Manual de banco del reparador de relojes - Clock Repairers Bench Manual Spanish

Manual de banco del reparador de relojes - Clock Repairers Bench Manual Spanish

by D Rod Lloyd
Manual de banco del reparador de relojes - Clock Repairers Bench Manual Spanish

Manual de banco del reparador de relojes - Clock Repairers Bench Manual Spanish

by D Rod Lloyd

Paperback

$39.99 
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Overview

Esta edición 2021 está escrita especialmente para el reparador de relojes aficionado o profesional. El único libro de reparación de relojes que necesita.
Todo lo que necesita saber al reparar relojes mecánicos. El manual de reparación de relojes más completo y actualizado disponible en la actualidad.
Más de 340 páginas incluyen cientos de fotografías y diagramas. Explicación completa de cómo desmontar y volver a montar un reloj CORRECTAMENTE.
Explicación completa de reparaciones de rutina como bujes, pivotes y lubricación.
Explicación completa de todo tipo de reparaciones necesarias para que un reloj vuelva a funcionar.
Incluye reparaciones completas de relojes de cuco, relojes de 400 días, Atmos Clock, etc.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798215094983
Publisher: D. Rod Lloyd
Publication date: 01/02/2023
Pages: 316
Product dimensions: 8.50(w) x 11.00(h) x 0.66(d)
Language: Spanish

About the Author

As a kid, whenever I saw an old clock at a jumble sale or going cheap, I would buy it and take it apart to see how it worked. I don't think I ever got one back together again, but I enjoyed tinkering with them.

Twenty years later when I was getting married, now living in the USA, Auntie Florrie wrote to me saying I could now have my Grandfathers clock.

I arranged to have the clock shipped over and it was proudly placed in the entrance hall to my home. It was built in about 1880 in Maghull England by a local clockmaker, [before the electric light was invented], had a stately mahogany case, hand-painted dial and ran nicely.

After a few years, it stopped. I was frustrated that I didn't know what was wrong with it or how to get it going. I ended up having it serviced by a local repair shop and it ran again. I was fascinated with the clock.

In 1995, my family decided to spend a year in England including putting the kids in school. It was a big challenge to arrange to swap houses with an English family. Finally, we were settled, and the kids started school, my wife was volunteering at a local charity shop and suddenly I had time on my hands.

I read the paper that morning and came across an ad for a clock course starting nearby at Manchester City College. I called the college and they told me it was a three-year course, one day per week. I explained I was only in the country for one year, so I persuaded them to let me take the course, coming all three days.

I enjoyed the course and did very well. The final exam took several weeks, making a ‘suspension bridge' from scratch to exact specifications, restoring several old clocks and watches. I documented the process and took the extensive final written exam all set by BHI [British Horological Institute]. I did pass the exams and became a Horologist.

25 years later I teach clock repair classes and ‘pass it on'. This is the class workbook.

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