Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
First time post. We have a 1973 Ridgeway grandmother (model 131) clock with an 'E' movement. The clock is not working and before I take the movement out I would like to have an accurate parts diagram and matching parts list so I can understand the movement and be able to identify parts as needed. Until I can speak intelligently enough to ask ...
It can be found in both the 1967 catalog as well as the 1977 catalog, so it was produced for a number of years. Attached below are scans. The first image is from the 1967 catalog and the other two pages are from 1977. In the 1977 catalog, the clock had a suggested retail price of $569 or $639, depending on movement.
Deceased. Jul 11, 2011. #8. Tim, the usual way to match them up is by length and width. Timesavers shows 2 for Urgos, 24687 is 18 mm by 8mm and 24689 is 25.5 mm by 11 mm. harold bain, Member ch 33. "If it won't "tick", let me "tock" to it".
The majority of the clocks in the 1977 catalog have model numbers that range between 112 up to 198, with just a few toward the end with model numbers 220, 230, 233, 304, 308, 314, and 337. So, it would seem that the "100-range" of numbers were the predominant model numbers in the 1970s, with a few "prototypes" or early entries in the "200-range ...
Knowing model numbers and old retail prices is just a 'curiosity' thing ... "Working on" clocks is all about the movement. Your clock likely has an Urgos UW32 movement. The Urgos company faltered about 1983 and folded in 1990. About 10 years later Ridgeway sold out to Howard Miller and now is a product in name only.
I’m trying to get some information on a grandfather clock that was passed down to me. It’s a ridgeway. Model - 164. Movement - W. Finish - Cog. Serial No. 5134. I can’t seem to find any information on it, the year, original cost, average cost today, etc.
Ridgeway used Hermle movements as early as 1980 on their lower-end clocks. I don't know when they began using Kieninger movements, but probably during the 1990's. I have a 1995 Ridgeway with a high end Hermle movement, an 1171-850. For our OP, lacking a movement number, can't tell you what weight the clock needs.
For schematics, the best you're likely to get is an exploded view of the movement. For that, we would need to see any identifying marks on the movement, typically on the rear movement plate. From what I can see of the front of the movement through the open work of the dial, it's probably not an Urgos.
I received a Ridgeway Grandfather clock Model TW337. It has an Urgos movement with the numbers UW3/12A and 122630 on it. I have the chains and weights but they were removed from the clock. So I need to know if I can install them without taking the movement out and what position to put the chains in lengthwise.
Oct 21, 2024. #1. I had posted recently about my Ridgeway Grandfather clock about it keeping perfect time but quit chiming. I found inside the cabinet on the base floor a little button and spring. Any idea what it is, maybe why it isn't chiming.