I find it crazy how the camera people at Getty Images are having him take off and put on the Pennies several times and inserting the wind up crank over and over just to get a good shot. The Pennies thing should’ve been done just once, as to not ruin the clocks accuracy
As an aside to what others have said, some later Dent clocks had a very clever arrangement that used 4 circumferential springs on the same axle as the winding drum. This involved having a reverse ratchet next to the 'normal' ratchet. As soon as torgue was applied to the winding handle the springs would drive the clock.
This Clock Saved Old Pennies From Being Discontinued
yes indeed
@@Elavator66Dats Wat She Sad
This clock is amazing. I love it😊 0:12
Excelente
Maquinaria
Que dicha poder conocerla
Una ilusión
Gracias
2:37 1st Quarter chime
3:11 police car
0:11 Chimes
No e just a small description of what we are looking at would help
Because it is a clock but different
Big Ben Chimes 0:35
did anyone hear the machinisim in the background?
Me
Quarter Chimes 0:13
I love London
When the bells ring before the big bell, I think I hear squeaking when the bell hits the hammer or something I don’t know how to explain it
what does he do in 5 minutes
8:00
This Is the end of half hour to 7:20
Suara detik nya
Kayak palu mukul besi
9:16 3 quarter hour chimes
Big Ben na verdade é o nome do Sino mais grande no centro😊
*bongs louder*
undertaker
Bell
0:10 start bells
9:13
the fact that the screw's off center at around 2:59 is kind of annoying me, the clock runs fine so I guess it's not an issue.
Thanks i hate it :D
Hi
I find it crazy how the camera people at Getty Images are having him take off and put on the Pennies several times and inserting the wind up crank over and over just to get a good shot. The Pennies thing should’ve been done just once, as to not ruin the clocks accuracy
@@trainlover123trainsrock It isn't that accurate that it would matter for a few minutes lol
I can see the other bell behind it 0:18
Hi
how does the clock keep ticking during the winding process?
There is a backup weight I think
idk maybe there's still gravity in the mechinisim
It has a ‘maintaining power’ weight which is connected to the going train and keeps it going while it’s being wound.
As an aside to what others have said, some later Dent clocks had a very clever arrangement that used 4 circumferential springs on the same axle as the winding drum. This involved having a reverse ratchet next to the 'normal' ratchet. As soon as torgue was applied to the winding handle the springs would drive the clock.