Indeed. These engineers designed and built 'master pieces' without computers, CNC etc. Just pencil and paper and perhaps a Faber Castell slide ruler ! Thank you for your compliments and for watching.
Excellent rendering, very impressive! I've been a mechanic for over 40 years and after watching the valve train motion I still can't quite wrap my head around the cam ring operation. The man who invented that was surely a genius!
Thanks for your compliments. Regarding the cam operation, you may want to have a look on my web-site www.pjvision.nl There;s some more information. Btw, to my knowledge, the cam ring gears operation came out of the clock makers world. Indeed, very clever !
@@anwarpopi8168 Maybe, but weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation. Rotary engines have no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets and the radiator. This provides excellent self-cooling, the rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed. They provided and excellent power to weight ratio. 😊
I am building a metal model of this engine and had no idea where the exhaust came out.... this video helped me learn and appreciate the magnificent engineering that went into it's manufacture. Well Done Sir.
Thanks this was my dream wen I was 16 years old and never had the opportunity then I learned DC auto and mechanic diesel and gasoline and now after 45 years is great to look this video thanks for the people who have the time for this
Thank you for your compliments. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
@@BMEPRAKULSHARMA I am using V8i MicroStation (Bentley Systems) for all 3D CAD work and the animations. MicroStation uses the Mode rendering engine (embedded). Next I import the rendered images (1000+) into a video editor to create the various scenes and the final video. I'm using Magix, but any video editing software would do it. Thanks for watching !!
Thank you for your compliments. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
Amazing how complex this rotary engine was. The engineering a tooling that went into it was astounding, especially considering the early era of flight.
Indeed ! No computers, just pencil on paper and perhaps a "Faber Castell" slide ruler. Manufactured with the available machinery, tools and skills. No CNC. Thanks for watching !!
@@pierrejansen2702.. By the time of the second great debate. Pratt and Whitney had developed a technique of milling ALL the cooling fins in a single operation...the fins were shrunk fit to the outside of the cylinder wall.
A treasure.Pure content with none of the glitz or irritating "improvements" inflicted on us by the fatuous Artiste Wannabees on most production teams these days: no gratuitous slow-panning, no breathless fast-cuts, and the soundtrack was actually listenable in its own right instead of being the seemingly obligatory rap-yap. Yay!
From harvesting ore from the earth, refining into steel, machining steel into unique parts, and finally assemble them all into an engine. So much detail, effort, and precision for a machine that will be targeted to be destroyed. You can tell a lot about a person even more so with militaries by the weapons they use to destroy you.
Ротативный двигатель , коленвал стоит на месте , а цилиндры с блоком вращаются вокруг него , широко применялся во время первой мировой войны в авиации.
Indeed. It's based on the fact that Weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation. Rotary engines have no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets and the radiator. This provides excellent self-cooling, the rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed. They provided and excellent power to weight ratio. Thank you for watching !!
Thank you for your compliments ! Indeed a masterpiece of engineering. No computers or CAD/CAM. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
Having always been facinated by engineering and have rebuilt quite few car engines in the past THAT Mr Jensen was THE FINEST annimation I have ever seen. Absoultely enthralling. I know a little about the clerget engine but I learned so much, I could find an old version strip and rebuild it just from watching the video...Dont know what else to say apart from thank you so much for creating and sharing.
Quite a few. Pierre Clerget together with his partner Blin started their engineering company, producing rotary engines, as well as the Gnome/Le Rhone Engineering company founded in 1913 by the engineers Louis Seguin and his brother Laurent. In the early days of aviation, engines had to be light, offering an excellent power to weight ration These rotary engines designs provided excellent self-cooling. The rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. No cooling liquid, no pumps nor radiators. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel was needed. Thanks for your feedback and for watching !!
Thank you for your compliments. Note that Weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation. Rotary engines have no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets and the radiator. This provides excellent self-cooling, the rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed. They provided and excellent power to weight ratio. Thanks for watching !!
