


Very nice liner


John

I'll say! I've got a New Haven drop dial wall clock, c.1880, that belonged to my great grandmother. I was once told that the likes of New Haven and Ansonia, with their cheap mass-produced clocks, brought about the demise of the long case clock in Britain.arceye wrote: As for American clocks, always undervalued whether electric or wind up, bloody reliable and run on forever where a "quality" frenchy will give up the ghost if the wind is blowing in the wrong direction.
They pretty much did indeed. The Americans brought about the first real mass production techniques, Jerome was one of the big influences, whilst of lower quality in real terms they got it right, large tolerences mean they run on and on and on. The first ones were weight driven due to problems in obtaining spring steel, and the first springers used a brass type spring, this changing around the civil war era to traditional steel springs.suffolkpete wrote:I'll say! I've got a New Haven drop dial wall clock, c.1880, that belonged to my great grandmother. I was once told that the likes of New Haven and Ansonia, with their cheap mass-produced clocks, brought about the demise of the long case clock in Britain.arceye wrote: As for American clocks, always undervalued whether electric or wind up, bloody reliable and run on forever where a "quality" frenchy will give up the ghost if the wind is blowing in the wrong direction.