For the gear you get a bucket from the beach. talk to the guy sitting in the chair. go to the snow forts and get the bucket full of that snow. go to the Pizza parlor and pick up the piano notes off the floor. than go to the town and ask that agent penguin for a flier of a gear. then go to the stage. click the piano. put the notes on the piano and play them. then after your done playing them the yellow puffle will come out. give him the picture of the gear and then the bucket of snow. pick it up and take it into g's invention room freeze it. then take it to the clock and put it in place. For the spring its at the iceburg far in the water. you have to get the magnet from headquarters and bring it to the iceburg. click the magnet and drag it to the place where the spring is. bring the spring to the freezer in the invention room. put the spring on it. click the fire button. the ice melts and you can take it to the clock. You completed the Mission! ( p.s. you also need the target which you get from the penguins at the docks )
by farting
from rookie at the town
The spring is at the iceberg, the target is at the dock and find the pic of the gear at the town then give it to the yellow puffle at the stage and it will make you a gear, then go to the gadget room in the HQ and put the gear in ice on the machine! ☺
You ice it in the test machine in the hq.
You go to the ice-berg and it will be floating there. You need to get the electro magnet from G and bring it there and the electro magnet will attract the spring. THen you go to the gadget room and put it in the test chamber. Press the fire button. The ice around the spring will melt, and then finish the mission.
If you go to the base, you will see the invention cabinet has a magnet in it, find the key to the lock, then open the door, obtain the magnet then use it to get the spring, which will be iced over.
click on the piano
look on www.Youtube.com
find it
At the Town
A spring-driven machinery that begins with "clock" is a "clockwork." Clockwork refers to the mechanism inside a clock or watch that uses a coiled spring to store energy, which is then released gradually to power the movement of the hands or gears. This technology is fundamental to traditional timekeeping devices and operates based on the principles of mechanical energy and gear ratios.
Kinetic energy and potential energy is stored in the wound-up spring or gear of the toy mechanism.It is called conservation of energy.