German Triple Chime Wall Clock by Jauch. Westminster, St. Michaels, Wittington chimes
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- Опубликовано: 6 авг 2012
- See and hear this lovely vintage clock chime all quarters of three different chime melodies; Westminster, St, Micheals, and the Whittington chimes.
Clock features a top caliber movement by the now defunct Jauch Uhrenfabrik. This movement employs heavy solid brass plates, machined gears and steel pinions. Also utilizing a Graham dead-beat escapement that assures low movement wear and supreme timekeeping accuracy.
Between the top caliber movement and the lovely chimes, this is quite a clock!
Thanks for demonstrating the chimes. I love them all and use the Westerminster as my daily chime, the St. Michaels for the Christmas holidays, and the Whittington for Christmas Eve. By the way, you have a great radio voice. 😃
St Michaels takes me back many years to fond childhood memories.
Nothing more beautiful than a chiming clock...considering it had a pleasant tone.
That's a beautiful clock with very good melodies (chime). Hats off to the Composer, the Clock Maker and to all who have contributed their part to make such a Beautiful MASTER PIECE...
Awwww.... :-)
This was very helpful thanks
Beautiful chimes!! You ever voice act or tv radio announce? You sure sound like a TV announcer I heard once upon a time. If you never did you should!
I have a Clock with the same movement Saint Michael’s is my favorite
I have that same exact clock
Mon préféré c'est Westminster
Thanks so much for this demonstration. I own one and for the life of me, I can't tell the difference between St. Michaels and the Whittington...love them all though.
Sugarshack22 Awww....
Whittington has more ascending notes (as in ascending in pitch).
I have a clock here in UK that has a lever marked with those same alternatives. BUT.... Actually it starts with the 8 note scale descent on the first quarter. It sounds like the Tonic solfa to me.
Thereonafter it is pretty but different. I cannot reconcile it with any of the three alternatives your clock plays! Whats likely to be going on? Does it matter?
Your chimes are much better but where is your microphone? That larger wall case may also be helping that sustain. Mine is a mantle case. Quite soft and rather beautiful to my ear. No makers name though. Just "13cm" for the pendulum length. Bravo for posting an excellent demonstration video. BjG
I really didn’t get u 😅
ON THURSDAY AFTERNOON I TOOK A SEIZURE XXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXX
I have a clock just like this, purchased in Germany in 1976. It no longer chimes. Do you know if/where replacement movements can be found?
Hi, I believe the movement is by Jauch. You can Google that. However, I have yet to find a movement that cannot be repaired. Can you not find an antique click repair person near you?
If you're still active, I recently purchased a box clock just like this. Same case and everything. Was the face held in by pins or some other method? I need to know just for future reference when I go to service mine.
Sorry, but it's been quite a while and I can't recall.
@@sharkyfreeman no worries!
@@DannysClocks My guess is screws... But who knows? 🤷
@@DannysClocksyes it is held in by tapered pins
What brand & model of this clock?
Jauch, one of the lesser famous
St. Michaels is actually better than Whittington for me
Makes sense. I personally agree. Whittington has a softer tone to it in the way that the notes are arranged. At half past the hour, the way that the notes descend makes for a more gentle and soothing sound, while St. Michael is a more bold and outstanding sound, starting at the highest note, then immediately dropping to a way lower note.
@@DannysClocks that’s what I like about Whittington chime
Hi Eko,
As I recall, the clock had no identifying marks whatsoever. The movement was identical to some I'd seen marked Jauch. Clocks like this occassionally appear at estate sales or online. They are not thar rare.
Clearly, they are not antique. Perhaps late 60's early 70's. The chime rods are the clue.