WWT Shows | CLICK TO: Join and Support Internet Horology Club 185™ | IHC185™ Forums |
• Check Out Our... • • TWO Book Offer! • |
Go | New Topic | Find-Or-Search | Notify | Tools | Reply to Post |
This is a 1970s era battery rewind cuckoo clock with a seperate music box (pull string activated). Andy. | |||
Front view of same battery rewind clock. | ||||
Another clock (not mine) with the same type movement. | ||||
Front view of my battery operated singing bird clock. | ||||
Here is a battery operated cuckoo clock from Japan. Andy | ||||
Front of "Kiddy" brand clock. | ||||
Very interesting Andy. When did they start making them with the battery add on. It is interesting that in the later one, the battery bird is activated with the time, whereas in the earlier version it is activated when someone pulled the string. Is that correct? Thanks for the pictures. Tom Seymour NAWCC #41293 IHC #104 IHC Exec.V.P. | ||||
Tom, The first one in the pictures uses the electric motor to wind the springs for both the time and cuckoo. Besides that, it is a standard cuckoo clock. The seperate pull string music box is in the bottom of the case, and it turns the water wheel. The second one is basically a standard one day weight driven cuckoo clock. It has the addition of a battery operated singing bird behind the second door which is activated on the hour. I haven't figured out exactly what the motor does on the one from Japan yet, too many projects, and I just got it. The two Regula clocks from Germany were made in the 1970s and 1980s, but I don't know about the Japan one. Probably about the same time. I don't think they made these electric-mechanical clocks very long. New battery operated cuckoo clocks have quartz movements in them, recorded cuckoo sound, and a lot of plastic. Andy. | ||||
Thanks Andy, I've kind of ingored these figuring if you've seen one you've seen them all. I knew of the fancy very early ones, but the battery combo models slipped right by me. I've got a dozen boxes of cuckoo cases, movements, parts and pieces. They have been sitting in my basement for about 15 years now. Supposedly a retirement project to salvage and restore as much as possible. I'll have to start digging through them. When you get the mystery solved on the third clock let us know what you find. Thanks! Tom Seymour NAWCC #41293 IHC #104 IHC Exec.V.P. | ||||
Close-up picture of the battery operated singing bird device on the second clock above. Andy. | ||||
This is an early (1960s) battery operated clock movement, the whole clock sold by General Electric. It is made of some kind of foam. It is time only. It is marked Deutsche Uhr. Andy So many clocks, so little time. | ||||
Powered by Social Strata |
Your request is being processed... |