John MacArthur
NAWCC Member
I have now gotten to halfway on my #6 regulator movement and thought I'd show some of the changes I've made. For starters, this clock will not have mercury compensation, but a heat treated Invar rod with a Strasser style bob. This will make it easier to adjust the compensation, as well as reduce the time lag for full compensation that occurs with the mercury bob. Anyway, I've depleted my stash of mercury and it's very expensive, if at all possible, to get now.
In addition I've made the pallets from tungsten carbide instead of sapphire. The sapphire has the problem of the sharp edge at the end of the impulse plane chipping off in very small pieces, and the carbide will not do that. This is somewhat experimental, as I'm not sure about the oil retaining property of the carbide as compared to sapphire.
I have used shielded miniature ball bearings on the barrel arbor, in the weight pulley, and at the front of the center arbor. This should substantially reduce train friction. I've added a counterweight to the cannon pinion that holds the minute hand to remove any cyclical timekeeping errors that not having this might cause.
I have included jewels at the back of the center arbor and both ends of the third wheel. My thought is to reduce train friction as much a possible in this movement.. The other minor modification has been to make the third wheel arbor in the German style with the wheel toward the front plate instead of behind the center wheel. This makes for a slightly more compact movement.
This movement is somewhat experimental at this stage and I'm working rather more slowly on it, but it is nearly ready to set on a test stand and see how much power it needs and how well the pendulum compensation works.
Johnny

In addition I've made the pallets from tungsten carbide instead of sapphire. The sapphire has the problem of the sharp edge at the end of the impulse plane chipping off in very small pieces, and the carbide will not do that. This is somewhat experimental, as I'm not sure about the oil retaining property of the carbide as compared to sapphire.

I have used shielded miniature ball bearings on the barrel arbor, in the weight pulley, and at the front of the center arbor. This should substantially reduce train friction. I've added a counterweight to the cannon pinion that holds the minute hand to remove any cyclical timekeeping errors that not having this might cause.

I have included jewels at the back of the center arbor and both ends of the third wheel. My thought is to reduce train friction as much a possible in this movement.. The other minor modification has been to make the third wheel arbor in the German style with the wheel toward the front plate instead of behind the center wheel. This makes for a slightly more compact movement.

This movement is somewhat experimental at this stage and I'm working rather more slowly on it, but it is nearly ready to set on a test stand and see how much power it needs and how well the pendulum compensation works.
Johnny
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