Click on each picture for a larger view.

 
  Made of cherry and birch, the Kaleidoscope features crank-operated chain-driven object case rotation. It has battery-powered internal lighting. The mirror system is "polyangular", controlled by the knob on the top. It can be adjusted to produce 3-,4-,5-, or 6-pointed images. The right-angle bevel gearset was the hard part!
Twelve turns of the crank rotates the object chamber once, so you can fine-tune the view.
 
 
  There are two interchangeable object chambers - one dry, and one liquid-filled. With the liquid chamber (glycerin), the image constantly changes as some stuff floats and some sinks.
It does no justice, but I tried to photograph some images through the eyepiece (which magnifies 2X, thanks to a lens from an old pair of reading glasses).
This project started out as an experiment to see if I could build a wooden "bicycle chain".
The tedium of cutting out all those little pieces - all the same - nearly killed me.
The spring-loaded tensioner wheel allows smooth rotation in either direction.
 
The "goodies" in each object chamber can be changed.
There is a matching wooden box to hold the unused chamber
and a great assortment of interesting little bits to view.
the Kaleidoscope
I've built kaleidoscopes all my life, but I'd never thought of this.
Inspired by the wonderful works of JR Beall, after I made that chain, this followed.

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