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Anchor_escapement_animation_217x328px.gif (217 × 328 pixels, file size: 878 KB, MIME type: image/gif, looped, 72 frames, 3.6 s)

Summary

Description
English: Animation of an anchor escapement used in pendulum clocks. An escapement is a mechanism in a clock which gives the pendulum pushes to keep it swinging, and at each swing releases the gear train to move forward a fixed amount, thus moving the clock's hands forward at a steady rate. The recoil or anchor escapement, invented by Robert Hooke around 1658 and first applied to clocks around 1680, was the standard escapement used in pendulum clocks until the late 1800s, when a more accurate variation called the deadbeat escapement superseded it. It consists of an "escape wheel" (yellow) which is driven by the clock's gear train. The pivoted "anchor" piece above it (grey) is attached to the clock's pendulum (not shown) which hangs below it. The anchor has flat angled surfaces on each side called "pallets" which the escape wheel's teeth alternately catch and push on, giving the pendulum impulses to replace the energy it loses to friction, keeping it swinging.

This animation shows a typical anchor escapement found in a grandfather clock. The clock has a seconds pendulum, with a period of 2 seconds, so each swing takes one second. The escape wheel has 30 teeth and thus rotates once per minute, so the clock's second hand can be attached to its shaft. The amplitude or width of swing of the pendulum in this example is about 8°, a little wider than many quality anchor clocks, which have amplitudes of 3° - 6°. Of this angle, the "lift" or "drive" angle, the angle of forward swing over which the pendulum receives drive force, is 5°, while the remaining 3° consists of the "recoil".

The animation illustrates one of the disadvantages of the anchor: "recoil", which means the pendulum pushes the escape wheel backwards during part of each cycle. Recoil reverses the clock's gear train all the way back to the driving weight each swing of the pendulum, causing increased wear and inaccuracy.
Français : Schéma animé d'un "recul" ou échappement à ancre utilisée dans pendules, inventé par Robert Hooke en 1657
Русский: Анимированные диаграммы из отдачи или анкерного спуска, используемого в маятниковых часов
Deutsch: Animierte Grafik eines Rückstoß oder Ankerhemmung in Pendeluhren verwendet wird, von Robert Hooke im Jahre 1657 erfunden.
Italiano: Diagramma animato di un "contraccolpo" o scappamento ad ancora utilizzati in orologi a pendolo, inventato da Robert Hooke nel 1657
Dansk: Diagramma animato di un "contraccolpo" o scappamento ad ancora utilizzati in orologi a pendolo, inventato da Robert Hooke nel 1657
Nederlands: Geanimeerde diagram van een "terugslag" of ankergang gebruikt in slingerklokken, uitgevonden door Robert Hooke in 1657
Español: Diagrama animado de un "retroceso" o escape de áncora utilizado en relojes de péndulo, inventado por Robert Hooke en 1657
Date
Source Own work
Author Chetvorno
Other versions Anchor escapement animation 315x478px.gif is a larger version of the same animation

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The person who associated a work with this deed has dedicated the work to the public domain by waiving all of their rights to the work worldwide under copyright law, including all related and neighboring rights, to the extent allowed by law. You can copy, modify, distribute and perform the work, even for commercial purposes, all without asking permission.

Captions

Animated diagram showing an anchor escapement in operation

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depicts

3 June 2014

image/gif

e3b90abb3b32daae32edad88715fe401c97da091

899,469 byte

328 pixel

217 pixel

3.6 second

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Date/TimeThumbnailDimensionsUserComment
current15:09, 3 June 2014Thumbnail for version as of 15:09, 3 June 2014217 × 328 (878 KB)ChetvornoUser created page with UploadWizard

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