The Conservative Cave

Interests => Around the House & In the Garage => Topic started by: seahorse513 on October 09, 2012, 08:28:47 AM

Title: fixing clock
Post by: seahorse513 on October 09, 2012, 08:28:47 AM
I have this lovely mallard duck mantle clock(I love ducks!). However the internal workings aren't turning. To who would take it too?? A jeweler, or a clocksmith(?)...Any idea of the costs?? any opinions?? advice??
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: CactusCarlos on October 09, 2012, 09:32:26 AM
I have this lovely mallard duck mantle clock(I love ducks!). However the internal workings aren't turning. To who would take it too?? A jeweler, or a clocksmith(?)...Any idea of the costs?? any opinions?? advice??

This looks interesting: http://www.nationalclockrepair.com/
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: seahorse513 on October 09, 2012, 09:50:17 AM
This looks interesting: http://www.nationalclockrepair.com/
After some intensive research, I found someone local.....I really love this clock!!
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: Wineslob on October 09, 2012, 10:01:01 AM
I have this lovely mallard duck mantle clock(I love ducks!). However the internal workings aren't turning. To who would take it too?? A jeweler, or a clocksmith(?)...Any idea of the costs?? any opinions?? advice??


Got a pic of it? I'm guessing it's a mechanical clock?
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: Freeper on October 09, 2012, 11:28:19 AM
If it is easy to take apart you can probably get the parts cheaply at wal mart and replace them.
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: Wineslob on October 09, 2012, 12:40:14 PM
If it is easy to take apart you can probably get the parts cheaply at wal mart and replace them.



 :thatsright:
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: longview on October 09, 2012, 04:06:43 PM
If it is easy to take apart you can probably get the parts cheaply at wal mart and replace them.

Or as my husband used to ask, "Can't ya just buy new guts?"
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: vesta111 on October 09, 2012, 05:24:38 PM
I have this lovely mallard duck mantle clock(I love ducks!). However the internal workings aren't turning. To who would take it too?? A jeweler, or a clocksmith(?)...Any idea of the costs?? any opinions?? advice??

Sea right  up my alley,I  began to collect clocks when I received my G-G-gradmothers mantel clock, it was not the clock but the history behind it.

 Over the years the clock had lost allot of it's innards due to being bumped about moved and  mistreated.   It sits alone on the top of the kitchen shelf today, Has not worked in 20 years.   Actually your post caused me to look up and see this clock that had become so much of the background I no longer saw it.  This clock is not made of wood, has lions heads on both sides, made of some material.

Then I have have a clock I bought at a flea market,  Perhaps Austrian, beautiful workmanship with a seal of some country that I never bothered to track down.  was before the PC.      This clock is odd it will not work unless it is completely level, an I gave up on it and put it on display.

Hubby told me his family had a Cookoo clock from the old country so as it had disappeared after his parents death I sent away to buy a replica.  What a mess, I tried time after time that one did not just pull on the chains to wind it, one had to hold the weights on their hand to keep from stripping the gears.

Clocks the time keepers of our lives each tick moves us into the future. Each tick means we still live, and to hear the ticking of an old clock brings our mortal lives into perspective.
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: thundley4 on October 09, 2012, 06:18:02 PM
I have this lovely mallard duck mantle clock(I love ducks!). However the internal workings aren't turning. To who would take it too?? A jeweler, or a clocksmith(?)...Any idea of the costs?? any opinions?? advice??

Talk to Mitt Romney, I heard he recently cleaned Obama's clock.   :-)
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: seahorse513 on October 09, 2012, 09:14:17 PM
(http://i1033.photobucket.com/albums/a412/tania513-2010/jingles/003.jpg)


Edited to show image. In the future, don't use HTML code, just the url.
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: seahorse513 on October 09, 2012, 09:15:53 PM
(http://i1033.photobucket.com/albums/a412/tania513-2010/jingles/003.jpg)
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: IassaFTots on October 09, 2012, 09:26:30 PM
Hey!  You posted a picture!!!!
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: Chris_ on October 09, 2012, 09:28:21 PM
You might be able to buy a new clock mechanism for that and have it mounted to the back of the face plate on that clock, but that's just a guess.  It shouldn't cost a lot (new clocks are cheap) and you can always save the original and have it repaired.
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: seahorse513 on October 09, 2012, 09:31:39 PM
Hey!  You posted a picture!!!!

yes very excited!!!
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: Big Dog on October 09, 2012, 09:38:42 PM
(http://i1033.photobucket.com/albums/a412/tania513-2010/jingles/003.jpg)

Nice clock!
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: IassaFTots on October 09, 2012, 09:39:00 PM
yes very excited!!!

You will have to let me know how you did it, I have not been successful.
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: Chris_ on October 09, 2012, 09:40:10 PM
You will have to let me know how you did it, I have not been successful.
[ IMG ] [ /IMG ]

Put a link to the picture between the IMG brackets (minus the spaces).
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: BattleHymn on October 09, 2012, 09:48:30 PM
Is it battery powered?  If so, for about $5-$6, any hobby shop or Wal-Mart should have replacement movements that you can stick your face dials on to.

