One of my students decided to get some hard data for herself so she could better gauge her beating. She kindly agreed to write up what she did. Here is part 1.
How hard am I beating ?
I was weaving today and I noticed as I
looked at my web, that there was this periodic line across the width of my
cloth. I thought to myself this line is occurring with a regularity that
resembles the frequency of my warp advancement. Is it possible that I am
beating too hard at the start, after each time I advance the warp? I left the
loom and I said to myself, there has to be a way that this can be measured so I
can teach my body what the acceptable beat is for this project. What I was
looking for was to establish a biofeedback
loop, so I could learn fast from real data.
Sitting at my desk, I began to consider the first principles. The force
of the beater hitting the fell of the cloth may be resulting in this variable
density that I am observing, or at least it is one of the parameters. I began scribbling, F=ma (force= mass x acceleration).
I know that the mass of the beater is fixed and constant . The exact beater
mass value is not relevant, since on each beat the mass will be the same, so
all I need to do is measure the acceleration of the beater as I move it towards
the fell line. If I can get that measurement in a reoccurring manner and record
it, I can use the data to help me confidently refine my beat to the desired
range, for that project and all others in the future.
As an engineer I know that there are
measuring devices for everything, so I started to look for an accelerometer
that I could strap to my loom. I wanted it to be inexpensive, since I was only
going to use it for a short period of time to increase my mindfulness. I then
had another idea, what about my Garmin watch that I use for running , that has
an accelerometer. If my watch has it then perhaps there is an app that I can
load on my smart phone. Of course there was an app, many in fact and I chose
one called G Accelerometer and the price was right, it was free.
After uploading the app , I went into the
settings and zeroed the gravity component ,we don’t really need it since I am
only interested in the horizontal displacement of the beater. If you leave the
gravity component on it is ok, but not necessary. I strapped my phone with the
accelerometer app on to my beater and I began to weave. The picture below shows
the simplicity of the setup.
What I found was that I had a very sporadic
beat after each advancement of the warp, the value of which ranged by an order
of magnitude. This graph below was plotted using the numbers that were exported
from the app. The absolute magnitude is not of importance, I was looking for
feedback on my beating pattern and trends. The Y axis is measured in Gravity
units (Gs) and the X axis is seconds. You may recall that one G is 9.8 meters/ sec 2 or
386 inches/sec 2. If I eyeball this graph and take out
the extreme high beat values, I can see a trend line around 0.05 Gs or 19
inches/ sec 2
I repeated this process several more times
and I plotted my progress throughout the following days and I eventually got a
much improved beat consistency at a lower beat, that gave me the picks per inch
I was looking for. In the graph below,
recorded for a longer period of time, you can see a trend line around 0.015Gs, which is
approximately 6 inches/sec 2. There are still variances and there always will be, since I am not a
machine, however I have learned that a simple app can give timely feedback into
our body movements that can be used to improve weaving . I hope you will give this a try for
yourselves, it may be interesting to see how many Gs you are putting on any
given project.
7 comments:
LOVE this. I am not an engineer, but am in a data-driven profession. Will definitely try this.
Of course there's an app for that!
Thank you both for sharing this incredible information. It's amazing research with visual results in the cloth.
What a brilliant idea to use an accelerometer to measure one's beat! Only an engineer would have thought (known) of such a thing. And to think there's a phone app... It's wonderful how modern technology can be used to facilitate improvement in an ancient craft.
Thank you for sharing! Research & analysis is my bread and butter, so this makes my data-intrigued heart sing. Now to go make your ideas inform some of my own biofeedback loop!
This is great! Thank you!
Wow!! Brilliant. Thank you!
You’ve given us a smart tool that we can duplicate too.
This is awesome!! I love how analytical we weavers tend to be. And I may try your accelerometer method to help me beat consistently when weaving overshot.
Post a Comment