My goodness great video, not sure I blinked for almost an hr. I not only enjoyed watching your machining technique but especially enjoyed the math portion for calculating the correct module. I truly appreciate you sharing your profession with us and look forward to your next video.
@@TommyJobsonhola, se podrá hacer una rueda de un reloj de bolsillo pequeño sus dientes muy delgados y pequeño, es que mi rueda se le rompió cuando el muelle real se salió del árbol y ahora estoy triste por que se le rompió un diente y otros están doblados no se si es posible
This is beautiful. I’m a machinist and this definitely isn’t machining this is ART. You are the last of a dying breed just beautiful craftsmanship all around.
Clean precise and as close to original as possible. So much time, patience and skill to make a wheel. Makes one appreciate when you find an antique clock movement that is entirely original.
Long before I decided to make my living in the electronics field, I sat ir stood by my uncle's rolltop bench where he repaired clocks and watches; a trade he learned from his Dad. I have always been impressed with horologists. They must apply math, trigonometry and physics when designing and making parts. This video has been fascinating and I could watch ones with this content for hours!
Really enjoyed the whole video, someone who really knows what they're doing, with a whole load of high-end tools and is prepared to share their knowledge. Much appreciated, thank you.
I'm an engineer in a totally different field. I really love these skills and never knew that was available to me when I was younger. I'm always wondering how one remembers all these factors, metals, sizes, etc.. truly requires a master in one's field.
I love making things out of Brass for broken pieces ,, the pinion leaf had sheared to halfway and was sitting on the next leaf. I just happened to spot it after cleaning the mainspring. Your precision workmanship gave me a boost I needed. You're a credit to us all
My Dad did his thesis in the 60's on the history of clocks , he did all the research and typed out a book , bound it and presented it , great to read it and i have always been interested in clocks , glad i found this channel and subscribed
As a Grandfather Clock (x2) owner, enthusiest & former Diamond Setter, I very much enjoyed your video & can relate to many.of the skill set, and I understand the work involved. Thank you!
When I was a small lad I was given many old clocks to take apart and reassemble, as I recall most of them worked, I went on to do an apprenticeships in Industrial instrument making. Now retired I started the family only to find my maternal grandfather's brother where a clock makes in the Coventry area. It must in the genes. Great Video, pity the basic skill are no longer taught in school.
Thank you, that was hugely interesting. I am an amateur clock repairer and have fixed hundreds of clocks, but your work is on another level, it is fascinating to see you using your skills and training in this way, showing the care and attention you put into the work. Great job!
Now, can you imagine how brilliant of a man, who created the first clock? Designed and built parts using way less technology than the guy in this video? Absolutely fantastic. Great video. Thanks
Wow I wish I had access to the cutting gear you has when I was repairing clocks a few years ago. I'm well retired now but in 60s to 90s repaired many hundreds of clocks from small to large town hall type's. Many old grandfather's had damaged wheels and broken teeth that had to be replaced by hand. Lovely video thanks. Fred.
Your craftsmanship is incomparable young man! A small suggestion for the hard of hearing members of your audience would be to to eliminate the whistle playing over your introduction and summation. Your words are like pearls and we hate to miss any of them. Thanks for giving so much of your life to learn your marvelous skills! Absolutely brilliant!
I personally prefer the longer videos it gives a better understanding of the skills involved rather than, here is one I made earlier. Facinating as always well done.
Hi Tommy, I always enjoy watching your videos. I try to understand all great explanation you made. I also enjoy watching your video, no matter how long they are! Personally, I prefer longer videos. thanks for your kindness to share your experience. Keep going buddy!👍
Horological gear cutters are cycloidal, although on this wheel I was not using the complete tooth form to match with the other wheel work so all of that was out of the window anyway!
What a demo of technique, preparation, tool working and precision metal piece manufacturing! Most impressive: not ALL cuts are made with a machine, and yet, the result is fantastic! Of course, you need to have the right tools, but that is taken for granted in the hands of a true artisan.
beautifully done, I have often wondered what a person would do if they were refurbishing an old clock and found a damaged wheel in the train I doubt that I could make a new wheel, but now I know that it can be done. Thank you for sharing your expertise.
