Clocks magazine logo
 
LONDON
ROME
NEW YORK
SYDNEY
TOKYO
Clocks magazine cover
   View larger picture
BACK ISSUE
CLEARANCE:
BACK ISSUES AT £1 EACH IN YEAR PACKS
CLICK HERE
SAVE
more than

£17.00

on Clocks Magazine

to find out how
CLICK HERE
The magazine
  About Clocks
  Sample copy
  Subscriptions
  Sample articles
  Advertising
  Back issues
 
Extras
  Binders
  Special offers
  T-shirts
 
Resources
  Links
  Question box
  Indexes
  Glossary
  Chronology
  Fault finder
 
Terms & conditions | Writing for Clocks | Submit a Site | Privacy | Contact us | Site map | Tell a friend
Page Ranking Icon
© 1977 to 2008 Splat Publishing Ltd
Splat Publishing Ltd logo
DATELINE
APRIL 2008


Moses Bradshaw
An unrecorded Gloucestershire maker,
by Brian Loomes.

Valpesarina
A valley of clocks in the Italian Alps,
by Lucian Comoy.

A Black Forest renovation
A box of bits becomes a clock again,
by Mark Martin.

NEW SERIES
Beginner's Guide to
pocket watches

Part 1 of 9,
by Ian Beilby.

Pensioner donates
rare lantern clock

A 79-year-old Scottish woman has donated a 17th-century lantern clock by Richard Mills to the National Museum of Scotland.

BHI headquarters at Upton Hall
Penman's Design & Build
Making strikework,
by Laurie Penman.

American Notebook
The Chauncey Jerome Jr,
by Tom Spittler.

Sundial Page
The Timaru trail,
by Christopher Daniel.

Diary of a Clock Repairer
Just the way it goes,
by Robert Loomes.

         
General clockmaker index
 Features
 News
 This month's tip
 Columns
To increase the capacity of your cleaning tank purchase a polythene container of the tall, elongated, oval type used to store breakfast cereals, fold a sheet of newspaper as a pad on which to stand the container in the tank, fill the polythene container with your normal cleaning fluid, fill the tank with clean, cold water, immerse items to be cleaned in the cleaning fluid, switch on timer and proceed as normal. You now have the facility to totally immerse larger items without risk of those dreaded tide marks which are virtually impossible to remove from brass items.

John Feeley

more tips
MAY ISSUE
MARCH ISSUE