THE CLOCK
Thirty-one
years ago, I received a clock from my company representing twenty-five years of
service. It is a nice clock. It is an Atmos clock, a special clock that
never needs winding as it self-winds by virtue of changing atmospheric pressure…or
something…I never really understood.
The clock
looks pretty on my mantle, but it never kept accurate time, and when I
attempted to adjust the speed to maintain correct time, it stopped after a few
days and needed to be manually rewound.
This clock was
a common recognition gift for service from many companies back when employees
did not skip firms every few years as seems to be the way to move up in the
world these days.
Anyway, I
have seen many of these clocks at friends or family members who managed to stay with the same firm for extended
number of years. It seems all these
other clocks maintain accurate time and they run forever, as advertised.
I figured
mine was just a dud.
I do know
that one key to keeping the Atmos clock running is to have it perfectly
balanced. There is a tiny level bubble
thing and adjustable “feet” that assist in this delicate balancing. Occasionally, over the years I adjusted the
balance and the clock would run for a while but it would stop before I could
properly adjust the timing adjustment bar.
I pretty
much just gave up on using the clock for time and accepted it as a nice mantlepiece
ornament.
A few months
ago, after having giving up on the clock as a time piece since the demise of my
second marriage, I adjusted the balance just for the heck of it and started it
up.
Son-of-a-gun
the clock ran with out stopping. It ran
a few minutes a day slow, but it continued to run.
For the last
month I have been adjusting the timing bar every few days until it now keeps
time within a few seconds a week of my cable box Greenwich Mean Time analog
clock.
Thirty-one
years and the clock now is not just an ornament but it actually maintains
accurate time!
Apparently,
my former wife who was a bit of a neat freak periodically dusted not just
around the clock but also under it. It seems
you should not move the clock. Using
atmospheric pressure to keep a clock running requires perfect balance.
The Atmos
clock is very sensitive.
Among the
many reasons I have for appreciating Mrs. C, I now add to the list the fact
that she does not dust the mantle.
Glad you figured it out.!!
ReplyDeleteYou would not want me as your hired housekeeper, I would have been dusting the mantle as well, including under the clock. Thanks for the head's up, if I run into one of these, I promise not to touch it, or dust under it.
ReplyDeleteit's not that i don't dust the mantle, i barley dust ever. except when company is arriving.
ReplyDelete