
Each dot represents half and hour minecraft time. The button will say “solid” or “pulse” and in solid mode it will emit redstone for the entire period the redstone is turned on in the clock. *New Feature: Added a solid redstone / pulsed redstone toggle button to the clock. This block can be made from any of the 6 different vanilla woods or from framing sheets and framing boards (replace planks with sheet and slabs with boards) and will look like the wood that is used. To shift the clock forward to the front of the block, right click the bookcase with either the screw gun or the hand drill. Then, using the screw gun or the hand drill, sneak right click one of the clocks, then sneak right click the second clock and they will connect. To attach 2 clocks together and make a grandfather clock, place a clock on top of another clock in the same orientation. Use the buttons at the bottom of the GUI to enable redstone output and chime sounds as well as the option to disable the tick sound. Click on the numbered presets or click round dots circled around the clock face. The clock can also be shifted forward to sit on the front half of the block. The clock also comes in the 6 different vanilla woods and in a framed block version which can be used with the Furniture Paneler to make it look like any solid block. Each dot on the clock GUI represents a half hour of Minecraft Time. The clock can also be switched between a pulse redstone mode that will emit a redstone signal for about 1 second for selected times or a solid redstone mode that will remain on for the duration of the selected times.

Two clock can be stacked and attached together to make a grandfather clock. The pendulum ticks in real world seconds.


The time on the face refers to in game time where 6 o’clock is sunup and 18 o’clock is sundown. (I just realized the following pictures might be a little big, so here's an album you can look at with smaller pictures.The clock tells minecraft time and can make chime sounds and emit redstone signals.

#MINECRAFT BIG CLOCK FULL#
With the turntable set to 5 seconds, this expands the time required to pass a full cycle to 1200 seconds, or a full 24 Minecraft "hours".Īll told, it wasn't overly difficult to build and doesn't require so many resources that it would be implausible to execute in a legit world. etc seconds, we can build an accurate Minecraft clock with just a little extra timing work.īasically, I took a turntable, used it to time a 10-space piston driven block band, which I then used to time a 24-block piston-band which outputs to a 12-hour clock face. The difficulty with making a 12 hour clock is that Minecraft has a 20 minute day, so to divide each day/night cycle into 24 hours would require each Minecraft 'hour' to be 50 seconds however, with the inclusion of the turntable timer that clocks accuratly at 0.5/1/2/5. I used TaviRider's World of Redstone as a test-world to demonstrate the concept (a great resource if you don't know the basics of redstone), but it's a bit deprecated now since it was made before snow fell in Beta.
#MINECRAFT BIG CLOCK SERIES#
I got excited by the idea of being able to make an accurate clock in Minecraft, so I built a 12 hour clock using the turntable to clock a double series of piston-driven bands that output to a clock face built using light blocks.