Fantastic Tommy! I really appreciate you talking through your decision making in the finished cut. It really helps to know not just what you did but also why.
Aww yeah boy. I'm a machinist and have worked on the massive in ship building down to the tiny in a medical lab. The big is fun; the little is funner. LOL!!
I was going to make a coffee six minutes into the video until i got side tracked to your video ,the time and experience into the craft shows if a job is worth doing good do it better i enjoyed your video and have subscribed to watch more .
This is spectacular work! I wish to pursue clockmaking in the distant future (as well as model engineering and engine work), and this video helped a lot with showing how wheelcutting is done. Especially with figuring out the correct modules for different wheel diameters. Keep running like clockwork because your work is awesome!
46.35 of enjoyment, watching a highly skilled craftsman explaining and working at his chosen profession! I've now subscribed, and wish you a very successful RUclips channel....
I’m not a clockmaker or repairman. I am however interested in all manner of work methods and like to glean little tidbits of information on mechanical assembly and hand manufacturing. I was especially illuminated by the spin-riveting! Thank you for the tidbits.
I am just blown away with your precision and perfection. Thanks for sharing this. It would be great to see what technology they used back in the 18th century to make these clocks. It must have been extraordinarily time consuming. No pun intended.
Check this video out. Johan is showing how it would have been done historicaly before the days of machines like mine. Enjoy! ruclips.net/video/iHwo_xadeWk/видео.html
That was fascinating and not too long at all. If you want to know the thought processes behind each stage, then your video is just the right length. Well done Tommy!
I've just became inspired in watch an clock repare. Came across your site found it very interesting an educational an very intertwining. Really loved the way you explained the steps you were taking. Wish you much success. I'll continue to watch your videos . Thanks
The algorithm brought me here, the curiosity of seeing how things are made made me stay. I wish we could've seen the assembled antique clock running again at the end though
Thank you Tommy for the very detailed and beautiful work. I am a third generation Aerospace worker. Being a female it was really fun doing things with the older fellas that they wouldn’t let the young lads do. My grandfather gave me his old watch bench and now that I am retired and settling up my own shop I look forward to these detailed things as well. It’s terrific that most of the tools and techniques that you use we also use building the big airplanes.. we didn’t make the wheels from brass though…each airplane is pretty much hand built. Noting many things just don’t fit as well as they are engineered to. So we use our heads and make it right. A really great video and I will learn a great deal from you I think. God bless you sir.🙋♀️⏳
It takes knowledge, skill, patients, and above all the right tools.............. It is on my bucket list to own and have a use for a Dividing Head......... I think we all forget a hundred years ago the most accurate clocks in the to world were made by HAND. Someone once said, sorry I forgot who, that the Railroad and Maritime Pocket Watches were (are) the most perfect machine ever made by man. I believe that is still true today.
Utterly astounding. Have always wondered how such small, precise, detailed work was done. You've illustrated and demonstrated it so well, from the calculations to the end product. Thank you for publishing it here. Can't help but wonder how a clockmaker in say, 1500s, might have achieved such results, close enough to make a clock even function at all, with such primitive, non-electrical tools! I can't even put four boards together and have them all come out, "right". How you might cut a multi-toothed gear wheel and have the last two teeth 'come out' so precisely .. is, to me, an impossible feat. Fascinating, very, very enjoyable hour .... thank you!!
Glad you enjoyed the video. Check out this video made by a friend of mine. He divides in the traditional way that would have been used before the machines we have now. ruclips.net/video/iHwo_xadeWk/видео.html
My god! Just looking at you filing those teeth one by one makes my fingers feel uncomfortable! What a patience you have! The amount of time and dedication you give to a single gear wheel is indeed staggering (at least by my standard who is an ME student). Certainly something you can be proud of!
