Wooden Gear Clock

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berry
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Joined: Sun Oct 15, 2006 5:46 pm
Location: St. Paul, MN

Wooden Gear Clock continued

Post by berry »

I added all the wheels and turned the unit by hand and everything worked fine. Then I added the pallet and pendulum, they have a very tight tolerance and the clock kept stopping. I played with it a little at a time sanding a tooth or one of the important faces on the pallet. Pretty soon everything was working.

[ATTACH]23587[/ATTACH]

[ATTACH]23588[/ATTACH]

The clock is losing about an hour a day and I don’t have the line on the weights set correctly yet. But I’m not going to make any changes for a couple weeks. I want to see if it breaks-in. If the clock loses time the pendulum shaft needs to be shortened.

Here are a couple of YouTube links to the clock in operation. My old camera doesn’t do it justice in particular you don’t get the great sound the clock makes.

http://youtu.be/qKMOcGxNiBI
http://youtu.be/WcCZnA5wtNs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kj3Ayiu69TI

I’m from the period when time came from Bulova, not Verizon. I find it relaxing and intriguing to measure time without batteries or satellites or being connected to some network. And I’m sure I’ll build another clock.

Happy New Year to one and all!
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New Leaf Custom Woodworking
Berry Conway - Chief Dust Maker
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camerio
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Location: Valcartier, just north of Quebec City, CANADA

Post by camerio »

Very good work and very special !
Keep us informed of any other projects .
Now you've got the 'TIME'
Camerio
MarkV 520 & Band saw
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JPG
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Location: Lexington, Ky (TAMECAT territory)

Post by JPG »

berry wrote:I added all the wheels and turned the unit by hand and everything worked fine. Then I added the pallet and pendulum, they have a very tight tolerance and the clock kept stopping. I played with it a little at a time sanding a tooth or one of the important faces on the pallet. Pretty soon everything was working.

[ATTACH]23587[/ATTACH]

[ATTACH]23588[/ATTACH]

The clock is losing about an hour a day and I don’t have the line on the weights set correctly yet. But I’m not going to make any changes for a couple weeks. I want to see if it breaks-in. If the clock loses time the pendulum shaft needs to be shortened.

Here are a couple of YouTube links to the clock in operation. My old camera doesn’t do it justice in particular you don’t get the great sound the clock makes.

http://youtu.be/qKMOcGxNiBI
http://youtu.be/WcCZnA5wtNs
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kj3Ayiu69TI

I’m from the period when time came from Bulova, not Verizon. I find it relaxing and intriguing to measure time without batteries or satellites or being connected to some network. And I’m sure I’ll build another clock.

Happy New Year to one and all!
Move the bob up about 3 inches.:)
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╟JPG ╢
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Goldie(Bought New SN 377425)/4" jointer/6" beltsander/12" planer/stripsander/bandsaw/powerstation /Scroll saw/Jig saw /Craftsman 10" ras/Craftsman 6" thicknessplaner/ Dayton10"tablesaw(restoredfromneighborstrashpile)/ Mark VII restoration in 'progress'/ 10
E[/size](SN E3779) restoration in progress, a 510 on the back burner and a growing pile of items to be eventually returned to useful life. - aka Red Grange
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