Name "Western Clock Company" modified to "Westclox"
Motor sort M1 introduced - Westclox own style of self-starting synchronous motor. Clocks using this motor included Bachelor (1938 - 1947), Manor (1938 - 1947), Big Ben vogue five Chime Alarm (1938 - 1941), Pittsfield (intro. 1939). Note: Bachelor, Manor, and Pittsfield used sort M2 motor beginning ca. 1940.
Smaller version of Westclox self-start synchronous motor introduced - varieties M2 and M3. a number of the models that used these motors are: Baby Ben vogue five electrical (intro. 1940), Big Ben vogue five electrical (not Chime Alarm) (intro. 1941), Dunbar (1946 - 1952), Logan (intro. 1946), Big Ben electrical in rectangular brown Bakelite case (1947 - 1952), Oracle (intro. 1947), Moonbeam - flashing light-weight grandfather clock (intro. 1949), and Switch Clock appliance timer (intro. 1949).
Motor sort M4 introduced. employed in Belfast (intro. 1948), Barry (intro. 1948), Bantam (intro. 1949), Greenwich (1950 - 1954), Melody (intro. 1950), Glo-Larm (intro. 1953), Ardmore, Orb, Big Ben and Baby Ben vogue seven electrical (intro. 1956), and lots of alternative models.
Motor with sealed rotor (detachable from field coil) introduced (M5).
Westclox,big ben,westclox history
931 General Time Instruments Corporation (which had been fashioned in 1930 as a holding company for Western Clock Company and Seth Thomas) purchases the Hamilton-Sangamo Corporation. Quoting from "Illinois Horology" by Andrew Hayes Miller and Dalia Maria Miller, p. 51, relating to the Sangamo electrical company:
Tuesday, March 12, 2013
Friday, March 8, 2013
History of Westclox Synchronous Electric Clocks part 2
First A/C powered clocks placed on market. These clocks used the S1 self-starting synchronous motor, purchased from Sangamo. the primary of those clocks were big Ben models: Model 820, black composition (Bakelite) case, $8.75, Model 830, same however with luminous dial, $10.00, each made of 1931 - 1934; and model 840, mahogany case, $12.50 retail (by 1935 the value had been reduced to $5.95), made of 1931 - 1935. alternative clocks that used the Sangamo motor embody Ben Franklin (1935 - 1939), Greenwich (1936 - 1939) and Silent Knight (1936 - 1940).
Westclox designed manual begin synchronous motor, S2, introduced. Entire movement except coil manufactured within the LaSalle plant. This manual begin motor was created for several years. Production apparently ceased throughout World War II, and never resumed. Clocks using this motor embrace electrical Wall Clock - rectangular case with rounded corners (1932 - 1939), America electrical (1932 - 1936), Ben Bolt (1933 - 1939), Country Club (1935 - 1942), electrical Wall Clock - spherical case (1936 - 1939), Andover (1938 - 1942), Orb (1938 - 1940), and Belfast (1939 - 1942).
Monday, March 12, 2012
History of Westclox Synchronous Electric Clocks part 1
1931
General Time Instruments Corporation (which had been fashioned in 1930 as a holding company for Western Clock Company and Seth Thomas) purchases the Hamilton-Sangamo Corporation.
Quoting from "Illinois Horology" by Andrew Hayes Miller and Dalia Maria Miller, p. 51, relating to the Sangamo electrical company:
"To meet the synchronous clock competition, they developed a non self beginning synchronous motor throughout the spring of 1930. In August, a replacement line of clocks was prepared for market. consistent with Robert C. Lanphier in Forty Years of Sangamo:
However, we have a tendency to soon realized that we would have liked a self-starting synchronous clock, therefore later that year created the primary sort "F" self-starting motor. . .We were close to supply a line of self beginning clocks. . . . when, in December 1930, the overall Time Instruments Corporation . . . owning the Western Clock company ("Big Ben") and Seth Thomas Clock Company expressed an interest in using the kind "F" motor in their electrical clocks. As we have a tendency to couldn't sell motors to the other concern than Hamilton-Sangamo, the upshot of the matter was that Mr. Ralph Matthiessen, President of G.T.I. corporation, offered to shop for the Hamilton-Sangamo Corporation, and therefore get the exclusive rights to use all of our motors, A.C. and D.C., for clock functions, still because the established business of the Hamilton-Sangamo Corporation. The business was so sold to G.T.I. Corporation in April, 1931, and Hamilton and Sangamo retired from the clock business, with considerable loss, however with a lot of valuable expertise.
General Time Instruments Corporation (which had been fashioned in 1930 as a holding company for Western Clock Company and Seth Thomas) purchases the Hamilton-Sangamo Corporation.
