GLOSSARY
Anchor | A part of an escapement of the same name. It looks like an upside-down anchor. |
Arbor | The name given to mechanical shafts in horology. |
Balance | Looks like a wheel and provides the mass for escapements which do not depend of pendulums. |
Balance spring | A spiral spring, one end of which is fixed to the balance and the other end to the frame, which, with the balance, forms an oscillator |
Barrel | The case in which the mainspring is contained. |
Beat | The even tick-tock of a clock or watch. |
Bezel | The frame holding the glass in front of a clock or watch. |
Brocot escapement | A type of deadbeat escapement using semi-cylindrical pins. |
Bush | An annular insertion of brass into the plate to provide a fresh bearing surface for the pivot. |
Cannon pinion | The pinion, having a long extension, which fits on the centre arbor and holds the minute hand. |
Case screws | The screws which hold the movement in the case. |
Centre seconds | Having a second hand concentric with the hour and minute hands. |
Centre wheel | The wheel on the centre arbor. |
Chiming | Producing a musical sequence of notes, often at the quarter hours. |
Chronograph | A clock or watch which records intervals of time. The hands can be stopped or started at will without stopping the mechanism and interfering with the timekeeping. |
Chronometer | A very accurate timekeeper. |
Click | A sprung detent which stops a ratchet wheel from turning backwards. |
Cock | A small plate holding one or two pivots only. |
Countwheel striking | An early and simple method of controlling the number of strokes sounded at the hour. |
Crown wheel | A wheel where the teeth face along the arbor and used in the verge escapement. |
Cylinder escapement | A balance wheel escapement driven by the escape wheel engaging in a cutaway cylinder. |
Deatbeat | A type of escapement without recoil. |
Dial | The plate on which the numerals are marked. |
Escapement | The device which controls the speed of the clock or watch time train. |
Fly | The rotating flat plate or governor which controls the speed of the striking or chiming trains. |
Full plate | Where the back plate covers the whole of the watch movement. |
Fusee | A tapered pulley device which evens out the pull of the mainspring. |
Going train | The train of wheels and pinions driving the escapement. |
Gut line | A line used to connect weights to the movement or to connect the mainspring to the fusee. Can be made from natural gut or can be artificial. |
Hairspring | See Balance Spring |
Half plate | Where the back plate of the watch covers only about half of the movement. Separate small plates called Cocks hold the escapement and fourth wheel pivots. |
Hole | A circular hole in the plate in which a pivot runs. |
Impulse | The small push given to the balance or pendulum once or twice each oscillation. |
Jewel | A precious or artificial stone used as a pivot hole or as an end cap for a pivot. |
Keywind | Wound by a key. |
Lever escapement | An escapement where an anchor shaped lever provides the impulse to the balance. |
Mainspring | A spiral spring, usually in a barrel, used as the motive force of a clock or watch. |
Motion work | The wheels and pinions linking the minute and hour hands together. |
Movement | The 'works' of a clock or watch. |
Olive | A small plunger in a watch case used in conjunction with the winding button to allow the hands to be set. |
Pallet | The teeth, usually only two, that engage in the escape wheel. |
Pendulum | A mass on the end of a rod which when acted upon by gravity provides the constant period oscillator for clocks. |
Perpetual calendar | An automatic calendar in a watch or clock which takes account of the varying lengths of months and of leap years. |
Pin pallet | A type of lever escapement using pins on the lever to obtain impulse. |
Pinions | A name for small gears, usually made of steel, driven by the larger wheels. |
Pivot | A fine extension of an arbor, running in a pivot hole. |
Plate | The back or front sheet of metal of a watch or clock movement in which the pivots run. |
Platform Escapement | A self-contained and removable balance escapement. |
Rack striking | A mechanism which superseded countwheel striking to control the number of strokes sounded at the hour. Allowed the use of repeater work. |
Ratchet wheel | A toothed wheel used in conjunction with a click to allow rotation in one direction only. |
Rating nut | The nut above or below a pendulum used to alter its length and so the rate at which the clock goes. |
Regulation | The process of changing the rate of a clock or watch. |
Regulator | The lever or other device used principally with balance escapements to alter the rate. |
Repeater | A clock or watch which can strike the last hour, with in some cases, the quarter and even the minutes at will. |
Run | Usually uncontrolled running of a movement |
Split seconds | Having two second hands, each of which can be stopped at will. |
Spring lug | The telescopic bar on a watch used to hold the strap. |
Stemwind | A watch wound by a knob or button, not with a key. |
Stop work | A mechanism connected to the winding to prevent overwinding. |
Stopwatch | A watch whose mechanism can be stopped or started at will. Used for timing events. See chronograph. |
Striking | Sounding the hours and perhaps the half-hours as well. |
Striking train | The train of wheels and pinions controlling the striking |
Suspension | A fine strip of steel, or sometimes silk thread, on which the pendulum hangs. |
Three-quarter plate | Where the back plate of a watch covers 3/4 of the movement, with the escapement pivoted in separate cocks. |
Verge | An early type of escapement where a crown wheel drives steel flags on the balance or pendulum arbor. |
Visible escapement | An escapement mounted on the dial of a clock. Often a Brocot escapement. |
Waterproof | A vague term. See the notes on water resistant watches. |
Wheels | The larger gears that drive pinions in movements. |
Winding button | The knob on a watch case that is used for winding. |
Winding square | The squared end of the mainspring arbor on which the key is fitted. |
Winding stem | The small shaft in the movement on which the winding button is fixed. |
