Taking it Apart – And Determining Beats per Hour
Finally, real work could begin with the gears themselves outside of the movement. To take the movement apart was a simple matter of taking out five screws and pulling the front plate straight upward to avoid bending any
pivots or shafts. This done, the gears were exposed and could be removed and replaced as needed according to the drawing which showed which pivot hole was which. Once it was apart, I had to count teeth to determine the beats per hour (BPH) of this particular clock. The BPH of a clock is the number of
most must be calculated using a “gear train calculation”. To make a gear train calculation, one only uses the gears
80 | 72 |
___ | x ___ x (30 x 2) = 3600 BPH |
12 | 8 |
There are 80 teeth on the center wheel (which drives the minute hand), 12 leaves on the pinion that mates with the center wheel, 72 teeth on the “3rd wheel” (that shares the shaft with the above pinion), eight leaves on the escape pinion that mates with the “3rd wheel”, and 30 teeth on the escape wheel. The tooth count of the escape wheel is multiplied times two due to the fact that there are two noises, tick and tock, that occur when each escape tooth enters and exits the pallets (for a total of two beats per tooth).
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