
audiobook
by Anonymous
E-text prepared by Robert Cicconetti, Janet Blenkinship,
WATCH AND CLOCK - ESCAPEMENTS
NEARLY TWO HUNDRED ORIGINAL ILLUSTRATIONS
PREFACE
CHAPTER I. - THE DETACHED LEVER ESCAPEMENT.
MAKING A PAIR OF DIVIDERS.
DELINEATING AN ESCAPE WHEEL.
PALLET-AND-FORK ACTION.
ESTABLISHING THE CENTER OF PALLET STAFF.
LAYING OUT ESCAPE-WHEEL TEETH.
This volume offers a thorough exploration of the three principal escapement systems that have driven watch and clock making for centuries: the lever, cylinder, and chronometer types. Combining historical overview with hands‑on technical guidance, it walks readers from the earliest crude concepts to the finely tuned mechanisms used in modern horology. The text is grounded in the classic serials of The Keystone, presenting a unified treatise that has long been trusted by the trade.
Readers will find step‑by‑step instructions for drafting escapements, complete with the modest set of tools a workshop needs—drawing board, T‑square, dividers, and a specially crafted degree arc. Detailed explanations of angular measurement and the construction of precision dividers empower even novice craftsmen to achieve accurate layouts. Illustrated with nearly two hundred original drawings, the book serves as both a practical manual and a visual reference for watchmakers, repairers, and anyone fascinated by the mechanics of timekeeping.
Full 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 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
Language
en
Duration
~6 hours (360K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2005-11-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Some of the world’s most enduring books come from writers whose names were never recorded or never revealed. “Anonymous” on a title page can mean many different things: a lost identity, a deliberate choice, or a work shaped by tradition over time.
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