Anchor | A part of an escapement of the same name. It looks like an upside-down anchor. |
Arbor | The name given to mechanical shafts in horology. |
Balance | Looks like a wheel and provides the mass for escapements which do not depend of pendulums. |
Balance spring | A spiral spring, one end of which is fixed to the balance and the other end to the frame, which, with the balance, forms an oscillator |
Barrel | The case in which the mainspring is contained. |
Beat | The even tick-tock of a clock or watch. |
Bezel | The frame holding the glass in front of a clock or watch. |
Brocot escapement | A type of deadbeat escapement using semi-cylindrical pins. |
Bush | An annular insertion of brass into the plate to provide a fresh bearing surface for the pivot. |
Cannon pinion | The pinion, having a long extension, which fits on the centre arbor and holds the minute hand. |
Case screws | The screws which hold the movement in the case. |
Centre seconds | Having a second hand concentric with the hour and minute hands. |
Centre wheel | The wheel on the centre arbor. |
Chiming | Producing a musical sequence of notes, often at the quarter hours. |
Chronograph | A clock or watch which records intervals of time. The hands can be stopped or started at will without stopping the mechanism and interfering with the timekeeping. |
Chronometer | A very accurate timekeeper. |
Click | A sprung detent which stops a ratchet wheel from turning backwards. |
Cock | A small plate holding one or two pivots only. |
Countwheel striking | An early and simple method of controlling the number of strokes sounded at the hour. |
Crown wheel | A wheel where the teeth face along the arbor and used in the verge escapement. |
Cylinder escapement | A balance wheel escapement driven by the escape wheel engaging in a cutaway cylinder. |
Deatbeat | A type of escapement without recoil. |
Dial | The plate on which the numerals are marked. |
Escapement | The device which controls the speed of the clock or watch time train. |
Fly | The rotating flat plate or governor which controls the speed of the striking or chiming trains. |
Full plate | Where the back plate covers the whole of the watch movement. |
Fusee | A tapered pulley device which evens out the pull of the mainspring. |
Going train | The train of wheels and pinions driving the escapement. |
Gut line | A line used to connect weights to the movement or to connect the mainspring to the fusee. Can be made from natural gut or can be artificial. |
Hairspring | See Balance Spring |
Half plate | Where the back plate of the watch covers only about half of the movement. Separate small plates called Cocks hold the escapement and fourth wheel pivots. |
Hole | A circular hole in the plate in which a pivot runs. |
Impulse | The small push given to the balance or pendulum once or twice each oscillation. |
Jewel | A precious or artificial stone used as a pivot hole or as an end cap for a pivot. |
Keywind | Wound by a key. |
Lever escapement | An escapement where an anchor shaped lever provides the impulse to the balance. |
Mainspring | A spiral spring, usually in a barrel, used as the motive force of a clock or watch. |
Motion work | The wheels and pinions linking the minute and hour hands together. |
Movement | The 'works' of a clock or watch. |
Olive | A small plunger in a watch case used in conjunction with the winding button to allow the hands to be set. |
Pallet | The teeth, usually only two, that engage in the escape wheel. |
Pendulum | A mass on the end of a rod which when acted upon by gravity provides the constant period oscillator for clocks. |
Perpetual calendar | An automatic calendar in a watch or clock which takes account of the varying lengths of months and of leap years. |
Pin pallet | A type of lever escapement using pins on the lever to obtain impulse. |
Pinions | A name for small gears, usually made of steel, driven by the larger wheels. |
Pivot | A fine extension of an arbor, running in a pivot hole. |
Plate | The back or front sheet of metal of a watch or clock movement in which the pivots run. |
Platform Escapement | A self-contained and removable balance escapement. |
Rack striking | A mechanism which superseded countwheel striking to control the number of strokes sounded at the hour. Allowed the use of repeater work. |
Ratchet wheel | A toothed wheel used in conjunction with a click to allow rotation in one direction only. |
Rating nut | The nut above or below a pendulum used to alter its length and so the rate at which the clock goes. |
Regulation | The process of changing the rate of a clock or watch. |
Regulator | The lever or other device used principally with balance escapements to alter the rate. |
Repeater | A clock or watch which can strike the last hour, with in some cases, the quarter and even the minutes at will. |
Run | Usually uncontrolled running of a movement |
Split seconds | Having two second hands, each of which can be stopped at will. |
Spring lug | The telescopic bar on a watch used to hold the strap. |
Stemwind | A watch wound by a knob or button, not with a key. |
Stop work | A mechanism connected to the winding to prevent overwinding. |
Stopwatch | A watch whose mechanism can be stopped or started at will. Used for timing events. See chronograph. |
Striking | Sounding the hours and perhaps the half-hours as well. |
Striking train | The train of wheels and pinions controlling the striking |
Suspension | A fine strip of steel, or sometimes silk thread, on which the pendulum hangs. |
Three-quarter plate | Where the back plate of a watch covers 3/4 of the movement, with the escapement pivoted in separate cocks. |
Verge | An early type of escapement where a crown wheel drives steel flags on the balance or pendulum arbor. |
Visible escapement | An escapement mounted on the dial of a clock. Often a Brocot escapement. |
Waterproof | A vague term. See the notes on water resistant watches. |
Wheels | The larger gears that drive pinions in movements. |
Winding button | The knob on a watch case that is used for winding. |
Winding square | The squared end of the mainspring arbor on which the key is fitted. |
Winding stem | The small shaft in the movement on which the winding button is fixed. |