Jump to content

Anno 1640 Waaguhr oil


Bauertime

Recommended Posts

Hi  A lot depends on the type of wood, Lignum Vitae is a dense wood and has its own oil,  Most of the wooden clocks were black forest made usually of pine (the local wood). Pine is by nature a resinous wood in its new state but as time goes by dries out  so some method of lubrication is required. I have used petroleum jelly (Vaseline) just thinned with a little oil applied sparingly as excess will gather dirt.  No lubrication will wear out the wooden pivots in no time.   Linseed oil is a wood preparation oil used on dry wood and cricket bats to good effect. but again just enough to do the job and no more.

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Don't use linseed oil. It's a drying oil. The triglyceride decomposes, and the free fatty acids react with oxygen in the air to form a hard plasticky resin (haven't had my coffee yet and it's been years since I dealt with triglyceride chemistry, so the technical term is not coming to me at the moment... maybe it'll come to me in a few cups). That's why it's used as a wood finish after boiling to speed up the breakdown process, historically was what made patent leather shiny and brittle, and used to be the main component in japanning (a durable black finish often applied to cast iron). 

Speaking from a chemistry perspective with out much in the way of practical experience lubricating wood, you'll want something with long, fully saturated carbon chains. Lard would have been used to lubricate wooden shafts historically, though I'm not sure about in a clock setting. Coconut oil might be a reasonable vegetable derived fat. If the oil being solid at room temperature is problematic, neetsfoot oil has, IIRC, 18 carbon bonds, as does olive oil. Both were used as machine oils in the early industrial era. I'm having a hard time thinking of any others that are heavier, readily available, but aren't solid at room temperature. Jojoba oil I think is a good one. Being fully saturated will make it less likely to break down and go rancid (which is why hydrogenated vegetable oils were used to keep packaged food from going bad before people realized it was bad for you). I'm having a hard time thinking of any readily available fully saturated oils off the top of my head at the moment...

Edited by spectre6000
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Are the pinons and pivots all made of wood. Do the pivots fit into wooden holes or into brass bushings. If the answer is it is completely made of wood then clock grease is to be used. If the pivots are steel and fit into brass bushings then I recommend Windles clock oil.  

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Restore formatting

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.



  • Recently Browsing

    • No registered users viewing this page.
  • Topics

  • Posts

    • Hello and welcome from Leeds. 
    • Unfortunately I'm not that lucky. I started on the train side and after I noticed the binding I pulled everything out except the driving wheel to rule everything else out. It still binds. I'm going to double check that the pinion is fully seated on the staff first, then if no joy I'll push the bridge jewel up a fraction of a mm. Fingers crossed!
    • Happy to have helped, great way to start the day with a win! 🥳
    • Thank you for the advise!! It worked. The setting screw was a lock/unlock to remove the rotor. 
    • I have that French tech sheet too, it is a little different than the English one (eg, it doesn't have the auto works diagram). BTW, it looks like you are looking up the case number in the 1979 ABC supplement. The 1974 ABC catalog does have the 3093 case. As you determined it takes the 1222-5 crystal.  When I serviced my President 'A' (which also takes that crystal), I was able to fit a 29.8 crystal from my DPA crystal assortment. Those are, in my opinion, a great deal. The assortment comes with 10 sizes each from 27.8mm to 32.4mm in 0.2 increments. I pretty much use them for any non-armored crystal that takes a high dome crystal. I think they no longer make them but Cousins has still has some in stock but when I bought them they were around $40 for the set and now they are around $100. Still, at 40 cents a crystal it's still a good deal. For the large driving wheel, I remember I once assembled the keyless/motion works first and when I placed the large driving wheel it was interfering with the setting wheel on the dial side as the teeth were not fully meshing and it wouldn't fully seat. If that isn't the issue I got nothing and am looking forward to see how you solve it 🙂
×
×
  • Create New...