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American Clock Company Chicago 1889

TQ60

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Sep 15, 2016
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We picked this clock up years ago and forgot about it.

Found while looking for something else.

Electric by maybe a couple 1.5 volt ign batteries.

Mercury pendulum with a built in level.

Seems well made but very dirty so some cleanup is needed.

The Pendulum suspension is missing th e coupling between rod and suspension, but good thing is previous owner attached with wire.

it seems to work but will need cleaning.

Serial number D7994
Patent date Nov. 21,1899

Anyone have one of these or some history on them?

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Tim Orr

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Good afternoon!

I have one someplace that is similar to yours, but has a conventional pendulum (not mercury) and no level. Mine has no bezel or glass, and looks as though it never had either.

I have heard that these were "premiums" awarded to newspaper carriers, but perhaps someone else can verify.

Best regards!

Tim Orr
 

TQ60

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Sep 15, 2016
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Today we cleaned it up.

It was dusty but otherwise not bad.

Used a 5 volt wall wart and the winding is great.

The level is needed as it is very picky.
The escapement was not working well, but simple adjustment there.

The suspension is the last puzzle, we just used some wire for now but it seems that there should be more due to the amount of holes.

May need to do more searching, maybe a patent search.

On the bottom of the ornamental feet are adjustable insert feet.

One is loose so repairs needed, will do that when we do the casework.

During first testing it would only run for a short time, seems to be doing well now.

This also is a clever layout.

The back is nailed in place, but the movement attaches to the dial and is smaller diameter.

The dial attaches to front via screw plates attached to from.

One can open the top, remove pendulum then remove clock like a Service module for service or replacement without needing access to back.

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Tim Orr

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Good evening!

Not sure I'd run this for long on a 5v wall wart. Unregulated, those warts can easily deliver 6v or more. Could accelerate the frying of the switch contacts.

Chances are, no more than 3v was used originally, and being dry cells, probably pretty much right on the nose 3v. I'd bet that once it's cleaned and serviced, 3v will be just fine. There's another thread here about "American" clocks, a reprise of a very very old thread.

You had said in your original posting that it has a mercury pendulum. Does it really?

Best regards!

Tim Orr
 
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TQ60

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Sep 15, 2016
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The pendulum has a liquid inside and is very heavy for the size.

The wall wart was just for testing and not long term.

It is a switching type so 5 volts out.

Coil worked very well, the "running voltage" during the time of load may be less depending on the load of the coils.

Original was pair of 1.5 volt batteries so about 3 volts.

We have some flat pack Lithium batteries removed from communications radios, 3400 MHr.

They should be close to 3 volts, 3.4 or so maybe.

Pondering either using larger capacity battery or possible use of super-cap as some have suggested.

One thought to limit current is to combine a larger capacity battery for longer run time with a super-cap isolated by a resistor to limit the current to that stored in the capacitor.

One thought was to add a relay or transistor switch to isolate the current from the switch, but then it would not be "original".

A relay can be added later if it fails, that can be for someone down the road.

For now goal is to get it running properly.
 

Ingulphus

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These clocks were made with agate pallets and mercury filled pendulums. They require 3 volts DC but need a higher amperage to reset the weight that powers the movement; more than regular batteries. When I had one, I used air alkaline batteries that look like dry cells and fit inside the case. I bought mine from McMaster-Carr the price has increased since then, but they lasted me quite a while, and are closer to the original
cells.

As I remember, there was a thin suspension spring that connected the time regulator to the pendulum rod, but it's been about ten years since I had the clock (and regret selling it), so I may be wrong.
.
 
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TQ60

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The brain ever stops...

The thought of protecting the coil switch had been bouncing in there for some time, then this morning the light went off.

This has NOT been tested, just sketched it now.

It is based on VERY OLD automotive stereo external audio power boosters that used the current drain of the radio to turn on the Amp.

Really simple, a diode is added to the path, current through diode turns on transistor that activates a relay.

How to protect the switch WITHOUT modification?

This is all external to the original connections.

We need minimal current during "turn on", and if possible, zero current for "turn off".

We start with the diode and transistor, but add a resistor to limit the current.

This PREVENTS the coils from working, but does allow very small current through the switch to be seen by the transistor.

The transistor is not likely able to drive the relay, but we need to do something else here so we add another transistor.

First transistor senses the current from the coil and turns on the second transistor.

Second transistor turns on a relay.

This relay provides battery power to the clock, bypassing the transistor.

This turns off the relay providing the full current.

A "hold" capacitor is added to the second transistor so the relay will stay on for long enough to "fire" the coils.

The trick is to have the size such that it only is on for the time it takes to fire the coils to toss the weight up and not hold them.

We think the hold time should be very short, the goal is to have the relay release before the switch opens.

If we can time it well there will be very little current through the switch

We could add a diode connected to the coils, there is a screw on the switchso easy to restore.

This diode can go back to battery to capture some of the ringing from the coil field collapse.

First photo is without diode for capture, second is edited one with diode, moved after "DUH" moment, I wrong place...

This is all external to the clock, except for the diode.

Not sure if it will work, looks good on paper though.


