h a l f b a k e r yLike gliding backwards through porridge.
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The top portion of each leg is a small hydraulic cylinder, a couple centimetres long from which an half-centimetre pipe leads to a central disk-shaped reservoir. Floating in the reservoir is a disk, the edge of which covers the entryways when the table is completely level. When the table isn't completely
level, the disk will be tilted, uncovering the holes, allowing hydraulic fluid to flow from the side(s) that are too high to the side(s) that are too low, shortening and lengthening the legs as desired.
Not only is the mechanism completely hidden from view/interference by the tabletop but the bottom of the legs are free of levelling devices, allowing a much cleaner look.
Self-levelling walker
Self-levelling_20walker Similar, except mobile [csea, Aug 29 2009]
House_20self-levelling_20system
Similar, except bigger [spidermother, Aug 30 2009]
Fluid locking & adjustment technology
http://www.youtube....watch?v=4aCXh2djrIo [xaviergisz, Aug 30 2009]
[link]
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what was the first... nevermind, found it. |
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Shouldn't it more convenient to just employ eccentrics placed in the joints of two adjacent legs? The eccentrics double as stepper motors. The battery doubles as weight and is suspended by springs underneath the tabletop. A contact dial would measure the incline of the weight to activate the motors appropriately to keep the tabletop level. And so on, and so forth. What's the advantage of hydraulics over this method? |
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// What's the advantage of hydraulics // |
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Smoothness, silence, power-to-weight ratio. |
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[bigsleep], you don't need any devices to remove a wobble. All you need to do to stabilise a table is rotate it, thanks to our friend the Intermediate Value Theorem. |
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There are devices for lengthening leg bones which are
inserted surgically into the ends of the cut bone, and which
slowly extend. If this were combined with FT's idea, we
could have a NotFallingOverWhenDrunk machine. [+] |
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You could do it with a 3-legged table of which 2 legs were telescopic - Then it'd work on uneven surfaces, too. [One big self-levelling bun] |
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Surely stability is the enemy of spilled drinks, and wobble the cause. |
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It will have to be powered, no? |
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//powered ?//I imagine the anno'd electric ones are, though you could spin the tabletop to generate the power :D |
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the post ? nope, just set it down and jiggle it. Without the disc (ie: if the leg-cylinders were connected directly to each other) all the legs would touch the ground but the tabletop would wobble. The disc keeps the legs from changing length once the tabletop is level by stopping the flow of fluid between the legs. |
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I was just thinking that unless you used a dense fluid the levelling force might be insignificant compared to slight irregularities in weight of the table top. I suppose you could add some dither - basically wobble the top around by hand, until it locks into place, at which point it would be level. |
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yup, pretty well, just set it down and jiggle it. |
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Once set it could be manually locked, though if you have a lock you could just have a spirit-level bubble inset in the middle of the tabletop and level it completely, manually, before locking. |
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The force we have to work with to move the disc is its buoyancy in the fluid, working against the friction of the tabs against the reservoir walls, so a perfect disk wouldn't be optimum though it does convey the idea of full coverage and works for any amount and arrangement of legs. |
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An x-pointed star with floats near the end of the arms and tethered to avoid rolling out of place would probably be optimum. |
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one thing wrong with that idea: elbows. |
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The spirit-level bubble idea works fine without the floating disc(of this idea) and with a manual lock, but then you have to manually level up the table instead of just jiggling it a couple times (and damping isn't necessary on this, either). |
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I love the idea of the disk floating level in the reservoir, regulating the way the liquid can flow. Brilliant. |
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//Shouldn't it more convenient to just employ eccentrics // Magnus Pike and Chris Eubank? |
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i like the idea of a table that self levels +
robotic furniture with a mind of its own i love that. |
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if a table got angry what could it do to you?
imagine having a love hate relationship with a table. |
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//wax// that could work too except you need an external heat source and (if combine with this idea) would need to heat hydraulic fluid which is spread out to the corners. |
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and the improvement over the current system is... ? |
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//going to be moved around restaurants or conference halls regularly// so you want to be constantly meltng and reforming the wax, as opposed to simply plunking the table down, because.... |
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//Shouldn't it more convenient to just employ eccentrics placed in the joints of two adjacent legs?// |
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Eccentrics are often hard to employ for workaday jobs like this, demanding unusual pay rates, unreliable hours, access to odd invention websites, and lots of isolation for their pet projects. |
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Simple genius. Run, don't walk, to a patent office [+] |
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//beermats last use theorem// [marked-for-tagline] |
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There are two discrete actions: first is getting all the legs on the ground, second is levelling the tabletop. |
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Realistically you probably wouldn't have to wiggle it: unless you somehow managed to set it down with the tabletop perfectly level, the fluid will flow until all legs are touching the ground. At that point pull up on the low side of the tabletop or push down on the high side until it stops and the tabletop will be level. Add beer pitchers. Enjoy. |
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