J_SAMa
Established Member
Hi all,
Soooo... My school requires each of it's students to do a BIG project of their own choice. Mine is gonna be a (grandfather) clock, with an emphasis on LOW-COST. It only has to visually resemble a genuine grandfather clock so the case is the focus here.
Anyways, that means no purchasing antique British movement & chimes for me (it's not like I can afford it anyways ). I thought letting Ponoko 3D-print the parts for a clock movement would be a good way to cut down on cost. I'm probably going to copy a design, might even be battery-powered (again, low-cost). Anyone tried this before? Or just any thoughts on designing clock movements in general. I've never done it so a tutorial/book suggestion would come in handy.
Or am I better off using an existing, modern clock movement... I'd really not like to do so because I want this project to be original.
And if it matters, I'm use hand tools only (maybe a circular saw for ripping stock but that's about it)
Sam
Soooo... My school requires each of it's students to do a BIG project of their own choice. Mine is gonna be a (grandfather) clock, with an emphasis on LOW-COST. It only has to visually resemble a genuine grandfather clock so the case is the focus here.
Anyways, that means no purchasing antique British movement & chimes for me (it's not like I can afford it anyways ). I thought letting Ponoko 3D-print the parts for a clock movement would be a good way to cut down on cost. I'm probably going to copy a design, might even be battery-powered (again, low-cost). Anyone tried this before? Or just any thoughts on designing clock movements in general. I've never done it so a tutorial/book suggestion would come in handy.
Or am I better off using an existing, modern clock movement... I'd really not like to do so because I want this project to be original.
And if it matters, I'm use hand tools only (maybe a circular saw for ripping stock but that's about it)
Sam