As a clock maker in the US my customers would complain that that was not a $10 job to get there clock going right. Great job in paying attintion to detail.
An on going struggle. I think most of my clients appreciate the effort that goes into a repair such as this. It's more comparable to the mindset of fine art restoration.
Great video. Loved to see how a wheel was made. Going to attend a course end of this month at a local clockmaker for maintaining and repairing (beginners stage) large timepieces. Hope to make my own wheels someday for my 24 antique clocks.
Very informative video, excellent craftsmanship. I've not seen spin riveting done before, so that's a new technique I'm now aware of. The whole video was very useful indeed.
Amazing video, thanks so much for sharing! If I could like it twice I would! I love the attention to detail to make it match, that extra effort is amazing, and something most wouldn't do.
Thanks so very much. I’m aiming to make more content and to keep the quality as high as I can. If you would like to support the channel I have a Patreon page. All support very gratefully received!
Hi Tommy, I saw your name in my recommendations and immediately thought of a GCSE pupil at the Shropshire school where I went to do teacher training many years ago! It's great to see that you're working with your hands and no surprise to see you producing such high quality work!
All of your skill sets and techniques are amazing ! but what I’m most impressed with is your degree of precision when you saw, file, and finish sand !! Gr8t job ….thanks for making the video !!
Enjoyed every moment...very therapeutic. Didn't want it to end. Love the way you work. Another level. You are a true craftsman....a perfectionist. Bless you.
Massive thanks for making and sharing this content. In my opinion creators like You who share their craft and passion that makes RUclips so good. Best regards
Great vid. That was my first exposure to the spinning rivet process and file nicking to provide the metal somewhere to go! Really cool. The only thing missing was a vid of the wheel operating in the clock. Good job!
Thanks for sharing your skills with this great video. Definitely something I'd love to take on. In my earlier days, I worked with both a Shaublin 80 and your 102 that you show here. What beautiful; machines to work with. Back to watching!
Hi Tommy, I really enjoy to watch your video - brilliant. But I do like the most to listen to your Gents of Leicester master in the background! :-) Greetings form Hamburg/Germany
Thank you for demonstrating this. I found the various procedures fascinating, and well explained. Pure craftsmanship, looking forward to further videos. Thank you again.
@@TommyJobson I’m considering purchasing the George Daniels Watchmaking book, I am fascinated by watch and clock mechanisms. So will enjoy viewing the various diagrams and pictures. I intend to build a wooden geared clock, have seen a paperback book that shows how to make a simplified clock. If you have amazon prime there is a film on there about George Daniels called The Watchmakers Apprentice. It’s from watching it that planted the idea of making a simple wooden clock.
My goodness great video, not sure I blinked for almost an hr.
I not only enjoyed watching your machining technique but especially enjoyed the math portion for calculating the correct module.
I truly appreciate you sharing your profession with us and look forward to your next video.
Thank you for a lovely comment, I’m really pleased you are enjoying the videos.
you have to be a nut job to make these small parts !!! Excellent job !
@@TommyJobson gg
@@TommyJobsonhola, se podrá hacer una rueda de un reloj de bolsillo pequeño sus dientes muy delgados y pequeño, es que mi rueda se le rompió cuando el muelle real se salió del árbol y ahora estoy triste por que se le rompió un diente y otros están doblados no se si es posible
This is beautiful. I’m a machinist and this definitely isn’t machining this is ART. You are the last of a dying breed just beautiful craftsmanship all around.
The amount of patience needed for this kind of work - never mind the skill and the tools - is remarkable.
Thank you for keeping our profession going!!! I have retired years ago but you have rekindled my memories! Be proud of yourself! Excellent.
Clean precise and as close to original as possible. So much time, patience and skill to make a wheel. Makes one appreciate when you find an antique clock movement that is entirely original.
Thank you very much.
I am a violin maker watching clocks videos 😊,nice job, you are trully professional! Thank you for your time.
Full of admiration for this guy, but in awe of the clock makers of centuries gone by, with comparatively crude tools at their disposal.