9.47 million views yet comments are not liked that much. hm... oh btw, the video was awesome, i love easily explained mechanics. radial engines too, interesting
Indeed. it looks like technical oriented people see little value in 'likes', see it as immature, kid stuff. Don't knoe. But, I sure do like your comments !!!!. Thanks for your compliments and for watching
Thank you. The movie tune was based on the bass theme that I came up when I recorded the bluesy/jazz cords progression. Thanks for watching and listening !!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
Well, quite simple compared to most todays engines! Thank you for your compliments. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
This animation is incredible...at least I think it is animated. FANTASTIC! Many thanks. I never realized how many parts were inside a rotary engine. Saw a few run and fly at Old Rhinebeck, NY airport many years ago. Watch out for the castor oil. It lubricates the intestines as well as the engine!
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching. Regarding the castor oil, I've got my shower standing directly behind the engine. Guess I was lucky, wasn't affected by the "side effects" Look at: ruclips.net/video/5Y6PsDfeFJ4/видео.html
Awesome - in the old sense of filled me with awe, both of the graphics and the original engineers. But I still can't cope with the fuel entering via the crankcase!
The mixture goes through the hollow crankshaft into the crankcase. During the inlet stroke, the inlet valve being opened, it was sucked into the appropriate cylinder through the induction pipe attached to the inlet valve seat on top of the cylinder (head). Note that the petrol tank was pressurized to assure petrol flow (through the Tampier mixing device) to the carburettor.
Weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation. The rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed. Rotary engines have no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets and the radiator. They provided and excellent power to weight ratio. Thanks for watching !!
My god the machining of all those parts and the tolerances to be held way back then , no cnc machining centers back then .As a retired machinist my hats off to that generation of machinists.👍🏻👏👏👏
Indeed, the rotary engines in the early days of aviation were real Masterpieces. As you said,, no CNC etc. Perhaps just a Faber Castel slide ruler was being used during the design phase ;-) Thanks for watching !!
The Clerget 9B was, in fact, a rotary engine. It wasn't a Wankel Engine, which is what is now also known as a rotary engine, but it was a rotary engine nonetheless. The difference between this type of rotary engine and a radial engine is that the radial engine has a fixed cylinder "block" with a rotating crankshaft whereas this engine and similar rotary engines had a stationary crankshaft and the engine itself rotated around the crankshaft
Thank you for your compliments. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
This is truly a great piece of CAD work, IMHO! I also think that educational videos like this one are truly educational- on many levels; Allowing countless people to understand the internal workings of engines, that almost certainly, they wouldn't be able to see assembly and disassembly, in any other way.
@@BMEPRAKULSHARMA I am using MicroStation V8i, which has the Modo rendering engine embedded, for all 3D creation and animations. Next, the rendered images (thousands) are imported into a video editing program to create the various scenes and the final video. I'm using Magix, but any editing software would do. Thanks for watching !!
I quote Englisman French here: "This is just the most interesting and well produced video I have ever seen, the amount of work that must have gone into this gem must have been enormous , I can only say thank you for having the vision to produce this."
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !! You may want to have a look at some more videos on my youtube channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ and on my web-site: www.pjvision.nl Cheers and Enjoy !
Thanks for your response. Just to make it a bit more clear ... Rotary engines were widely used for aircraft during the WW1 period. The crankshaft remains stationary and the entire cylinder block rotates around it. The crankshaft was fixed solidly to the airframe, and the propeller was simply bolted to the front of the crankcase. Weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation. Rotary engines have no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets and the radiator. This provides excellent self-cooling, the rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed. They provided and excellent power to weight ratio. Thanks for watching !!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
A 3D animation about the assembly of the Clerget Engine. All 3D modeling and animations are done with MicroStation V8i (Bentley Systems) which uses the Luxology (Modo) rendering engine. Thanks for your compliments and for watching !!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
Outstanding work on the design, and especially the assembly animation. One of the very best that I've ever seen, and, I'm saying this over 5 years after your original release. Thanks again, SCR
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching (again) !!!
