Page:On the economy of machinery and manufactures - Babbage - 1846.djvu/92

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REGISTERING OPERATIONS.

mercury in the cup of the barometer. Sir David Brewster proposed, several years ago, to suspend a barometer, and swing it as a pendulum. The variations in the atmosphere would thus alter the centre of oscillation, and the comparison of such an instrument with a good clock, would enable us to ascertain the mean altitude of the barometer during any interval of the observer's absence.[1]

An instrument for measuring and registering the quantity of rain, was invented by Mr. John Taylor, and described by him in the Philosophical Magazine. It consists of an apparatus in which a vessel that receives the rain falling into the reservoir tilts over as soon as it is full, and then presents another similar vessel to be filled, which in like manner, when full, tilts the former one back again. The number of times these vessels are emptied is registered by a train of wheels; and thus, without the presence of the observer, the quantity of rain falling during a whole year may be measured and recorded.

Instruments might also be contrived to determine the average force of traction of horses,—of the wind,—of a stream,—or of any irregular and fluctuating effort of animal or other natural force.

(74.) Clocks and watches may be considered as instruments for registering the number of vibrations performed by a pendulum or a balance. The mechanism by which these numbers are counted is technically

  1. About seven or eight years since, without being aware of Sir David Brewster's proposal, I adapted a barometer, as a pendulum, to the works of a common eight-day clock; it remained in my library for several months, but I have mislaid the observations which were made.