: A Natural History of the Screwdriver and the Screw." Scribner, 2000.
*Goodall, George. [http://www.deregulo.com/facetation/2006/08/ramellis-book-wheel-book-wheel.html Ramelli's Book Wheel] .
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