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Dente d'arresto[modifica | modifica wikitesto]

Template:Multiple image Il dente d'arresto o scappamento per cronometro venne usato per la prima volta nei cronometri marini, nonostante fosse usato anche in alcuni orologi di precisione costruiti durante il XVIII e XIX secolo.Errore nelle note: </ref> di chiusura mancante per il marcatore <ref> It was considered the most accurate of the balance wheel escapements before the beginning of the 20th century, when lever escapement chronometers began to outperform them in competition.[1] The early form was invented by Pierre Le Roy in 1748, who created a pivoted detent type of escapement, though this was theoretically deficient.[2][3][4] The first effective design of detent escapement was invented by John Arnold around 1775, but with the detent pivoted. This escapement was modified by Thomas Earnshaw in 1780 and patented by Wright (for whom he worked) in 1783; however, as depicted in the patent it was unworkable. Arnold also designed a spring detent escapement but, with improved design, Earnshaw's version eventually prevailed as the basic idea underwent several minor modifications during the last decade of the 18th century. The final form appeared around 1800, and this design was used until mechanical chronometers became obsolete in the 1970s.

The detent is a detached escapement; it allows the balance wheel to swing undisturbed during most of its cycle, except the brief impulse period, which is only given once per cycle (every other swing).[2] Because the driving escape wheel tooth moves almost parallel to the pallet, the escapement has little friction and does not need oiling. For these reasons among others, the detent was considered the most accurate escapement for balance wheel timepieces.[5] John Arnold was the first to use the detent escapement with an overcoil balance spring (patented 1782), and with this improvement his watches were the first truly accurate pocket timekeepers, keeping time to within 1 or 2 seconds per day. These were produced from 1783 onwards.

  1. ^ Eugène Jaquet, Technique and history of the Swiss watch, London, Spring Books, 1970, p. 222, ISBN 978-0-600-03633-3.
  2. ^ a b Jonathan Betts, Time Restored:The Harrison timekeepers and R.T. Gould, the man who knew (almost) everything, Oxford University Press, 2006, ISBN 978-0-19-856802-5.
  3. ^ Samuel L. Macey, Encyclopedia of Time, Garland Publishing, 1994, ISBN 0-8153-0615-6.
  4. ^ Britten's Watch & Clock Makers' Handbook Dictionary & Guide Fifteenth Edition p.122 [1]
  5. ^ Milham 1945, p.272