I'm constantly surprised what I find on RUclips . Absolutely fascinating , and such high standard of workmanship . Thank you for posting
Long before I decided to make my living in the electronics field, I sat ir stood by my uncle's rolltop bench where he repaired clocks and watches; a trade he learned from his Dad. I have always been impressed with horologists. They must apply math, trigonometry and physics when designing and making parts. This video has been fascinating and I could watch ones with this content for hours!
Thank you! I'm really pleased you are enjoying the videos. Thanks for telling me about your Uncle.
I am a professional watchmaker since 1982. I am in business. What I can say is that you are really very good and your work is excellent.
Really enjoyed the whole video, someone who really knows what they're doing, with a whole load of high-end tools and is prepared to share their knowledge. Much appreciated, thank you.
Fun to watch, reminded me of when I was a wee baby boy. My Grandfather was a clock maker. Brought back some very fond memories.
I'm an engineer in a totally different field. I really love these skills and never knew that was available to me when I was younger. I'm always wondering how one remembers all these factors, metals, sizes, etc.. truly requires a master in one's field.
I love making things out of Brass for broken pieces ,, the pinion leaf had sheared to halfway and was sitting on the next leaf. I just happened to spot it after cleaning the mainspring.
Your precision workmanship gave me a boost I needed. You're a credit to us all
My Dad did his thesis in the 60's on the history of clocks , he did all the research and typed out a book , bound it and presented it , great to read it and i have always been interested in clocks , glad i found this channel and subscribed
Thats great, sounds like a lovely thing to have. Thanks for the sub!
Brilliant and Well done ! As a metal sculptor and welder/fabricator/ machinist I appreciate your sense of aesthetics and clear narration.
As a Grandfather Clock (x2) owner, enthusiest & former Diamond Setter, I very much enjoyed your video & can relate to many.of the skill set, and I understand the work involved. Thank you!
Enjoyed the video, it took me back to being at my Grandfathers in Ireland back in the sixties, repairing watches and clocks were his trade.
When I was a small lad I was given many old clocks to take apart and reassemble, as I recall most of them worked, I went on to do an apprenticeships in Industrial instrument making. Now retired I started the family only to find my maternal grandfather's brother where a clock makes in the Coventry area. It must in the genes. Great Video, pity the basic skill are no longer taught in school.
Thank you, that was hugely interesting. I am an amateur clock repairer and have fixed hundreds of clocks, but your work is on another level, it is fascinating to see you using your skills and training in this way, showing the care and attention you put into the work. Great job!
Thank you very much, glad to be of help.
Now, can you imagine how brilliant of a man, who created the first clock? Designed and built parts using way less technology than the guy in this video? Absolutely fantastic.
Great video. Thanks
Wow I wish I had access to the cutting gear you has when I was repairing clocks a few years ago.
I'm well retired now but in 60s to 90s repaired many hundreds of clocks from small to large town hall type's.
Many old grandfather's had damaged wheels and broken teeth that had to be replaced by hand.
Lovely video thanks.
Fred.
What a brilliant way to spend my lunch break !!!! Always a good day when the happy-tappy-stick comes out to play
Your craftsmanship is incomparable young man! A small suggestion for the hard of hearing members of your audience would be to to eliminate the whistle playing over your introduction and summation. Your words are like pearls and we hate to miss any of them. Thanks for giving so much of your life to learn your marvelous skills! Absolutely brilliant!
Very fine and accurate work. It is such a joy to watch such a perfectionist at work.
I must say your craftsmanship is superb, even to this untrained eye. Thank you for posting your work. It’s absolutely fascinating.
I personally prefer the longer videos it gives a better understanding of the skills involved rather than, here is one I made earlier. Facinating as always well done.
Great feedback, thanks. I’m glad you enjoyed the video.
Hi Tommy, I always enjoy watching your videos. I try to understand all great explanation you made. I also enjoy watching your video, no matter how long they are! Personally, I prefer longer videos. thanks for your kindness to share your experience.
