The whistler cometh...
So I was at this lady's house to take her Mauthe wall clock's movement
home with me to fix and I'd almost gotten away clean when she said,
"Wait."
I knew this meant trouble and it was. She handed me this wood carving
of a guy leaning against a lamp post. "He whistles," said she, "but not
lately. Can you fix him?"
So he went in the movement bin with the Mauthe. He had a key sticking
out of his back, and no place for batteries. Yet he whistles. Hokay,
I thought.
Finally got started on him today, at least to the extent of opening
his back cover, and holy smoke -- he whistles a tune using a
double-action bellows air pump with a spring-loaded reservoir to even
out the air flow. This blows across what is essentially a brass
slide-whistle whose pitch is changed by a cam barely visible in the
photograph, and the duration of each note is controlled by another cam
in there somewhere. Another cam moves a linkage to turn his head as
he's whistling; apparently there's only one tune, currently
unrecognizable.
Everything is brass and steel; no plastic anywhere, and I'm guessing
that he just needs a cleaning. Suffice it to say that I am terrified
of messing up this amazing little thing, and any advice would be
welcome. (Also posted at the NAWCC clock repair forum, because I need
all the help I can get.)
Mark Kinsler - humbled once again.
[ The whistler guy (front)
[ http://www.mmdigest.com/Attachments/17/12/07/171207_142154_whistler%20guy%20back.jpg
[ The whistler guy's movement
[ http://www.mmdigest.com/Attachments/17/12/07/171207_142154_whistler%20guy%20movement1.jpg
|