Re: Getting Started w/ Mechanical Clocks
- From: Bo Williams <williams@xxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Sat, 30 Dec 2006 17:35:23 -0600
BobHoover wrote:
drachs@xxxxxxxxx wrote:I want to learn how to
design and fabricate these beautifull things.
... but I don't know where to start.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
For ultra-basics you might consider a simple wooden clock kit.
No special tools are needed and it's difficult to assemble one that
does NOT work... after a fashion :-) By the same token, it's
virtually impossible to come away from a wooden clock WITHOUT a
complete understanding of the gear-train and mechanics that are
fundamental to a pendulum-type time-keeper.
For the novice, especially so for youngsters, a wooden clock is a kind
of No-Fault project, very difficult to do wrong and superbly satisfying
when a touch of sandpaper and whiff of graphite produces a stately
tick-tocker. The lack of accuracy is acceptable because the builder
understands the reasons for it, laying the ground work for future
projects which embody less friction and more precision.
What a great post. Thanks for that. I'm going to have to get one myself now.
--
Bo Williams - williams@xxxxxxxxxx
http://hiwaay.net/~williams/
http://wmwms.blogspot.com/
.
- References:
- Getting Started w/ Mechanical Clocks
- From: drachs
- Re: Getting Started w/ Mechanical Clocks
- From: BobHoover
- Getting Started w/ Mechanical Clocks
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