Keep going buddy!👍
I forgot to ask you, do you use cyclodical gear cutter or involute ones?
Thank you.
Horological gear cutters are cycloidal, although on this wheel I was not using the complete tooth form to match with the other wheel work so all of that was out of the window anyway!
Fantastic video! I appreciated where you showed us the steps you took to calculate the proper dimensions for the replacement gear.
Glad you enjoyed it!
What a demo of technique, preparation, tool working and precision metal piece manufacturing! Most impressive: not ALL cuts are made with a machine, and yet, the result is fantastic! Of course, you need to have the right tools, but that is taken for granted in the hands of a true artisan.
Thank you for your kind words.
beautifully done, I have often wondered what a person would do if they were refurbishing an old clock and found a damaged wheel in the train I doubt that I could make a new wheel, but now I know that it can be done. Thank you for sharing your expertise.
Thank you very much!
Fantastic Tommy! I really appreciate you talking through your decision making in the finished cut. It really helps to know not just what you did but also why.
Glad you found it useful!
Aww yeah boy. I'm a machinist and have worked on the massive in ship building down to the tiny in a medical lab. The big is fun; the little is funner. LOL!!
Great stuff. Thanks for the comment, glad you are enjoying the videos.
I was going to make a coffee six minutes into the video until i got side tracked to your video ,the time and experience into the craft shows if a job is worth doing good do it better i enjoyed your video and have subscribed to watch more .
That's great to hear, thank you so much for the Sub!
This is spectacular work! I wish to pursue clockmaking in the distant future (as well as model engineering and engine work), and this video helped a lot with showing how wheelcutting is done. Especially with figuring out the correct modules for different wheel diameters. Keep running like clockwork because your work is awesome!
I remember viewing this some months ago. True craftsmanship, loved every part of it.
46.35 of enjoyment, watching a highly skilled craftsman explaining and working at his chosen profession! I've now subscribed, and wish you a very successful RUclips channel....
Thank you so much. I'm really pleased you are enjoying the videos.
I’m not a clockmaker or repairman. I am however interested in all manner of work methods and like to glean little tidbits of information on mechanical assembly and hand manufacturing.
I was especially illuminated by the spin-riveting! Thank you for the tidbits.
Hello Tommy, Thanks for this great video. It's a beautiful work. We say in France: "all is in details" , your work is the proof
I am just blown away with your precision and perfection. Thanks for sharing this.
It would be great to see what technology they used back in the 18th century to make these clocks. It must have been extraordinarily time consuming. No pun intended.
Check this video out. Johan is showing how it would have been done historicaly before the days of machines like mine. Enjoy! ruclips.net/video/iHwo_xadeWk/видео.html
...Especially, how then, they marked off the teeth without an instrument to precisely locate them. (PS how many jig saw blades did you expend?)
That was fascinating and not too long at all. If you want to know the thought processes behind each stage, then your video is just the right length. Well done Tommy!
I've just became inspired in watch an clock repare. Came across your site found it very interesting an educational an very intertwining. Really loved the way you explained the steps you were taking. Wish you much success. I'll continue to watch your videos . Thanks
Never anything wrong with a long video. Great work. Excellent explanation👍🏻
The algorithm brought me here, the curiosity of seeing how things are made made me stay. I wish we could've seen the assembled antique clock running again at the end though
Glad you enjoyed it. I released the video before I had cleaned and completed the rest of the clock.
The more I watch. The more questions I get about your tools.
Hey, no. Get back here. I want a full tool walk through video. Just showing them off and explaining their purpose.
Thank you Tommy for the very detailed and beautiful work. I am a third generation Aerospace worker. Being a female it was really fun doing things with the older fellas that they wouldn’t let the young lads do. My grandfather gave me his old watch bench and now that I am retired and settling up my own shop I look forward to these detailed things as well. It’s terrific that most of the tools and techniques that you use we also use building the big airplanes.. we didn’t make the wheels from brass though…each airplane is pretty much hand built. Noting many things just don’t fit as well as they are engineered to. So we use our heads and make it right. A really great video and I will learn a great deal from you I think. God bless you sir.🙋♀️⏳
Thank you for the lovely comment. Good luck geetting started at your watch bench.