As primative as this engine was, it still was machined and assembled with great precision at a time when most roads in America were dirt and cowboys still had a job.
Why Not... those were the days.... However, from the Fly Boys movie I've learned the some cowboys left there jobs and went to France in order to fly (and fight) in aero planes powered by rotary engines.
Beautiful Visual & Graphics - Yet all i could wonder was how much precision machining & fabrication went into each of the actual engine components & parts, designed & built in 1916, without the CNC machinery we have nowadays
Thank you for your compliments. Indeed a masterpiece of engineering when you realize that there were no computers, no CNC and all designed by pencil on paper with a "Faber-Castell" slide-ruler. Thanks for watching !!
I love ROTARY engines.Been a military aircraft buff since childhood and the ROTARY engine has always fascinated me.Thanks for sharing man,I love this stuff.And the video...awesome and informative.Excellent work brother.
Weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation. Rotary engines provide excellent self-cooling, the rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed. These engines had no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets, radiator. etc. and provided an excellent power to weight ratio. Thanks for watching !!.
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. if you want to see more. Click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!
Thank you for your compliments. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
To use one of the current buzzwords, this video is VERY satisfying. Excellent animation, and even the music was OK, subtle and smooth. Great vid!! I have to amend this comment...each time I re-watch this vid, I am more and more impressed. The animation's parts' actual 'motion' is smooth, and precise. Positions of pieces are logical. The actual 'rendering' (is that the word?, the creation of the images of the pieces) is SO realistic. Texture of the surfaces, shadows, sharpness (threads etc.) great! The text is concise but clear and well-phrased. I was surprised at how 'thin' the carburetors were. I was almost totally unfamiliar with these types of rotating engines, I'd heard of them but never seen one, even an animation, in action.I was literally amazed to watch it rotate, and still find it a little hard to fathom, despite seeing it all laid out. lol All in all, quite an impressive vid.
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching and listening to my music !!!
If you got the exhaust and inlet valves timing gears right for one cylinder, it'll be correct for all 9. Same for the ignition timing. However, next comes all the inlet- and exhaust push rods ..... Thanks for your response and for watching !!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching !!!
Excelente trabalho! Merecedor de premios de animação e CAD! E a música perfeitamente adequada. Trabalho para ser guardado como um jóia preciosa de explicação, demonstração de funcionamento e montagem!! Parabens à toda equipe de trabalho!!!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos. If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines. Thanks for watching (and listening) !!!
Yes indeed. All based on the fact that weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation. Rotary engines have no need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets, radiator or batteries. They provided excellent self-cooling. The rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed. They provided and excellent power to weight ratio. Thanks for watching !!
This is absolutely stellar. No other word for it. The work behind this must have been monumental.
Thank you John !
Those who didn't liked this video, aren't engineers!!! Such a master piece.
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
@@skauffman74 Its a work of art.
G@@pierrejansen2702
This is SO incredible. The ingenuity in even a "simple" WWI era aircraft engine is astounding, and really impressive. What a fantastic video!
Indeed. These engineers designed and built 'master pieces' without computers, CNC etc. Just pencil and paper and perhaps a Faber Castell slide ruler !
Thank you for your compliments and for watching.
This Clerget Aircraft Engine is over 100 years old.Look at the engineering and details to assemble.I love it!!
Thanks for your response and for watching the video !
What a marvelous piece of machinery. And this before the days of CAD and CNC engineering.
Indeed, no computers, just pencil on paper and perhaps a Castell slide ruler .....
An amazing Masterpiece of engineering.
Thanks for watching !!
@@pierrejansen2702 And with the greatest amount of respect probably a great deal of "suck it and see"
Excellent rendering, very impressive! I've been a mechanic for over 40 years and after watching the valve train motion I still can't quite wrap my head around the cam ring operation. The man who invented that was surely a genius!