I love old clocks.  I'm still shopping for a couple of gut pieces for a Ingraham mantle clock from the 20's/30's, and a main spring for a 1919 Big Ben style 1A.   :naughty:
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: seahorse513 on October 09, 2012, 09:50:12 PM
do you have photobucket??
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: Big Dog on October 09, 2012, 09:57:56 PM
You will have to let me know how you did it, I have not been successful.

Is that the reason we haven't seen your lingerie pictures?

 :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty:
 :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty:
 :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty:

 :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs:
 :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs:
 :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs:
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: BattleHymn on October 09, 2012, 09:59:37 PM

 This clock is not made of wood, has lions heads on both sides, made of some material.


Is it made out of bakelite, vesta?
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: longview on October 09, 2012, 10:38:57 PM
That's a neat looking clock, seahorse.
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: seahorse513 on October 09, 2012, 10:39:56 PM
That's a neat looking clock, seahorse.
Thankyou!!
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: vesta111 on October 10, 2012, 07:44:17 AM
Is it made out of bakelite, vesta?

I have no idea what it is made of, according to my grandmother this was a wedding gift to her mother in the mid 1800's, I received it in the mid 1970's when she sold out and went into a place that was assisted living..   So she gave away all the trappings of life including 2 other mantel clocks, made of wood, both with double key wind like mine, pocket watches, seems that keeping time was very important to the late generations.

Now I have Mother on the hunt for a watch my Dad had along time ago.  It was one of those that wound itself up just by the movement of the wearers wrist. 

Back to the clock in question , double key wind, lions heads on both sides both lions holding a ring in their mouth.   Front has a either a Greek or Roman theme, decorative columns holding up the flat top, at one time the clock had a bronze statue of horse and rider placed there.  My aunt took that.

I am fascinated however with my flee market find,  double key wind and the innards have some kind of a gizmo's with a definitely European Eagle looks like a symbol for some country over there.  The clock face has no makers name on it so I believe the clock lost the original face and was repaired sometime in the past.

I did find out something interesting at work one day.  Part of my job was to time the lines with a stop watch.  The company gave out the battery type but one worker had a stem wound watch.   I went a looking and could not find any under $100, 20 years ago.
A beautiful piece of work with a face cover, like a pocket watch.   Along with my hunt I also found out that watch fobs  are valuable.

Styles of the late 1800's up to the 1940's had those of wealth take dimes into a jeweler, the back of the dimes was ground off and each dime was engraved with the initials of a family member.   The front intact with the date and the government stamp. These the Jeweler attached together to a chain all on one place to create a watch fob. Mom gave me one that belonged to her grandfather and I passed it on to my son. 

I think I will head for E Bay to see what they have for their clocks, pocket watches etc.
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: IassaFTots on October 10, 2012, 08:21:11 AM
Is that the reason we haven't seen your lingerie pictures?

 :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty:
 :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty:
 :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty: :naughty:

 :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs:
 :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs:
 :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs: :thumbs:

Uh yeah, that's it.
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: Wineslob on October 10, 2012, 10:23:13 AM
Sea, since it says "quartz" I agree, you will probably be able to just buy a new movement for it and have it installed.

Now, if it was a wind up from the 40-50's.................. :hyper:
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: vesta111 on October 10, 2012, 02:13:47 PM
Sea, since it says "quartz" I agree, you will probably be able to just buy a new movement for it and have it installed.

Now, if it was a wind up from the 40-50's.................. :hyper:

Oh yes, that Mickey Mouse alarm clock I received as a kid, who knew then what it would cost today. 

Reminds me of a scam I heard about in the early 1990's, Returning Airforce vets and family's from Germany would bring back these huge elaborate grandfather clocks. The weights were the size of your head.   The scam was they were told that the clock had to cleaned every 18 months and given a list of company's all over the USA to come to the home and clean it.  Cost from $500.+ 

 Up in Dover a near by town there is a small Museum   with one room that has grandfathers that go back to the 1700's I asked the Docent how they could afford to have these clocks kept in good repair as they all ran and kept good time.

The old fella, looking as old as the clocks gave me an odd look and said that every couple years they very carefully vacuum them out and oil the workings with sewing machine oil.  Just a few drops are needed.     I asked what was used before the oil was invented and he laughed and said perhaps unsalted lard, or whale oil.

What a scam, but they are out there you know.
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: RobJohnson on October 14, 2012, 01:58:46 AM
seahorse, nice clock.

When I was younger and still in high school I always like to have things with ducks. Especially mallards.

It might just be irony but years later I worked for a pro UFC hockey team, the Quad City Mallards....hmmmmm

I did not play...hell no....I was the sales manager.
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: CG6468 on October 14, 2012, 07:33:21 AM
Sea, since it says "quartz" I agree, you will probably be able to just buy a new movement for it and have it installed.

Now, if it was a wind up from the 40-50's.................. :hyper:

How about a porcelain windup from the 1920s?
Title: Re: fixing clock
Post by: Wineslob on October 18, 2012, 09:43:23 AM
How about a porcelain windup from the 1920s?

Even better.