6 comments

  • mattegan 1 hour ago
    Bryan has been working on this forever! Truly a labor of love. Neat to see it pop up here. He also does illustrations of homes around San Francisco (amongst other things), which I highly recommend checking out: https://www.instagram.com/bmacomber_art/
  • Muhammad523 7 hours ago
    "Illustrated tear-downs and break-downs of everyday products, like mechanical pencils, lighters and pez dispensers, that you may have taken for granted. Drawn by Bryan Macomber, a mechanical engineer and artist."

    The description above comes from the following post on mastodon: https://merveilles.town/@rek/116658587354593919

  • srean 2 hours ago
    Such a beautifully done site. I might be in love already . Many kudos.

    I dropped in a suggestion to do one on an umbrella. There's a lot going on in these. One can study the differential geometry of surfaces. The mechanism design of opening and closing.

    I find both the spring ones (push button) and the ones without spring quite fascinating. In fact the ones without a spring has implicit ones imposed by the bending of the spokes.

  • sublinear 1 hour ago
    I've always enjoyed that the cam surface for that particular push-push mechanism design (click pen) is not that dissimilar from a Leibniz wheel. It's so tempting to add more steps.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Leibniz_wheel

    I can't help myself and have to link some of my favorite youtube channels.

    Engineerguy: https://youtube.com/@engineerguyvideo

    Chris Staecker: https://youtube.com/@ChrisStaecker

  • unwind 2 hours ago
    Meta: confusing typo in title. Mods , please fix penciN -> penciL. Thanks.
    • tomhow 25 minutes ago
      Fixed, thanks!
  • niraj898 2 hours ago
    [flagged]