Thanks for your compliments. Regarding the cam operation, you may want to have a look on my web-site www.pjvision.nl There;s some more information. Btw, to my knowledge, the cam ring gears operation came out of the clock makers world. Indeed, very clever !
Have watched several of these videos & still makes my head hurt trying to figure how these things run. I see, but why?
The stupidest design
Jump to 3:00 of this video and it may give some insight into the cam rings workings. ruclips.net/video/-42Z-_Kq0QU/видео.html
@@anwarpopi8168 Maybe, but weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation.
Rotary engines have no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets and the radiator.
This provides excellent self-cooling, the rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed. They provided and excellent power to weight ratio.
😊
I am building a metal model of this engine and had no idea where the exhaust came out.... this video helped me learn and appreciate the magnificent engineering that went into it's manufacture. Well Done Sir.
Glad the video helped and success with your project !
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
Any chance of posting a pic in your comments section?
@@pbsluvr312
Look at Micro Mark engine models. This is a Clerget 9B WW1 Rotary Engine.
Thanks this was my dream wen I was 16 years old and never had the opportunity then I learned DC auto and mechanic diesel and gasoline and now after 45 years is great to look this video thanks for the people who have the time for this
Thank you for your compliments.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
This is an absolutely outstanding animation. Many thanks to the brilliant people who made this!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
@@pierrejansen2702 whichx software do you use for making these animations
whichx software do you use for making these animations
@@BMEPRAKULSHARMA I am using V8i MicroStation (Bentley Systems) for all 3D CAD work and the animations. MicroStation uses the Mode rendering engine (embedded). Next I import the rendered images (1000+) into a video editor to create the various scenes and the final video. I'm using Magix, but any video editing software would do it.
Thanks for watching !!
@@pierrejansen2702 ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤,briliant
Brilliant. Thank you
Thank you for your compliments.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
Amazing how complex this rotary engine was. The engineering a tooling that went into it was astounding, especially considering the early era of flight.
Indeed ! No computers, just pencil on paper and perhaps a "Faber Castell" slide ruler. Manufactured with the available machinery, tools and skills. No CNC.
Thanks for watching !!
@@pierrejansen2702tv
@@pierrejansen2702..
By the time of the second great debate. Pratt and Whitney had developed a technique of milling ALL the cooling fins in a single operation...the fins were shrunk fit to the outside of the cylinder wall.
White tech.🤓👍😉
Inacreditável a inteligência humana..
Brilliantly modeled and animated. Huge amount of work.
Thank you for your compliments. Indeed, it took more than a rainy Sunday afternoon.
Thanks for watching !!
A treasure.Pure content with none of the glitz or irritating "improvements" inflicted on us by the fatuous Artiste Wannabees on most production teams these days: no gratuitous slow-panning, no breathless fast-cuts, and the soundtrack was actually listenable in its own right instead of being the seemingly obligatory rap-yap. Yay!
Thank you for you nice comments Michael. Glad you liked the way I've put it together and thanks for watching !!
@@pierrejansen2702 .
@@pierrejansen2702 l
@@pierrejansen2702 welcome sir
Excellent!!! Here it is 100 years after the Great War and these rotary engines are all but forgotten...thank you for bringing them back to life...
Thanks for your compliments. Yes, I'm doing my bit, trying to keep the history alive.
Thank you for your response and for watching !!
From harvesting ore from the earth, refining into steel, machining steel into unique parts, and finally assemble them all into an engine. So much detail, effort, and precision for a machine that will be targeted to be destroyed.
You can tell a lot about a person even more so with militaries by the weapons they use to destroy you.
Wise words !
Thanks and thank you for watching !!
Ротативный двигатель , коленвал стоит на месте , а цилиндры с блоком вращаются вокруг него , широко применялся во время первой мировой войны в авиации.
Indeed. It's based on the fact that Weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation.
Rotary engines have no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets and the radiator.
This provides excellent self-cooling, the rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed.
They provided and excellent power to weight ratio.
Thank you for watching !!
