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   » Wiki: Clockmaker
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A clockmaker is an who makes and/or repairs . Since almost all clocks are now -made, most modern clockmakers only repair clocks. Modern clockmakers may be employed by , , and places devoted strictly to repairing clocks and watches. Clockmakers must be able to read and instructions for numerous types of clocks and time pieces that vary from antique clocks to modern time pieces in order to fix and make clocks or watches. The trade requires fine motor coordination as clockmakers must frequently work on devices with small and fine .

Originally, clockmakers were who designed and built clocks by hand. Since modern clockmakers are required to repair , handmade or one-of-a-kind clocks for which parts are not available, they must have some of the and abilities of the original craftsmen. A qualified clockmaker can typically design and make a missing piece for a clock without access to the original component.

Clockmakers generally do not work on ; the skills and tools required are different enough that watchmaking is a separate field, handled by another specialist, the .


Origins and specialities
The earliest use of the term clokkemaker is said to date from 1390, about a century after the first mechanical clocks appeared. From the beginning in the 15th century through the 17th century, clockmaking was considered the "leading edge", most trade existing. Historically, the best clockmakers often also built scientific instruments, as for a long time they were the only craftsmen around trained in designing precision mechanical apparatus. In one example, the was invented by a young clockmaker, which was then mass-produced by another clockmaker, Matthias .

Prior to 1800 clocks were entirely handmade, including all their parts, in a single shop under a master clockmaker. Examples of these complex movements can be seen in the many constructed in the 16th and 17th centuries. By the 19th century, clock parts were beginning to be made in small factories, but the skilled work of designing, assembling, and adjusting the clock was still done by clockmaking shops. By the 20th century, interchangeable parts and designs allowed the entire clock to be assembled in factories, and clockmakers specialized in repair of clocks.

In Germany, and were the early clockmaking centers, and the came to specialize in wooden .


Guilds
As the art of making clocks became more widespread and distinguished, guilds specifically for this trade emerged around the sixteenth century. One of the first developed in London, England, known as the Worshipful Company of Clockmakers; the group formed after a small number of foreign-trained clockmakers spent time working in . A requirement of joining the guild was to practise their craft and gain as much as possible, along with joining one of many other trade guilds, such as the , , or Company. There are many guilds where clockmakers meet to buy, sell and get clocks to repair from customers, the IWJG is one of the most prominent in the world.

Quality control and standards were imposed on clockmakers by the Worshipful Company of Clockmakers, a guild which licensed clockmakers for doing business. By the rise of in the late 18th century, clocks, especially pocket watches, became regarded as fashion accessories and were made in increasingly decorative styles. By 1796, the industry reached a high point with almost 200,000 clocks being produced annually in London. However, by the mid-19th century the industry had gone into steep decline from Swiss competition. Switzerland established itself as a clockmaking center following the influx of craftsmen, and in the 19th century the Swiss industry "gained worldwide supremacy in high-quality machine-made watches". The leading firm of the day was founded by of and of .


Tools
Early clockmakers fashioned all the intricate parts and wheelwork of clocks by hand, using hand tools. They developed specialized tools to help them.

  • Balance Truing Caliper: This device was used in fashioning the wheels and gearwork of the clock, to make sure the wheel, particularly the was balanced and circular. The pivots of the wheel were mounted in the caliper. An index arm was moved next to the edge and the wheel was spun to see if the edge was true.
  • Die/Screw Plate: The die plate was used to cut . It had a number of threaded die holes of different sizes for making different threads. A piece of wire was inserted in a hole and turned to cut a thread on the end. Then a head would be formed on the other end of the wire to make a screw.
  • File: Hardened steel files were used to shape the metal before it was used to make and fit wheels or plates. There were many variations of files.
  • Rivet Extracting Pliers: Made of or steel, extracting were used to remove rivets from assorted clock parts.
  • Jeweler’s : The blade of the saw was released by undoing the thumbscrew adjacent to the handle. To start an interior cut, a hole was drilled and the blade was inserted and reattached to the saw. This device was popular among clockmakers to repair the ends of clock hands.
  • Staking tool: An iron vertical plunger was used with an array of stakes for placing rollers and balanced wheels on staffs.
  • Turns: The "turns" was a small bow-operated used for furbishing parts and for working gear blanks to size. During use, the device was clamped in a and the worker held a cutting or polishing tool on a tee-shaped tool rest with one hand, and shifted the bow back and forth to spin the part.
  • Cross : The flat end of the tool was for general use, whereas the radiused peen end was used for flattening rivet heads. This tool was used for , riveting, striking steel, etc.


Other uses
Clockmaker is also the name of several movies.

often call the "Clockmaker". The Temple of the Great Clockmaker, in the novel The Case Of The Dead Certainty by , is a temple which represents deism.

The Clock Maker Theory and the watchmaker analogy describe by way of analogy , , and opinions about the existence of (s) that have been expressed over the years.

During the 1800s and 1900s, clocks or watches were carried around as a form of . They were also a way of instilling a sense of time regulation for work in the budding industrial market.

In 2004, wrote a comic book entitled The Clock Maker, published by German publisher Image Publishing, that focuses on the life of a clockmaker.

Artist Tony Troy creates the Illustration titled "The Clockmaker" in 2003 for his Broadway musical "The Fluteplayer's Song".


Historical clockmakers
  • Aaron Lufkin Dennison, United Kingdom
  • Abraham Louis Breguet, France and Switzerland
  • , France
  • , Germany
  • , France
  • , Paris
  • Benjamin Vulliamy, United Kingdom
  • Charles Cabrier II, England
  • Christiaan Huygens,
  • David Hare, Scottish philanthropist and pioneer of modern European Education in India
  • David Rittenhouse, United States
  • , United States
  • Eugène Farcot, France
  • Ferdinand Berthoud, France and Switzerland
  • , Germany
  • G Bernard Ramsdale, United Kingdom
  • George Graham, United Kingdom
  • Giovanni de Dondi, Italy
  • Hans Düringer, Germany
  • Humbertus Gallet, Switzerland
  • J. B. Joyce & Company, United Kingdom
  • James Ivory, United Kingdom
  • Jean-Antoine Lépine, Franc
  • Jens Olsen, Denmark
  • Johann Andreas Klindworth, Germany
  • Johann Baptist Beha, Germany
  • , United Kingdom
  • John Arnold, United Kingdom
  • John Ellicott, United Kingdom
  • , United Kingdom
  • John Tolson, United Kingdom
  • , United Kingdom
  • Joost Bürgi, Switzerland
  • , United Kingdom
  • Konstantin Chaykin, Russia
  • Lazar the Hilandarian, late 14th- and early 15th-century and Russia
  • , United Kingdom
  • Michelangelo Sapiano, Malta
  • Mikulas of Kadan
  • , Germany
  • Peter Hill (1767-1820), African-American clockmaker.
    (2025). 9781578591428, Visible Ink Press. .
  • Pierre Le Roy, France
  • Rasmus Sørnes, Norway
  • Richard Donisthorp, United Kingdom
  • Richard of Wallingford, United Kingdom
  • ,
  • , Germany
  • , United States
  • Smith of Derby Group, United Kingdom
  • , China
  • , United Kingdom
  • Thwaites & Reed, United Kingdom
  • (made the London Zoo Clock and the Water Clock) United Kingdom
  • Timothy Mason, United Kingdom
  • William Potts & Sons, United Kingdom


Clockmaking organizations
  • British Horological Institute
  • Federation of the Swiss Watch Industry FH
  • Petrodvorets watch factory
  • Worshipful Company of Clockmakers


See also


Sources


External links

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