J-G
Established Member
Most of today I've been working on my latest clock which has a timber dial and case. The dial is mostly what was sold to me as 'Marble' wood but in fact is some form of Palm which is 'evil' to work but perfect (as far as its appearance is concerned) for this project. It is inset with Ebony, Pink Ivory & Maple - - - viz:
You will see that the Maple (Dots and Battens) are rather small.
In fact the Major Hour markers are 8mm x 3mm, the Minor Hour battens 5mm x 2mm and the Minute Dots 1.6mm Dia.
They are all 2.5mm long (or 'deep' if you wish)
If I had made the Major Hour battens 8.1mm long they would not have fitted the slots - or only 2.9mm wide then they would leave a space.
Similarly, the 'Sun' had to be 24mm dia. - not 23.9 or 24.1.
This is not yet the finished product, the battens & dots are currently glued in but not cured. Once the glue has gone off they will be sanded down level and the whole dial reduced from the current 10.3mm thick to 10mm. There is still a curved slot to be taken out as a 'window' for the day name to show through.
To give a better perspective as far as scale is concerned here is an image of one of the Minute Dots held in Nº5 tweezers (with a 5p piece for scale) :
I doubt that many of you will have applied glue with a scalple but that is what I had to resort to for the dots. Each one was turned to 1.6mm dia. - a length of ~10mm at a time - and sawn to length with a 4/0 jewellers saw.
I'll agree that the beautiful work that @Adam W. creates does not necessarily need to be as precise as my clock dial but if my dial was out of round by 1mm it would most certainly be noticed and detract from its appearance.
If I were to be building a house/shed/workshop - - - even a table or chair - - - then I would be happy to work to within a mm but there are projects which most definitely do need a higher precision.
You will see that the Maple (Dots and Battens) are rather small.
In fact the Major Hour markers are 8mm x 3mm, the Minor Hour battens 5mm x 2mm and the Minute Dots 1.6mm Dia.
They are all 2.5mm long (or 'deep' if you wish)
If I had made the Major Hour battens 8.1mm long they would not have fitted the slots - or only 2.9mm wide then they would leave a space.
Similarly, the 'Sun' had to be 24mm dia. - not 23.9 or 24.1.
This is not yet the finished product, the battens & dots are currently glued in but not cured. Once the glue has gone off they will be sanded down level and the whole dial reduced from the current 10.3mm thick to 10mm. There is still a curved slot to be taken out as a 'window' for the day name to show through.
To give a better perspective as far as scale is concerned here is an image of one of the Minute Dots held in Nº5 tweezers (with a 5p piece for scale) :
I doubt that many of you will have applied glue with a scalple but that is what I had to resort to for the dots. Each one was turned to 1.6mm dia. - a length of ~10mm at a time - and sawn to length with a 4/0 jewellers saw.
I'll agree that the beautiful work that @Adam W. creates does not necessarily need to be as precise as my clock dial but if my dial was out of round by 1mm it would most certainly be noticed and detract from its appearance.
If I were to be building a house/shed/workshop - - - even a table or chair - - - then I would be happy to work to within a mm but there are projects which most definitely do need a higher precision.
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