Well, at last I decided to pry open the rectangular bezel - it came
off easier than I expected.
(and later, after reassembly, it was practically invisible that the
clock had been opened).
It was NOT the electromagnet- controlled type I expected, rather
there is a one transistor circuit
and an electromagnet that controls the forward and backward rotation
of the flywheel.
So, the accuracy is still determined by the mechanics, i.e. not by a
quartz oscillator.
The problem was probably caused by a bad internal ground contact,
I'm not totally sure, but after cleaning the internal contacts, the
clock now works fine again.
That is the end of the story!
Bert
>It has been many, many, years ago since I have dismantled such a clock.
>IIRC there is an electromagnet inside that rewinds the coil spring when it
>is out of action.
>This happens every 5 minutes or so, causing the clock to 'click'.
>There is no mention of 'quartz' on the face of the clock, so it is not an
>electronic one.
>
>Come to think of it, probably the contact breaker points for the magnet
>inside the clock are corroded
>(as was the case with the engine distributor, the car would not run
>initially
>since having been standing for over 20 years. Cleaning the CB points cleared
>that problem.
>They were replaced shortly after, of course).
>
>So, I'm now thinking of trying an electrical trick first, before
>dismantling.
>I'll keep you informed.
_______________________________________________
Support Team.Net http://www.team.net/donate.html
Mgs@autox.team.net
http://autox.team.net/mailman/listinfo/mgs
http://www.team.net/archive
|