Beautiful old clock but ???
Beautiful old clock but ???
Anybody know where/when this magnificent old clock was used?? I am going to try to find a home for it. I think it was before 1930 but would like to pin it down better.
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Thanks for any light you can shed on this.
DSCN3860 (800x600).jpg
DSCN3865 (800x600).jpg
Thanks for any light you can shed on this.
Well, here is what is described as a 1926 Olds 30-D Speedster, and it appears to have a nearly identical, but slightly older version. Since (I believe) by 1930, the Olds dash has come to look a lot like the Model A dash, a clock like this would have been out of place by then, so I'd have to say late twenties for that clock.

- Eric

- Eric
Thanks, Eric!
That is exactly the clock that I have. I just do not have the brass bezel that anchors it to the panel. What is amazing about this clock is that the very thin crystal has survived all these years. It is rather striking as the crystal is beveled. I have seen a lot of these old car clocks but none with the beveled glass. Thank you very much.
Thanks to the others for chiming in. Tru-Blue: Yes, the clock works now. I restore these old clocks as a hobby/pastime.
That is exactly the clock that I have. I just do not have the brass bezel that anchors it to the panel. What is amazing about this clock is that the very thin crystal has survived all these years. It is rather striking as the crystal is beveled. I have seen a lot of these old car clocks but none with the beveled glass. Thank you very much.
Thanks to the others for chiming in. Tru-Blue: Yes, the clock works now. I restore these old clocks as a hobby/pastime.
Rick
Correct. And also many of the early electric clocks mounted in the glove box door so you could get to the back of the clock to set the time and adjust the Slow/Fast. Most had some kind of cover over the electrical contacts but some did not. You had to be careful what you put in the glove box. A bunch of loose wrenches in theer was a recipe for disaster with that hot-all-the-time power lead going to the clock and lots of chassis ground nearby!!
I use a light synthetic oil, probably available at your local clock/watch repair shop. And you don't need to use a lot of it. Too much can cause runs and seeping onto the clock face...and now you have a cosmetic problem.
Rick
Rick
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