From 3801eb768482dbadd0b21359a16d862bbe2fe8a1 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: CrispyPin Date: Sat, 6 Jul 2024 02:10:21 +0200 Subject: [PATCH] oopsie 2 --- site/horological-crimes.html | 4 ++-- write/horological-crimes.md | 4 ++-- 2 files changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-) diff --git a/site/horological-crimes.html b/site/horological-crimes.html index c18b8d9..e49ec72 100644 --- a/site/horological-crimes.html +++ b/site/horological-crimes.html @@ -34,10 +34,10 @@ Only after halfway disassembling the clock did I decide to learn how these thing So I watched one video

-Turns out that the second gear (directly engaged with the escapement gear) is slipping, because the "top"(back? relative to the clock face) bearing has been destroyed.
+Turns out that the second gear (directly engaged with the escapement gear) is slipping, because the "top" (back relative to the clock face) bearing has been destroyed.
I can fix this.
I stripped a short length of cable-tie into a 0.5mm diameter wire, bent it into a hook, and filled the side of the bearing thats broken.
-And to hold the wire in place, I used duct tape because I don't respect the Art of Watchmaking have anything better.
+And to hold the wire in place, I used hot glue because I don't respect the Art of Watchmaking have anything better.

a small wire is inserted into the broken gearing
diff --git a/write/horological-crimes.md b/write/horological-crimes.md index db08a86..083d1fd 100644 --- a/write/horological-crimes.md +++ b/write/horological-crimes.md @@ -15,10 +15,10 @@ On a whim I decided to see if I could figure out what was wrong and attempt to f Only after halfway disassembling the clock did I decide to learn how these things are meant to work. So I watched [one video](https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d_pV8TGKfMc) -Turns out that the second gear (directly engaged with the escapement gear) is slipping, because the "top"(back? relative to the clock face) bearing has been destroyed. +Turns out that the second gear (directly engaged with the escapement gear) is slipping, because the "top" (back relative to the clock face) bearing has been destroyed. I can fix this. I stripped a short length of cable-tie into a 0.5mm diameter wire, bent it into a hook, and filled the side of the bearing thats broken. -And to hold the wire in place, I used duct tape because I don't respect the Art of Watchmaking have anything better. +And to hold the wire in place, I used hot glue because I don't respect the Art of Watchmaking have anything better. a small wire is inserted into the broken gearing the wire is now covered in hot glue