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Watch and Clock Escapements
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Title: Watch and Clock Escapements A Complete Study in Theory and Practice of the Lever, Cylinder and Chronometer Escapements, Together with a Brief Account of the Origin and Evolution of the Escapement in Horology
Author: Anonymous
Release Date: November 6, 2005 [eBook #17021]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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WATCH AND CLOCK ESCAPEMENTS
A Complete Study in Theory and Practice of the Lever, Cylinder and Chronometer Escapements, Together with a Brief Account of the Origin and Evolution of the Escapement in Horology
Compiled from the well-known Escapement Serials published in The Keystone
Nearly Two Hundred Original Illustrations
Published by The Keystone The Organ of the Jewelry and Optical Trades 19th & Brown Sts., Philadelphia, U.S.A.
1904
All Rights Reserved Copyright, 1904, By B. Thorpe, Publisher of the Keystone.
PREFACE
Especially notable among the achievements of The Keystone in the field of horology were the three serials devoted to the lever, cylinder and chronometer escapements. So highly valued were these serials when published that on the completion of each we were importuned to republish it in book form, but we deemed it advisable to postpone such publication until the completion of all three, in order that the volume should be a complete treatise on the several escapements in use in horology. The recent completion of the third serial gave us the opportunity to republish in book form, and the present volume is the result. We present it to the trade and students of horology happy in the knowledge that its contents have already received their approval. An interesting addition to the book is the illustrated story of the escapements, from the first crude conceptions to their present perfection.
CONTENTS
CHAPTER I.
THE DETACHED LEVER ESCAPEMENT 9
CHAPTER II.
THE CYLINDER ESCAPEMENT 111
CHAPTER III.
THE CHRONOMETER ESCAPEMENT 131
CHAPTER IV.
HISTORY OF ESCAPEMENTS 153
CHAPTER V.
PUTTING IN A NEW CYLINDER 169
INDEX 177
WATCH AND CLOCK ESCAPEMENTS
CHAPTER I.
THE DETACHED LEVER ESCAPEMENT.
In this treatise we do not propose to go into the history of this escapement and give a long dissertation on its origin and evolution, but shall confine ourselves strictly to the designing and construction as employed in our best watches. By designing, we mean giving full instructions for drawing an escapement of this kind to the best proportions. The workman will need but few drawing instruments, and a drawing-board about 15" by 18" will be quite large enough. The necessary drawing-instruments are a T-square with 15" blade; a scale of inches divided into decimal parts; two pairs dividers with pen and pencil points--one pair of these dividers to be 5" and the other 6"; one ruling pen. Other instruments can be added as the workman finds he needs them. Those enumerated above, however, will be all that are absolutely necessary.
[Illustration: Fig. 1]
We shall, in addition, need an arc of degrees, which we can best make for ourselves. To construct one, we procure a piece of No. 24 brass, about 5?" long by 1?" wide. We show such a piece of brass at A, Fig. 1. On this piece of brass we sweep two arcs with a pair of dividers set at precisely 5", as shown (reduced) at a a and b b. On these arcs we set off the space held in our dividers--that is 5"--as shown at the short radial lines at each end of the two arcs. Now it is a well-known fact that the space embraced by our dividers contains exactly sixty degrees of the arcs a a and b b, or one-sixth of the entire circle; consequently, we divide the arcs a a and b b into sixty equal parts, to represent degrees, and at one end of these arcs we halve five spaces so we can get at half degrees.
[Illustration: Fig. 2]
Before we take up the details of drawing an escapement we will say a few words about "degrees," as this seems to be something difficult to understand by most pupils in horology when learning to draw parts of watches to scale. At Fig. 2 we show several short arcs of fifteen degrees, all having the common center g. Most learners seem to have an idea that a degree must be a specific space, like an inch or a foot. Now
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