96th Auction

2017/11/18

Lot 263

John Arnold & Son, London, Invt. et Fecit, Movement No. 85 / 175, 156 x 105 mm, circa 1794
An important ship's chronometer with 2 days power reserve and Arnold's spring detent escapement with Z balance
Case: mahogany, octagonal. Dial: silvered. Movm.: brass movement, chain/fusee, Z balance with 2 weights and 2 screws.
This ship's chronometer by the famous maker John Arnold is striking because of its enormous size and the large "Z" balance as well as its outstanding original condition - it still has Arnold’s original escapement and "Z" balance.
Illustrated and described in: "100 Jahre Präzisionsuhren von John Arnold bis Arnold & Frodsham 1763-1862" (100 years of precision clocks, John Arnold to Arnold & Frodsham 1763-1862), by Hans Staeger, Filderstadt 1997, p. 317f.
John Arnold (1736-1799)
After his apprenticeship with his father in Cornwall, John Arnold settled in London in 1760. In 1764 he presented King George III with a half quarter repeating cylinder watch mounted in a ring. By the time he was 28, Arnold's watches, be they verge or cylinder, displayed interesting original components such as straight-line compensation curbs and minute repeating by increments of 10 minutes (instead of the more common 15 minutes). Around 1768 Arnold began his research into marine chronometers. He established himself at 2 Adam Street, Adelphi Buildings, Strand, in 1771 and carried out most of his research into marine chronometers here over the next eleven years. By 1774 Arnold had constructed a marine chronometer with pivoted detents; he invented terminal curves for the cylindrical balance spring in 1776 and included this construction in the patent for a bimetallic compensated balance he took out in 1782. He subsequently devised numerous different balances such as the Double T, Double S, Z, O-Z and U. Arnold, who was admitted to the Clockmakers' Company in 1783, was the first to employ the term chronometer in the modern sense and to successfully find a way to simplify Harrison's timekeeper design. In 1787 he took his son, John Roger Arnold, into partnership and changed the business name to "Arnold & Son", which it retained until his death.

Sold

estimated
12.00020.000 €
Price realized
55.800 €