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Product: Clock: Accuracy
Clockspring overwinding preventor   (+3)  [vote for, against]
Don't grind the coils

I love mechanical watches and clocks. I collect the former, and accumulate the latter.

One problem with basic spring-powered, pendulum-regulated clocks is that they are not isochronous: they run faster when the spring is newly-wound-up than when it's almost run down. This is because the escape wheel (which is driven, indirectly, by the spring) gives the pendulum a tiny nudge via the escapement, at each swing, to keep it going. This tiny nudge is enough to make the pendulum swing a little faster than its "natural" rate. The nudge is stronger when the clock is first wound, and weaker as it runs down, so the clock runs faster and then slower by a very small amount. As an example, I have an old station clock with an 8-day movement which gains about 5 min in the three days after its wound, and then loses about 8min over the next 4 days. Most of the gain is in the first day, and I've set the subsequent loss to offset this, so the clock is never more than 5min out.

Now, this 8-day movement will run the clock for 8 days or more (hence its name), but the clock will run most accurately if it is wound up less than fully at the start of the week, and then run for only 7 days before winding again. In this way, you avoid the "very fast" bit when the clock has been wound up as far as possible, and also the "very slow" bit on the 8th day when it is almost unwound.

The problem is, though, that it's very difficult to wind the clock up just enough to keep it going for 7 days. The only way you can tell when it's wound is when the spring "goes tight" (ie, the coils start to touch eachother), and by this point you've given it the full 8 days of winding, and it will run very fast for the first day.

You could, of course, count the number of turns of the winding key, and find that a full winding was 16 turns of the key, so 14 turns would be ideal. However, if you're slightly out (eg, if it unwinds only 13.5 turns in a week), then you'll 'accumulate' 0.5 turns per week, and you'll soon be overwinding the clock.

So.

A modest proposal.

The winding key should, in fact, be a miniature torque-wrench. In this way, you'd be able to tell when the mainspring was wound sufficiently to keep the clock running for 7 days, but not overwound to the point of over-driving the clock on the first day.

That's it, really.

You can stop reading now, because I am about to stop writing.

And don't talk to me about bloody fusées, that's all I can say.
-- MaxwellBuchanan, Jul 09 2010

Bloody fusees http://webofstories.com/play/10679
[mouseposture, Jul 09 2010]

1) I'm almost sure I owned a watch, once, with a clutch on the stem. However, it was only to protect against damage from overwinding, not to improve accuracy.

2) Have you seen the George Daniels interviews on Web of Stories? <link>
-- mouseposture, Jul 09 2010


Mouse - thank you so much for the link!!! I had not seen it, and I am absolutely enchanted having watched two "episodes".

If I could live my life over again, I think I'd be happy to come back as a watchmaker. Mechanical watches are so irrelevant that it becomes possible to devote one's life to them.
-- MaxwellBuchanan, Jul 09 2010


"And I decided one day that I would pluck up enough courage to take the spring out of the barrel of the gramophone motor so that I could examine it more closely. And I don't know why I thought I could examine it more closely, I suspect it was just traces of destructive interference that all boys have you see, I just wanted to find out what was in it. And I got this spring out and it was enormous and it was about six feet long and two inches wide"

He got it back in - talk about a tiger by the tail. He'd make a great halfbaker.
-- normzone, Jul 10 2010


He was also lucky not to lose a finger. Just last week I stupidly forgot to let down a mainspring before working on a movement. The result was, in effect, a spring-driven circular saw which ran for about one second, discharging all the energy in the mainspring. Fortunately my finger was only just touching the teeth of the mainspring wheel, so I just got an eighth-inch groove taken out of me. Maybe that's why I love watches more than clocks.
-- MaxwellBuchanan, Jul 10 2010



random, halfbakery