Quoting from "Illinois Horology" by Andrew Hayes Miller and Dalia Maria Miller, p. 51, relating to the Sangamo electrical company:
"To meet the synchronous clock competition, they developed a non self beginning synchronous motor throughout the spring of 1930. In August, a replacement line of clocks was prepared for market. consistent with Robert C. Lanphier in Forty Years of Sangamo:
However, we have a tendency to soon realized that we would have liked a self-starting synchronous clock, therefore later that year created the primary sort "F" self-starting motor. . .We were close to supply a line of self beginning clocks. . . . when, in December 1930, the overall Time Instruments Corporation . . . owning the Western Clock company ("Big Ben") and Seth Thomas Clock Company expressed an interest in using the kind "F" motor in their electrical clocks. As we have a tendency to couldn't sell motors to the other concern than Hamilton-Sangamo, the upshot of the matter was that Mr. Ralph Matthiessen, President of G.T.I. corporation, offered to shop for the Hamilton-Sangamo Corporation, and therefore get the exclusive rights to use all of our motors, A.C. and D.C., for clock functions, still because the established business of the Hamilton-Sangamo Corporation. The business was so sold to G.T.I. Corporation in April, 1931, and Hamilton and Sangamo retired from the clock business, with considerable loss, however with a lot of valuable expertise.
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Westclox Simplicity Wall Clock, White
Westclox Simplicity Wall Clock, White |
Saturday, March 12, 2011
Big Ben Quartz Cream Alarm Clock
Big Ben Quartz Cream Alarm Clock |
Alarm clock
Westclox Big Ben Classic Alarm Clock (90010A) |
Traditional mechanical alarm clocks have one or 2 bells that ring by means that of a mainspring that drives a gear that propels a hammer back and forth between the 2 bells or between the inside sides of one bell. In some models, the rear encasement of the clock itself acts because the bell. In an electrical bell-style watch, the bell is rung by an electromagnetic circuit and armature that turns the circuit on and off repeatedly.
Westclox Baby Ben Alarm Clock (11611K) |
Some alarm clocks have radios which will be set to start out enjoying at specified times, and are referred to as clock radios. A progressive watch, still new within the market, will have totally different alarms for various times (see Next-Generation Alarms). latest televisions and cell phones have watch functions to show on or create sounds at specified times.
Friday, March 11, 2011
Westclox Digital Clock
WESTCLOX METEOR BLK 06 RED DISPLAY |
Westclox Nova White |
Westclox
Early history as United Clock Company
Charles Stahlberg and others from Waterbury, Connecticut originally shaped as "United Clock Company" on December five, 1885 in Peru, Illinois, aspiring to manufacture clocks based mostly on a technological innovation by Stahlberg. This innovation was patented by Stahlberg on September twenty two, 1885 (US patent #326,602) and concerned the employment of molded lead alloy movement plates with inset brass bushings furthermore as lead alloy gear assemblies. Shortly when being granted the 1885 patent, United Clock Company went bankrupt, and there are not any known surviving samples of the patented clock.
Bankruptcies, reorganizations, and mergers
In 1887, the company reorganized beneath the new name "Western Clock Company." the company once more went bankrupt, and was reorganized by F. W. Matthiessen in 1888 because the "Western Clock manufacturing Company." In 1908, the company was granted a patent for the "Big Ben" grandfather clock movement. This movement has a "bell-back" design, which suggests that the bell mechanism is integral to the clock's case. the company first brought the massive Ben to market in 1909. The company's name was shortened to "Western Clock Company" in 1912. In 1910, the massive Ben became the primary alarm clock advertised nationally, with ads placed within the Saturday Evening Post.
Charles Stahlberg and others from Waterbury, Connecticut originally shaped as "United Clock Company" on December five, 1885 in Peru, Illinois, aspiring to manufacture clocks based mostly on a technological innovation by Stahlberg. This innovation was patented by Stahlberg on September twenty two, 1885 (US patent #326,602) and concerned the employment of molded lead alloy movement plates with inset brass bushings furthermore as lead alloy gear assemblies. Shortly when being granted the 1885 patent, United Clock Company went bankrupt, and there are not any known surviving samples of the patented clock.
Bankruptcies, reorganizations, and mergers
In 1887, the company reorganized beneath the new name "Western Clock Company." the company once more went bankrupt, and was reorganized by F. W. Matthiessen in 1888 because the "Western Clock manufacturing Company." In 1908, the company was granted a patent for the "Big Ben" grandfather clock movement. This movement has a "bell-back" design, which suggests that the bell mechanism is integral to the clock's case. the company first brought the massive Ben to market in 1909. The company's name was shortened to "Western Clock Company" in 1912. In 1910, the massive Ben became the primary alarm clock advertised nationally, with ads placed within the Saturday Evening Post.
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