My jaw is still open-- speechless --brilliant - THANK YOU
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
Never really understood how theses engines worked. This is awesome.. You can really appreciate the engineering in that time period..
Thank you for your compliments !
Indeed a masterpiece of engineering. No computers or CAD/CAM.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
Amazing to watch, love seeing how all the connections are made....
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
beautiful, hypnotising........a Michaelangelo of engineering
Thank you for you compliments and thanks for watching !!
Absolutely superb!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
Thank you 😊
Thank you and thanks for watching !! 😊
As someone who has both worked on and digitally modeled round engines, allow me to say WOW. You did a great job.
Thank you!
This engine is not only beautiful but pure genius! Wow!
Yes it is. Thanks for watching !!!
Having always been facinated by engineering and have rebuilt quite few car engines in the past THAT Mr Jensen was THE FINEST annimation I have ever seen. Absoultely enthralling. I know a little about the clerget engine but I learned so much, I could find an old version strip and rebuild it just from watching the video...Dont know what else to say apart from thank you so much for creating and sharing.
You make me blush!! Thanks for the complements.
One of the coolest things I've seen. An old retired engine mechanic.
Thanks for your compliments !
Now THIS is what youtube was invented for. Utterly astounding work and I can't thank you enough for allowing us to see it Pierre.
Thanks for you complements
honestly , very nice
@@gizmono2869 yeah
@@pierrejansen2702 welcome again
that was cool. Kudos to the inventor!
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!!
Extremely well done. That rotating motor has always amazed the shit out of me.
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
A big thanks !!! Finally I understood how it works this kind of motor. Also first time I see a motor moving and the crankshaft fix...
Thanks your for your compliments and thanks for watching !!!
Incredible presentation of an incredible piece of engineering, considering the era of when it was designed and manufactured.
Indeed amazing. Thanks for your comment and for watching !
Dave Crown ... yes - you are right! .. to have the idea to design a Motor in this way!!!
I mean...how come people came up with this in early 1900’s?!?! Simply unbelievable engineering....
Quite a few. Pierre Clerget together with his partner Blin started their engineering company, producing rotary engines, as well as the Gnome/Le Rhone Engineering company founded in 1913 by the engineers Louis Seguin and his brother Laurent. In the early days of aviation, engines had to be light, offering an excellent power to weight ration
These rotary engines designs provided excellent self-cooling. The rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. No cooling liquid, no pumps nor radiators. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel was needed.
Thanks for your feedback and for watching !!
the CAD work is amazing and I didn't know this engine in the end will start rotating its whole block , great animation !
Thank you for your compliments.
Note that Weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation.
Rotary engines have no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets and the radiator.
This provides excellent self-cooling, the rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed.
They provided and excellent power to weight ratio.
Thanks for watching !!
@@pierrejansen2702 dbb
@@dadafafa8572 Thank you !!
9.47 million views yet comments are not liked that much. hm...
oh btw, the video was awesome, i love easily explained mechanics. radial engines too, interesting
Indeed. it looks like technical oriented people see little value in 'likes', see it as immature, kid stuff. Don't knoe.
But, I sure do like your comments !!!!.
Thanks for your compliments and for watching
Hell of a Bass player in the sound track.
Thank you. The movie tune was based on the bass theme that I came up when I recorded the bluesy/jazz cords progression.
Thanks for watching and listening !!
Fantastic precision. Great presentation. Thanks a lot.
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching the video !!
One out of a million videos of this kind.
Thank you for your compliments.
It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
A really complex engine.
Great animation.
Well, quite simple compared to most todays engines! Thank you for your compliments.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
finally a youtube video with great music
Sometimes it's amazing what a one-man-band can do. Thanks you for your compliment and thanks for watching !!!
Merci monsieur Pierre vous étiez très généreux de nous démontrer cette génie mécanique et artistique .
Merci et merci d'avoir regardé la video !!
A masterpiece of engineering, a miracle of sorts.
Indeed and all was done without computers, CNC etc. Perhaps they used a Faber Castell slide rule ...