It takes knowledge, skill, patients, and above all the right tools.............. It is on my bucket list to own and have a use for a Dividing Head......... I think we all forget a hundred years ago the most accurate clocks in the to world were made by HAND. Someone once said, sorry I forgot who, that the Railroad and Maritime Pocket Watches were (are) the most perfect machine ever made by man. I believe that is still true today.
"Give the man the right tools".......... Thanks for the kind words.
Utterly astounding. Have always wondered how such small, precise, detailed work was done. You've illustrated and demonstrated it so well, from the calculations to the end product. Thank you for publishing it here. Can't help but wonder how a clockmaker in say, 1500s, might have achieved such results, close enough to make a clock even function at all, with such primitive, non-electrical tools! I can't even put four boards together and have them all come out, "right". How you might cut a multi-toothed gear wheel and have the last two teeth 'come out' so precisely .. is, to me, an impossible feat. Fascinating, very, very enjoyable hour .... thank you!!
Glad you enjoyed the video. Check out this video made by a friend of mine. He divides in the traditional way that would have been used before the machines we have now. ruclips.net/video/iHwo_xadeWk/видео.html
I would love to see a video by You with Your thoughts on the Antikithera mechanism
That must so satisfying to c the last cut, so they are lined up accurately.....
It’s always nice, much better than when you get it wrong and end up with half a tooth!
Wow!This is not a job,this is passion!
Tommy this is great ! I did not understand how 45 minutes passed. You made my Sunday night 🐾🌿 Subscribed 👌🏻 Thank you for sharing ...
Wonderful video! Not too long at all. Like I mentioned before, take as much time as you need to properly explain the process.
Thanks.
My god! Just looking at you filing those teeth one by one makes my fingers feel uncomfortable! What a patience you have! The amount of time and dedication you give to a single gear wheel is indeed staggering (at least by my standard who is an ME student). Certainly something you can be proud of!
masterful to say the least. thanks for taking the time to share so that others can benefit!!
And this is one of the 2945 wheels, be patients my friends, incredible!!! Thanks for take your time and let’s us have a journey in your world
Absolutely WONDERFUL and spellbinding to watch this video. Thank you. I have owned these clocks via my parents.
Glad you enjoyed it!
As a clock maker in the US my customers would complain that that was not a $10 job to get there clock going right. Great job in paying attintion to detail.
An on going struggle. I think most of my clients appreciate the effort that goes into a repair such as this. It's more comparable to the mindset of fine art restoration.
🤯 What a masterful job and the final achievement is magnificent!! 👍
My goodness - what a labour of love. Well done!
So lucky to find this channel. just fantastic.
Thank you so much.
Facinating - thank you so much for sharing your incredible engineering skills - I never cease to be amazed at what skilled humans can produce!
Thank you very much! I'm really pleased you are enjoying the videos.
Great video. Loved to see how a wheel was made. Going to attend a course end of this month at a local clockmaker for maintaining and repairing (beginners stage) large timepieces. Hope to make my own wheels someday for my 24 antique clocks.
you are what in italy we call un vero artigiano! thanks for the amazing video, please make more
Thank you very much, most kind. More videos are certainly on their way so stay tuned!
A real watchmaking art. Beautiful wheel workmanship.
Thank you very much!
Absolutely breathtaking attention to detail!!!
That is the best video out there for cutting replacement gear, wow, thanks for posting it!
Thanks very much! That’s very kind.
I really enjoyed it. The precision amazed me……Thank you.
Very informative video, excellent craftsmanship. I've not seen spin riveting done before, so that's a new technique I'm now aware of. The whole video was very useful indeed.
Stunning sawing accuracy. Great skill.
That's an outstanding video! Perfect close up filming, clear explanations and a beautiful result!