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TQ60

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Sep 15, 2016
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Here is the battery, 2 cells in series for 7.5 volts, will remove and do parallel, 3.4 amp hr each so should be good for 6 Amp or more parallel.

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Jmeechie

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Hi,
These clocks as previously stated, we’re powered by 3 volts DC and honestly require a low milliampere as they were powered by 2 number 6 batteries. I have several of these clocks and the biggest issues are the unique pendulum/suspension assembly and the fact that the weight arms are not synchronous or side by side, but rather staggered so it only throws 1 weight arm at a time every roughly 12 minutes. I’ve attached a picture of a complete upper assembly. Yes, the bob were either mercury or solid and you should be able to tell if mercury filled by giving it a shake and you should feel it sloshing around. The spring is 0.003” thick.
I strongly recommend not connecting all that amperage to the clock as again 3 volts and only milliamperes is all needed to drive this clock. 2 D cell batteries in series will run one or these clocks for several years!
Cheers,
James

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TQ60

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Thanks for the thickness, the rest we can figure out from the photos.

If you could measure the length and width of the spring it would help.

Distance between the closest holes as well, that would save us from translating from photos.

Having more current available does not matter, the coils will draw what they will based on their resistance.

We are guessing maybe 60 ma, not much and this should not stress the switch.

inrush current may be higher, and there could be arcing during make and break that causes the damage.

There are a few posts stating that the weak point of these are the contacts fail.

The Lithium battery should be close enough to the pair of ignition batteries so the current should be very close.

The circuit works by only connecting the battery directly to the coils after the switch has made its connection and opening the circuit before the switch opens up.

This transfers the arcing to the relay, away from the internal switch, without modifying the clock.

We may not be able to find a relay that works on 3 volts, so maybe a transistor.

It is just something to play with for fun that may improve battery life while reducing strain on the clock, without modifying it.
 

Jmeechie

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Here’s the spring spec
Thickness 0.004” (apologies for earlier error at 0.003”)
Total length 1.050”
Width 0.190
Centre to centre inner holes 0.625
Total length of pendulum assy 9” 1/4

The only issue is these coil packs were made with a resistor wired in across the coils to control arcing and American Clock Co was one of the few, personally, that got it right and controlled the arc. Wear and discoloration (tarnish/dirt) is the biggest issue with the contacts. I have to kindly disagree with over powering the coils, several issues will result as I’ve repaired and restored numerous Electro Mechanical clocks for 35+ years and seen people apply everything up to 110v ac! The coil cores will start to become heavily magnetized, stronger magnetic field will slam the weight arms causing excessive damage and wear to pivots, weights and gears, amperage consideration is more important vs voltage as the old #6 dry cells were only good for around 1.4 volts and minimal amperage and the arc was created by the coil field collapsing when the contacts open. Modern batteries, let alone lithium batteries are capable of dumping larger amounts of amperage and volts and I’ve found with these specific clocks they’ll run happily on 3 volts from 2 C or D cells in series for several years. These clocks suffer from miss adjusted stops and excessive power supply and being allowed to slam the weight arms against the stop constantly! Again, trying to rewind both arms at the same time is the usual problem people have with these clocks failing to rewind and needing more power! The arms must be staggered for correct running and rewinding.
Here’s a link of one of my clocks rewinding. Sorry for the out of beat.


Cheers,
James

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TQ60

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Sep 15, 2016
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We assumed the weights needed to be offset, the switch in ours looks new.

Thanks for the measurements, we just need to get some material, timesavers has some 12 packs for $3.00, maybe order some, need to see what else we can fine in the catalog.

We have not checked resistance yet, have read posts stating 5 to 6 ohms maybe.

With 3 volts available the current should be around 1/2 Amp for the short period.

As long as the voltage is kept at the 3 volt range there should be minimal risk of overcurrent.

If it gets stuck it could be a problem i suppose.

Agree that higher voltage clearly can be an issue.

The ignition batteries can put out a lot of current, back in the day they were used for glow plugs and other high current loads.

Not to worried about overdriveing the coils, their resistance will limit the current they draw.

Did not notice a resistor in ours, something to check out next time we are tinkering.
 

Jmeechie

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Dec 8, 2010
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5 to 6 ohms is correct total for the pair measuring each coils then adding together. The resistor is tucked in between the 2 coils on one side.
I’ve seen lower and slightly higher with no ill effects on performance.
Cheers,
James
 

TQ60

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Sep 15, 2016
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We ordered the suspension material earlier in the week, only 3 bucks for 12.

To avoid the minimum order charge we stocked up on 400 day suspensions, have a few to tinker with.

Will be next weekend to continue.
 

Ralph

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Good afternoon!

I have one someplace that is similar to yours, but has a conventional pendulum (not mercury) and no level. Mine has no bezel or glass, and looks as though it never had either.

I have heard that these were "premiums" awarded to newspaper carriers, but perhaps someone else can verify.

Best regards!

Tim Orr
Tim,

You may have sold me the clock you mentioned, at a regional in Denver a few years ago. The subject clock looks familiar. The one I got from you, is gone so I can’t verify it is the same model.

Ralph
 

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