Thanks, Tommy! I also very much enjoy the nicely toned rods. Likewise with your own collection! That Waterbury clock you got recently as well as that very solid wall clock are very fascinating.
Nice addition as always! You're correct, 1942 is the date this movement was made. I have that same Plymouth clock with the movement dated December 1941.
Thanks Clock 1010 for the confirmation! I know that you bought one of these before me, but I wanted to get the one at our local clock shop because the different movement design was very interesting to me.
Beautiful piece, Danny :) The case looks quite appealing. And the movement is very interesting aswell. Just one question: When the hour snail is on the 1/2/3 o'clock step, how does the quarter mechanism work? I'm probably just tired but I can't figure out how the gathering pallet picks the rack up in these situations without striking the wrong quarter... Mid-century clocks are also my favourites :) Especially the ones from Junghans and Mauthe. Great addition as always!
Hey, Luka! That's a valid point you make that I overlooked! Hmm... My guess would be that there's actually slots in the hour snail just for the 1, 2 and 3 o'clock positions. Unlike in the older Plymouth that has slots in the snail between every single hour. Maybe this clock uses a few special slots in the hour snail just for the first couple hours, and then it's a normal shaped snail the rest of the way around and primarily utilises the minute snail for the rest of the hours.
@@DannysClocks Ok :) It makes perfect sense and I should have thought about that, considering that I have seen that weird snail in your older Plymouth. Thanks for your answer!
I think this is actually the case! If you look up Plymouth 4601 or alternatively Plymouth Quarter Striking Movement you can find images of the front of this clock and see the special slots in the very beginning of the snail.
I haven't a new clock to show so I figured I shouldn't make a new video. I've been focusing on another hobby of mine I'm passionate about for the past couple of months. But I do think an update video is warranted :)
That's a very nice clock Danny. I love the deep toned rods. Great to see your collection growing!
Thanks, Tommy! I also very much enjoy the nicely toned rods. Likewise with your own collection! That Waterbury clock you got recently as well as that very solid wall clock are very fascinating.
nice to see how this clock works :D never seen it like that :) thanks for sharing
Nice addition as always!
You're correct, 1942 is the date this movement was made. I have that same Plymouth clock with the movement dated December 1941.
Thanks Clock 1010 for the confirmation! I know that you bought one of these before me, but I wanted to get the one at our local clock shop because the different movement design was very interesting to me.
That’s a wonderful addition to the collection! Great find Danny!
Thank you, Nicholas!! :D
Man, I wish the chimes on my Cymbal Number 2 sounded that good
Very nice piece Danny!
Beatiful!
A beautiful clock with a really nice chime. I also like Art Deco and Mid Century Modern design.
Beautiful piece, Danny :) The case looks quite appealing. And the movement is very interesting aswell. Just one question: When the hour snail is on the 1/2/3 o'clock step, how does the quarter mechanism work? I'm probably just tired but I can't figure out how the gathering pallet picks the rack up in these situations without striking the wrong quarter...
Mid-century clocks are also my favourites :) Especially the ones from Junghans and Mauthe.
Great addition as always!
Hey, Luka! That's a valid point you make that I overlooked! Hmm... My guess would be that there's actually slots in the hour snail just for the 1, 2 and 3 o'clock positions. Unlike in the older Plymouth that has slots in the snail between every single hour. Maybe this clock uses a few special slots in the hour snail just for the first couple hours, and then it's a normal shaped snail the rest of the way around and primarily utilises the minute snail for the rest of the hours.
@@DannysClocks Ok :) It makes perfect sense and I should have thought about that, considering that I have seen that weird snail in your older Plymouth. Thanks for your answer!
I think this is actually the case! If you look up Plymouth 4601 or alternatively Plymouth Quarter Striking Movement you can find images of the front of this clock and see the special slots in the very beginning of the snail.
That's pretty cool, I have a clock with the same chime sequence, mine is also a Seth Thomas Plymouth
Very Good Clock Condition
Very nice! I’ve never see that movement before.
Ooh, very nice clock.
When is a new video coming? It's been a while
I haven't a new clock to show so I figured I shouldn't make a new video. I've been focusing on another hobby of mine I'm passionate about for the past couple of months. But I do think an update video is warranted :)
@@DannysClocks oh what's the other hobby? Is this channel gonna die now?
Nice
I wonder what happened to rarezeelu...
I just rebranded :p
@@DannysClocks Wow your still active. But still will you upload a video in like months or something?
@@c_xcr I just haven't purchased any new clocks for a couple months now. I was planning on making an update video soon, actually.
@@DannysClocks well what about in your main but these videos are interesting to me
@@DannysClocks or ur rarezeelu account
Qqqq😊😊