Pure genius. I've never seen this done before..
I did enjoy that. I am not into watch making myself, but I saw the whole thing and appreciated the skills, you display
Thank you.
Amazing video, thanks so much for sharing! If I could like it twice I would! I love the attention to detail to make it match, that extra effort is amazing, and something most wouldn't do.
Thanks so very much. I’m aiming to make more content and to keep the quality as high as I can. If you would like to support the channel I have a Patreon page. All support very gratefully received!
Wonderful to have all the equipment you need.
Thumbs up Tommy! Spin riveting and green loctite. That’s what I call a contingency plan!
Belt and braces. It’s not going to go far with that!
Hi Tommy, I saw your name in my recommendations and immediately thought of a GCSE pupil at the Shropshire school where I went to do teacher training many years ago! It's great to see that you're working with your hands and no surprise to see you producing such high quality work!
Small world! Thanks for getting in touch.
All of your skill sets and techniques are amazing ! but what I’m most impressed with is your degree of precision when you saw, file, and finish sand !! Gr8t job ….thanks for making the video !!
Thank you, i’m pleased you liked the video.
Mi más sincero reconocimiento por su profesionalidad Gracias por el vídeo tan detallado.
I like working with Brass. For keeping me entertained. Thanks. From, St. Paul Minnesota.
Enjoyed every moment...very therapeutic.
Didn't want it to end. Love the way you work. Another level. You are a true craftsman....a perfectionist. Bless you.
Thank you very much!
That was a lot of work for a small gear . Very intricate work. Great job. !👍
Fascinating-thank you for sharing your skills. Greetings from Tasmania Australia.
Nice work thanks for putting it up for us, the dividing head is still a mystery. Cheers
Great work done so professionally. Thanks for uploading this video.
It requires so much passion.
Beautiful workmanship
Amazing work! Never seen someone so precise. You have now one follower more!
Massive thanks for making and sharing this content. In my opinion creators like You who share their craft and passion that makes RUclips so good.
Best regards
Wow, thank you for the kind comment.
wow!! You are amazing and proffesional... I LOVE HAND MADE REAL WORK!!!
Thank you very much!
Great vid. That was my first exposure to the spinning rivet process and file nicking to provide the metal somewhere to go! Really cool. The only thing missing was a vid of the wheel operating in the clock. Good job!
Wow!!! Beautiful work. Totally amazing. Thanks for sharing this.
Very interesting craftsmanship, I would love to have the patience for this type of work, at least as a hobby.
Thanks for sharing your skills with this great video. Definitely something I'd love to take on. In my earlier days, I worked with both a Shaublin 80 and your 102 that you show here. What beautiful; machines to work with. Back to watching!
Hi Tommy, I really enjoy to watch your video - brilliant. But I do like the most to listen to your Gents of Leicester master in the background!
:-)
Greetings form Hamburg/Germany
Well spotted! It does rather Klunk!
Outstanding video. Very well done, Sir. It was a real treat for me to see how this is done.
Excellent work, phenomenal attention to detail.
Glad I found this video. Excellent job.! 👍
Thank you for demonstrating this. I found the various procedures fascinating, and well explained. Pure craftsmanship, looking forward to further videos. Thank you again.
Thank you very much, I'm glad you enjoyed it.
@@TommyJobson I’m considering purchasing the George Daniels Watchmaking book, I am fascinated by watch and clock mechanisms. So will enjoy viewing the various diagrams and pictures. I intend to build a wooden geared clock, have seen a paperback book that shows how to make a simplified clock. If you have amazon prime there is a film on there about George Daniels called The Watchmakers Apprentice. It’s from watching it that planted the idea of making a simple wooden clock.
Excellent video. Thank you for posting from GA, USA. Fine work sir.
Glad you enjoyed it
I love your description of your thought process while reverse engineering. A fine example of care for the original and experience.
Thanks, I was trying to include the ‘why’ as well as the end result.
Wonderful video and many thanks for sharing your techniques.