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Electric clocks

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  • albatros
    replied
    Originally posted by DeborahMoore View Post
    I am interested in what do you prefer? Digital clocks or classic watches. Those digital ones come with more features than their analog counterparts. Digital clocks provide superior readability during tense, time-sensitive scenarios, and some digital models can help people track the time with the help of a countdown timer. They can help to get students to their next classroom on time. That is why I vote for digital version.
    Analogue every time (no pun intended). I hate digital displays with a passion. For one thing there is always a degree of "scatter" in the last digit(s) and for another it's harder to follow trends. My pet aversion is in the case of electrical measuring instruments. Give me an AVO every time. As for watches - a good quality proper watch with no flash display and never actually used dials such as the Omega seamaster - finestkind! Digital clocks and watches? Nah. The old ways really ARE the best.

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  • DeborahMoore
    replied
    I am interested in what do you prefer? Digital clocks or classic watches. Those digital ones come with more features than their analog counterparts. Digital clocks provide superior readability during tense, time-sensitive scenarios, and some digital models can help people track the time with the help of a countdown timer. They can help to get students to their next classroom on time. That is why I vote for digital version.

    Leave a comment:


  • minilandrover
    replied
    Hi I had a great electric clock, that I sold for a lot of money but still miss its wonderfull display, called a spinner clock.
    Now thats an ELECTRIC CLOCK !
    50 htz  europ model

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  • sesarob
    replied
    What an awful way to get woken up, and as likely to wake others. I ended up buying a digital plug-in with a radio with my own money so I could wake up to music or at least a DJ (I had an early morning papers round).
    Encryptobiography

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  • beccabear67
    replied
    I remember my parents getting a new bedside clock that looked kind of like digital but it was tiles with half numbers on them flipping down over and over. It would make a flapping sound every minute, and the more tiles that flapped over at once the louder. I'm glad I didn't have one like it because it's flapping would remind me of the passage of time if I was having trouble getting to sleep! I did have a wind up alarm clock (with Cookie Monster from Sesame Street on it) that I hated the loud ring on so refused to keep it wound. What an awful way to get woken up, and as likely to wake others. I ended up buying a digital plug-in with a radio with my own money so I could wake up to music or at least a DJ (I had an early morning papers round).

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  • sesarob
    replied
    Clock faces were originally analogue but digital displays also exist. Impulse clock systems were rarely used in homes but were common in offices, schools, train stations, and other locations where many clock faces were used. Master clocks could also control timed bells or time stamping machines as well as clock faces.

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  • tex
    replied
    Re: Electric clocks

    [QUOTE=Arran;229570]Impulse clock systems are probably the most interesting electric clocks. They consist of a master clock, which is a machine that produces high accuracy electric pulses, and a number of clock faces which accept the pulses and display the time. Some systems produced pulses every second but others every minute. Clock faces were originally analogue but digital displays also exist. Impulse clock systems were rarely used in homes but were common in offices, schools, train stations, and other locations where many clock faces were used. Master clocks could also control timed bells or time stamping machines as well as clock faces.

    The most prominent British manufacturer of impulse clock systems was Gent.

    http://www.aeolian-hall.myzen.co.uk/clocks.htm[/
    We certainly found our expert on all things clocks, i bow to your knowledge Arran.

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  • Arran
    replied
    Re: Electric clocks

    Impulse clock systems are probably the most interesting electric clocks. They consist of a master clock, which is a machine that produces high accuracy electric pulses, and a number of clock faces which accept the pulses and display the time. Some systems produced pulses every second but others every minute. Clock faces were originally analogue but digital displays also exist. Impulse clock systems were rarely used in homes but were common in offices, schools, train stations, and other locations where many clock faces were used. Master clocks could also control timed bells or time stamping machines as well as clock faces.

    The most prominent British manufacturer of impulse clock systems was Gent.

    http://www.aeolian-hall.myzen.co.uk/clocks.htm

    Leave a comment:


  • CrystalBall
    replied
    Re: Electric clocks

    Back in the 1970s we had a Smiths Sectric wall clock in the kitchen, two Smiths alarm clocks and a Kienzle wooden wall clock in the lounge - all mains-powered. The Smiths Sectric and the Kienzle lasted from when my parents were married (1963) until the mid-1980s! The Smiths alarm clocks were not very good though.

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  • George 1978
    replied
    Re: Electric clocks

    I am sure that early 1980s Argos catalogues had them on their pages - and many classrooms at school had them as well.

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  • staffslad
    replied
    Re: Electric clocks

    Originally posted by zabadak View Post
    We had a wall-mounted Smiths "Sectric" in our living room. It was connected directly to the mains, not plugged in.

    I think my uncle's clock was also directly connected to the mains, rather than plugging into a wall socket. His doorbell chimes were similarly connected.

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  • Richard1978
    replied
    Re: Electric clocks

    I remember my friend's house had one of those clock sockets on the wall, but no clock.

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  • zabadak
    replied
    Re: Electric clocks

    We had a wall-mounted Smiths "Sectric" in our living room. It was connected directly to the mains, not plugged in.

    Leave a comment:


  • tex
    replied
    Re: Electric clocks

    Smiths were probably the best known and adorned many a school hall and factory wall, speaking of clocks reminds me of my dads wind up alarm clock it was called "Big ben" and not without good reason,the thing was deafening. My dad worked on the buses (his name was Stan....genuinely) and the big ben was set for 5 am but it would wake the whole house up (we were a family of eight)

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  • staffslad
    replied
    Re: Electric clocks

    My uncle and aunt had a mains-powered electric clock on their lounge wall in the 70s and into the 80s. That is the on;y one I can recall seeing in a private house. It always impressed me when visiting them as we were still using mechanical wind-up clocks in our house. Actually, I think there is something rather comforting and reassuring in the ticking of a mechanical clock.

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