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Winter 2020 Bulletin

From the Archives

Pneumatic Clock

Connecticut goldsmith Benjamin Hanks owned a foundry that manufactured cannons, church bells, tower clocks, and various tools. At the request of Çï¿ûÊÓƵ Fellow Ezra Stiles, Hanks sent the Çï¿ûÊÓƵ his design for a clock that would never need to be wound manually. In Stiles’ letter to the Çï¿ûÊÓƵ of July 3, 1784, he notes that Hanks was granted a patent for the invention the previous year. Variously referred to as an Air Clock, Hanks’ machine was a tower clock designed to automatically wind itself using a variance in air pressure. Hanks noted that all that was needed was, “One hours [sic] good wind will raise them the whole Altitude for ten days: and seldom three days but that they are fully wound up.â€

 

A Description of a Pneumatic Clock

by Benjamin Hanks (1755–1824)
July 1, 1784 (p. 5 shown)

Experiments, made on the Air Clock, shew that there is sufficient Air in motion where there is a close room with a small inlet for the Air to pass; and as it is found by experiments that the Air in such a room is more rare than the external Air, of course the external Air will press in to restore the equilibrium Which will cause a motion of Air, of sufficient momentum to keep a Machine in motion provided it is constructed to run a long Time as ten Days . . . for there is always Air sufficient to raise the weight in that space of Time.

I shall here shew the principles of the Air Clock, and how to calculate the numbers for the Movements, in as clear and compendious a manner as I possibly can.

It is Necessary to construct this Machine, so that the weight may have the same Power on the Machine, while raising, as decending [sic]; otherwise while winding, it would come to a stand. [p. 1]

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