Thank you for watching !!
Great job putting this together.
Thank you for your compliments.
It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
This animation is incredible...at least I think it is animated. FANTASTIC! Many thanks. I never realized how many parts were inside a rotary engine. Saw a few run and fly at Old Rhinebeck, NY airport many years ago. Watch out for the castor oil. It lubricates the intestines as well as the engine!
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching.
Regarding the castor oil, I've got my shower standing directly behind the engine. Guess I was lucky, wasn't affected by the "side effects"
Look at: ruclips.net/video/5Y6PsDfeFJ4/видео.html
Thank you 🙏 i have seen it,never work on it! Looks great 👍 simple with lots of bearings ,fascinating full engine turning ☝️for cooling system 😂👏👏👏👏👍
Glad it helped. Thanks for your compliments !
I had heard of this engine before but had no idea how it worked. Thanks for a truly informative and entertaining presentation.
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
Dad was an aeronautical engineer and it was from him I heard that that a Frenchman had built that wonder called Rotating/Radial engine !
Good ..
I thing it was wrong when I see the main body rounding, but I found a video of a real one working... amazing!
Indeed, thanks. You can also watch me and my friend running his Clerget 9B on:
ruclips.net/video/5Y6PsDfeFJ4/видео.html
Un chef-d’œuvre. Du grand art !
Merci Monsieur.
Merci pour tes compliments.
Awesome - in the old sense of filled me with awe, both of the graphics and the original engineers. But I still can't cope with the fuel entering via the crankcase!
The mixture goes through the hollow crankshaft into the crankcase. During the inlet stroke, the inlet valve being opened, it was sucked into the appropriate cylinder through the induction pipe attached to the inlet valve seat on top of the cylinder (head). Note that the petrol tank was pressurized to assure petrol flow (through the Tampier mixing device) to the carburettor.
@@pierrejansen2702 Thanks Pierre. Now I get it. I just don't want to believe it!
Великолепное видео! Фантастика в начале двадцатого века.
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
Fantastic engine, fantastic graphics . . . truly stunning!
Thanks for your compliment !
@@pierrejansen2702 y que
Craziest piece of technology
Weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation.
The rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed.
Rotary engines have no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets and the radiator.
They provided and excellent power to weight ratio.
Thanks for watching !!
My god the machining of all those parts and the tolerances to be held way back then , no cnc machining centers back then .As a retired machinist my hats off to that generation of machinists.👍🏻👏👏👏
Indeed, the rotary engines in the early days of aviation were real Masterpieces. As you said,, no CNC etc. Perhaps just a Faber Castel slide ruler was being used during the design phase ;-)
Thanks for watching !!
Wow, super video.
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
It isn't often we see attention paid to rotary engines. A fine piece of work.
I've tried to keep the history regarding the engines alive. Thank you.
This isnt a rotary engine, its a radial engine, there's a difference
The Clerget 9B was, in fact, a rotary engine. It wasn't a Wankel Engine, which is what is now also known as a rotary engine, but it was a rotary engine nonetheless. The difference between this type of rotary engine and a radial engine is that the radial engine has a fixed cylinder "block" with a rotating crankshaft whereas this engine and similar rotary engines had a stationary crankshaft and the engine itself rotated around the crankshaft
This is wonderful - I'm going to show it to my engineering students.
Thanks you for your positive feedback. It's this kind of responses that keep me creating these videos !!
This video is absolutely phantastic ! ! !
nothing more to say !
Thanks for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
What a beautiful creation. Can you imagine what the engineers and mechanics of the First World War would think if they could have seen this?
Choice, Thank you!
Thank you for your compliments.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
That was fantastic, well done!! Absolutely love these engines and their mechanical workings.
Thanks for your complement Dustin !
Nice video,thanks :)
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
This is truly a great piece of CAD work, IMHO! I also think that educational videos like this one are truly educational- on many levels; Allowing countless people to understand the internal workings of engines, that almost certainly, they wouldn't be able to see assembly and disassembly, in any other way.
