Pendulum over swing if the bob on the pendulum hasn t first been immobilized or removed from the pendulum arm before the clock is moved the pendulum can over swing go past its normal arc and throw the clock out of beat then eventually the clock will stop.
Pendulum stops swinging on wall clock.
Since the swinging pendulum collides with air and the joint of the pendulum must scrape against the surface that supports it it will gradually slow down as these interactions pull energy out of the pendulum.
The below instructions do not apply if your clock has no pendulum moving a mechanical mantel clock from one place to another is one of the most common reasons why it stops running and can result in one of the following.
I don t think it has that sharp tick tock sound that it had but a softer sound.
The pendulum needs to swing exactly equal distances from dead center to the left as from dead center to the right.
A clock that leans to the left or right at the slightest angle will throw your pendulum into pandemonium or stop it in its daily tracks for tracking good time.
For wall clocks always remove your pendulum before taking the clock off the wall.
Also there is a thin black stiff wire like piece that hangs down in front of the bell that used to be behind it i think.
These forces are known as friction and they are what stops the pendulum.
The pendulum needs to swing exactly equal distances.
The movement of the pendulum and the clock s ticking make a pleasant counterpoint to the pace of modern life until the pendulum stops swinging.
Tock tick tock tick an adjustment must be made or the clock will stop.
Pendulum clocks stop for a variety of reasons but can usually be restarted.
If you ve recently moved your clock you should check the foundation for levelness.
Can t imagine how it could have come out from behind there.
This is a short video on how to adjust the beat or ticking of a clock movement.
If a clock is out of beat the pendulum will swing for a few minutes then stop even if the clock case is level.
You work toward equal time between the tick and the tock.
It should sound steady and even like a metronome.
As a clock ages the oils and lubricants become gummy and the pendulum starts slowing down and then finally come to a stop or it may become dry and the same problem may happen.
When a clock pendulum swings to and fro you can truly watch time fly.
The pendulum stops after only a couple minutes of swinging.
This covers most american style movements and these same principles can be.
If the pendulum stays in the clock it may scratch the inside of the case as well as change the beat and then the clock may not work.
If the beat is irregular like.
The only other problems would be a worn pendulum spring or the clock needs a good cleaning and re oiling job.
If your clock keeps stopping it could be the space it rests on.