An Important Electric Observatory Regulator

WILLIAM HAMILTON SHORTT, LONDON, NO. 18; CIRCA 1928

Details
An Important Electric Observatory Regulator
William Hamilton Shortt, London, No. 18; circa 1928
The copper vacuum tank designed to be suspended from a wall with a glass plate to the base and glass dome over the pendulum suspension bracket, thermometer and barometers to the side, the pendulum suspended from the centre and having a lead bob with weight tray on the steel shaft, the base of the canister with a connection to insert the pressure gauge, the front of the tank applied with two plaques engraved Clock "SHORTT" No. 18; Designed by Wm. Hamilton Shortt M. I.nst. C.E. in association with the Synchronome Co. Ltd 32 and 34 Clerkenwell Rd. London. E.C.; the slave regulator housed within a rectangular mahogany case with concave moulding to the base, the front door with foliate carved spandrel decoration to the silvered observatory dial engraved SYNCHRONOME Patent No. 187814, the regulator layout with a Roman XXIIII-hour dial, glazed aperture below giving separate dials for the free pendulum clock and slave clock itself with blued steel hands, the spring-suspended pendulum with steel weight, weight tray to the shaft and jewelled roller
Slave Clock 53½ ins (136 cm), Free Pendulum Clock 50 ins (127 cm) high
Literature
F. Hope-Jones, Electrical timekeeping, 2nd. ed. 1949, N.A.G., pp. 166-174

Lot Essay

The Shortt free pendulum clock was a quantum advancement in the field of electrical horology and after its trials in Edinburgh it was regarded as the most advanced timekeeper to date and gave an accuracy of less than one second a year!
In a passage from Electrical Timekeeping Hope-Jones op.cit. describes the invention;
...fortunately in 1921 he (Shortt) hit upon a means of two pendulums swinging together in PRECISE sympathy vis. 'the hit and miss synchroniser'......I rank this invention as one of the very few of outstanding importance in the application of electricity to horology; it was the last thing needed to produce a practical free pendulum since it enabled two synchronome clocks to be firmly held in synchronisation. .......The first free pendulum clock was made by Mr Shortt with his own hands and was errected by him in the Edinburgh observatory in the christmas of 1921.....the free pendulum itself being in cylindrical copper case from which the air was exhausted. It is known in the astronomical world as SH.O and the report of Professor Sampson on its first year's run created a sensation

In 1912 the watch trials at Kew were transfered to Bushy house in Teddington where the new National Physical Laboratories were set up. In its basement was an old beer cellar which was converted into a rating room with small rooms constructed alongside for maintaining cold, normal and hot temperatures. In March 1927 the laboratory installed the Shortt free pendulum clock No. 13 to be used as the standard time, it was the replacement for a master clock by J. Morrison & sons. It was bolted to the 3ft. thick cellar wall and final regulation was attained by adjusting the air pressure enabling rates of under one second a year to be attained. Its time was transmitted by the slave clock to the three rating room's impulse dials. Eventually in was superseeded by a quartz clock about 1955 and the Shortt clock was dismantled and later given to the Liverpool City Museum where it remains.
100 Shortt Free Pendulum clocks were built, all of them for observatories all over the world for they truly were the most accurate form of timekeeper known to the world. The present clock was built for the Mount Faber obervatory in Singapore. Just before the fall of Singapore it was rescued by the Synchronome Clock Company in Brisbane, Australia where it stood unused. Later after a flood in their shop caused dammage to some of the clock's circuitry the shop sold it to the present owner who had been undertaking to restore a good deal of the circuitry damage

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