Thanks you for your compliments, your kind words of appreciated and for watching.
whichx software does she use
for making these animations
@@BMEPRAKULSHARMA I am using MicroStation V8i, which has the Modo rendering engine embedded, for all 3D creation and animations. Next, the rendered images (thousands) are imported into a video editing program to create the various scenes and the final video. I'm using Magix, but any editing software would do.
Thanks for watching !!
I vote for most excellent video and audio 👍 on RUclips.
Thank you for your compliments. You make me blush ......
Thanks for watching (and listening)
I quote Englisman French here: "This is just the most interesting and well produced video I have ever seen, the amount of work that must have gone into this gem must have been enormous , I can only say thank you for having the vision to produce this."
You're welcome. Thanks for your compliments Francois
.
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@@pierrejansen2702 well come again
Excellente démonstration ; merci !.
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
Thank you very much for an outstanding video. I could watch that 100 times
Thanks for your compliments and for watching.
Perhaps you like the Gnome video too ! ( ruclips.net/video/Gh3W-9gZXFw/видео.html )
@@pierrejansen2702Thanks for the valuable reply!
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Great sir wonderful experience
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
You may want to have a look at some more videos on my youtube channel: ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
and on my web-site: www.pjvision.nl
Cheers and Enjoy !
Didn't understand anything, but very interesting!
Thanks for your response.
Just to make it a bit more clear ... Rotary engines were widely used for aircraft during the WW1 period. The crankshaft remains stationary and the entire cylinder block rotates around it. The crankshaft was fixed solidly to the airframe, and the propeller was simply bolted to the front of the crankcase.
Weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation.
Rotary engines have no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets and the radiator.
This provides excellent self-cooling, the rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed.
They provided and excellent power to weight ratio.
Thanks for watching !!
Very nice french work and quality...!!!!
Thanks for your compliments Pascal
That was awesome I freaking loved it beautifully done really enjoyed that. I can watch that over and over
Thanks for your kind words Paul.
@@pierrejansen2702 do no
wonderful animation......
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
what kind of animation is this ? blessed with it man
A 3D animation about the assembly of the Clerget Engine. All 3D modeling and animations are done with MicroStation V8i (Bentley Systems) which uses the Luxology (Modo) rendering engine. Thanks for your compliments and for watching !!
Ghg
Wow! - a sublime animation! Bravo, sir!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
Outstanding work on the design, and especially the assembly animation. One of the very best that I've ever seen, and, I'm saying this over 5 years after your original release. Thanks again, SCR
Thank you for your compliments.
It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching (again) !!!
Excellent, and the music was perfect. Some cool jazz....😎
Glad to hear you liked my music too and thanks for watching !!
As primative as this engine was, it still was machined and assembled with great precision at a time when most roads in America were dirt and cowboys still had a job.
Why Not... those were the days.... However, from the Fly Boys movie I've learned the some cowboys left there jobs and went to France in order to fly (and fight) in aero planes powered by rotary engines.
ព្រះ
Whynot Whynot '"
Those were the days alas very few to be found these days,
All except the very extensive calculations were done with slide rules and those planes are still flying!
Bonjour. Très bonne vidéo. Merci.
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
Beautiful Visual & Graphics - Yet all i could wonder was how much precision machining & fabrication went into each of the actual engine components & parts, designed & built in 1916, without the CNC machinery we have nowadays
Thank you for your compliments.
Indeed a masterpiece of engineering when you realize that there were no computers, no CNC and all designed by pencil on paper with a "Faber-Castell" slide-ruler.
Thanks for watching !!
ㅑ
0
Amazing Assembly video
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
This is the best video i have ever seen on RUclips. Just cant imagine how much hard work is there behind this video . Amazing my friend 🖒
Ajay, thank you for your compliments and kind words !
Outstanding simulation, and fitting music.
Thanks for the compliment Nigel, glad you liked the music too !
