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The pneumatics of Hero of Alexandria

Chapter 19: 14. A Bird made to whistle by flowing Water.
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About This Book

A systematic practical handbook of machines and demonstrations that uses air, steam, heat, and water to produce mechanical effects. The text gives clear descriptions, construction details, and diagrams for siphons, valves, pumps, fountains, jets, self‑acting mechanisms, and ritual or theatrical contrivances driven by pressure and temperature changes. Explanations focus on the mechanical principles behind pneumatic and hydraulic behaviors and on ways to control flow and timing, with numbered propositions that pair instructional steps with illustrative figures for building and operating each apparatus.

14. A Bird made to whistle by flowing Water.

Vessels may be made such that, when water is poured into them, the note of the black-cap, or a whistling sound, is produced. The following is their construction. Let A B C D (fig. 14) be a hollow air-tight pedestal: through the top, A D, let a funnel, E F, be introduced and soldered into the surface, its tube approaching so near to the bottom as only to leave a passage for the water. Let G H K be a small pipe, such as will emit sound, communicating with the pedestal and likewise soldered into A D. Its extremity, which is curved, must dip into water contained in a small vessel placed near at L. If water be poured in through the funnel E F, the result will be that the air, being driven out, passes through the pipe G H K, and emits a sound. When the extremity of the pipe dips into water a bubbling sound is heard, and the note of the black-cap is produced: if no water is near, there will be a whistling only.

These sounds are produced through pipes; but the quality of the sounds will vary as the pipes are more or less fine, or longer, or shorter; and as a larger or smaller portion of the pipe is immersed in the water: so that by this means the distinct notes of many birds can be produced. The figures of several different birds are arranged near a fountain, or in a cave, or in any place where there is running water: near them sits an owl, which, apparently of her own accord, turns at one time towards the birds, and then again away from them; and when the owl looks away the birds sing, when she looks at them they are mute: and this may be repeated frequently.