Atmos clock

This article is about the clock; for other uses see Atmos (disambiguation).
Jaeger-LeCoultre's Atmos clock on display.

Atmos is the brand name of a mechanical torsion pendulum clock manufactured by Jaeger-LeCoultre in Switzerland which does not need to be wound manually. It gets the energy it needs to run from temperature and atmospheric pressure changes in the environment, and can run for years without human intervention.

Its power source is an internal hermetically sealed capsule containing a mixture of gaseous and liquid ethyl chloride, which expands into an expansion chamber as the temperature rises, compressing a spiral spring; with a fall in temperature the gas condenses and the spring slackens.[1] This motion constantly winds the mainspring. A temperature variation of only one degree in the range between 15 °C (59 °F) and 30 °C (86 °F), or a pressure variation of 3 mmHg, is sufficient for two days' operation.[2]

In order to run the clock on this small amount of energy, everything inside the Atmos has to work in as friction-free a manner as possible. For timekeeping it uses a torsion pendulum, which consumes less energy than an ordinary pendulum. The torsion pendulum executes only two torsional oscillations per minute, which is 1/30 the rate of the pendulum in a grandfather clock.

History

Older Atmos clock

The first clock powered by changes in atmospheric pressure and temperature was invented by Cornelis Drebbel in the early seventeenth century. Drebbel built as many as 18 of these, the two most notable being for King James VI & I of Britain, and Rudolf II of Bohemia. The King James clock was known as the Eltham Perpetuum, and was famous throughout Europe. It is mentioned in two works of Ben Jonson.

Experimental clocks powered by atmospheric pressure and temperature changes were next made during the Enlightenment. Early examples are a clock developed by Pierre de Rivaz in 1740,[2] and Cox's timepiece, a clock developed in the 1760s by James Cox and John Joseph Merlin. The oldest predecessor still running today is the 1864 Beverly Clock in New Zealand.

The first Atmos clock was designed by Jean-Léon Reutter, an engineer in Neuchâtel, Switzerland, in 1928.[3] This noncommercial prototype, which predated the Atmos name but is now known unofficially as Atmos 0, was driven by a mercury-in-glass expansion device. The mechanism operated on temperature changes alone.

On 1 June 1929, Compagnie Générale de Radio (CGR) in France began manufacturing the first commercial model, Atmos 1, which used a mercury and ammonia bellows power source. On 27 July 1935, Jaeger-LeCoultre took over production of Atmos 1 while it developed a second design which used the present ethyl chloride power source. This model later named the Atmos 2, was announced on 15 January 1936, but problems delayed full production until mid-1939. Subsequent models were based on this design. To date, over 500,000 Atmos clocks have been produced.[2]

See also

References

  1. Sacks, Adam Michael. "How the Atmos works". The Atmos clock page. Retrieved 2007-12-08. External link in |publisher= (help)
  2. 1 2 3 Callaway, Edgar H. (2003). Wireless Sensor Networks: Architectures and Protocols. US: CRC Press. pp. 157–158. ISBN 978-0-8493-1823-8.
  3. Murray, Michael P. (2004). "Basic information on the Atmos". Mike's Clock Clinic. Archived from the original on 29 December 2007. Retrieved 2007-12-07. External link in |publisher= (help)

External links

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