I love ROTARY engines.Been a military aircraft buff since childhood and the ROTARY engine has always fascinated me.Thanks for sharing man,I love this stuff.And the video...awesome and informative.Excellent work brother.
You're welcome, John. Thanks for the compliments !
This video was actually fun to watch.
Thank you!!
100% TOP SHOW WOW GREAT MUSIC AND EVERYTHING THANK YOU SIR .
Thanks for your compliments !
No worries dick head lol
Excellent animation. Perfection.
Thank you for your compliments and thanks for watching !!
The best animation I ever seen..A huge thumbs up!!!
You made me blush. Thank you !
Human made miracle.... jus wow for d technology
Weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation. Rotary engines provide excellent self-cooling, the rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed. These engines had no a need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets, radiator. etc. and provided an excellent power to weight ratio.
Thanks for watching !!.
@@pierrejansen2702 s bro... i kno it thanks for ur valuable information...
Incredible engine, to think that technology advances in great steps
Indeed ! Thanks for watching.
Lovely video, no distractions. congrats.
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching !!
Amazing CAD work. I really appreciate the time you took to model this and the assembly.
Thank you for your compliments.
It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
if you want to see more. Click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!
Very very very excellent I like it
Thank you for your compliments.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
@@pierrejansen2702 Thanks for the reply. It's a great work and a masterpiece. I am very interested in the machines
@@ekhles104 Thank you !!
Fantastic Pierre beautifully done regards Tim
Thanks Tim
1 hp motor
Great video! I lost count how many times I watch
Thanks for your compliments and for watching it many times. Glad you enjoyed it !!
To use one of the current buzzwords, this video is VERY satisfying. Excellent animation, and even the music was OK, subtle and smooth. Great vid!!
I have to amend this comment...each time I re-watch this vid, I am more and more impressed. The animation's parts' actual 'motion' is smooth, and precise. Positions of pieces are logical. The actual 'rendering' (is that the word?, the creation of the images of the pieces) is SO realistic. Texture of the surfaces, shadows, sharpness (threads etc.) great! The text is concise but clear and well-phrased. I was surprised at how 'thin' the carburetors were. I was almost totally unfamiliar with these types of rotating engines, I'd heard of them but never seen one, even an animation, in action.I was literally amazed to watch it rotate, and still find it a little hard to fathom, despite seeing it all laid out. lol All in all, quite an impressive vid.
David, thanks for you reaction and compliments.
Coolest visual explaining, and coolest music too ! Top quality production - well done .
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching and listening to my music !!!
That must be a nightmare to get the timing right on that🤯
If you got the exhaust and inlet valves timing gears right for one cylinder, it'll be correct for all 9. Same for the ignition timing.
However, next comes all the inlet- and exhaust push rods .....
Thanks for your response and for watching !!
Beautifully made animation. Thanks!
Thank you for your compliments. It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching !!!
Excelente trabalho! Merecedor de premios de animação e CAD! E a música perfeitamente adequada. Trabalho para ser guardado como um jóia preciosa de explicação, demonstração de funcionamento e montagem!! Parabens à toda equipe de trabalho!!!
Thank you for your compliments.
It's these kind of responses that keeps me creating these videos.
If you want to see more, click on my channel; ruclips.net/channel/UCbyGXbMxmWfH8XsXzmmddhQ
Also my web-site ( www.pjvision.nl ) now contains 360 degr. views of the various WW1 engines.
Thanks for watching (and listening) !!!
It's amazing engine technology.... stunning
Yes indeed. All based on the fact that weight was an important issue during the early days of aviation. Rotary engines have no need for cooling liquid, pipes, water jackets, radiator or batteries. They provided excellent self-cooling. The rotating crankcase/cylinder assembly created its own cooling airflow, even with the aircraft at rest. Because of the rotating mass, no flywheel is needed. They provided and excellent power to weight ratio.
Thanks for watching !!
My dream now is project engines like This
Thanks for watching !!
great vid!
beautiful
Thank you for your compliment and thanks for watching !!!
beautiful
Thanks you!