COMITTI - The Navigator Clock

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  • Опубліковано 10 гру 2019
  • Over a period of many years John Harrison a self taught English clockmaker invented the marine chronometer, the most accurate timekeeper ever created which importantly would keep accurate time aboard a pitching ship and in extremes of heat, cold and humidity. This extraordinary achievement allowed marine navigators to establish their longitude position on the high seas for the first time. The COMITTI Navigator is a tribute to the skill, ingenuity and tenacity of one man who changed the course of history.

КОМЕНТАРІ • 144

  • @kipling1957
    @kipling1957 3 місяці тому +1

    The best book I’ve read on this whole topic is “Longitude.”

  • @rowanshole
    @rowanshole Рік тому +1

    Magnificent, and I wish I could have one as a tribute to Mr. Harrison. But for me John Harrisons greatest achievements are his wooden long case regulators which achieved an accuracy of 1 second a month in the 1870s.
    What is more amazing is that these wood clocks alongside H1, H2, and H3 are still running and keeping time 3 centuries on.

  • @Rockanory247
    @Rockanory247 Рік тому +5

    Absolutely amazing engineering. Those balances blow my mind!

  • @cat637d
    @cat637d Рік тому +7

    That was amazing and enjoyable! Hail Britannia and the Comitti!

  • @kinklesstetrode
    @kinklesstetrode Рік тому +4

    It is so nice to see true craftsmen. I had the misfortune to mess my Comitti barometer up. I called the company later in the day and a very helpful chap (Mr. Barker) helped me out, sending me details as to how to remove bubbles from my barometer and a quote for a replacement glass. Wonderful service. Long may it continue.

  • @21jlxi
    @21jlxi Рік тому +16

    As a Nautical Cartographer, this was compulsory learning, as it made such a big impact on navigation. Very interesting, if I win lotto, this'll be on the shopping list! Thanks for the video.

  • @dominickcolasanto6582
    @dominickcolasanto6582 Рік тому +2

    Top notch quality still exists you just have to pay for it in the long run its worth it for sure.

  • @johnpartridge7623
    @johnpartridge7623 Рік тому +5

    Beautiful piece of Time Keeping & it's good to see that "Not Everything" is made in China, Great Britain still has some original manufacture & long may it continue to do so.

  • @Humble_Electronic_Musician
    @Humble_Electronic_Musician Рік тому +1

    This was an awesome video.
    I would never imagine to look 13 hours to a video of a clock, but here i am and i am glad i did.
    A masterpiece !

  • @alfredocomitti2351
    @alfredocomitti2351 2 місяці тому

    Me sinto muito orgulhoso ao ver relógios de alta qualidade com a marca Comitti

  • @stevejwilliams61
    @stevejwilliams61 Рік тому +6

    Hardly believe he built something like that 300 years ago. Genius.

    • @Journeyman53
      @Journeyman53 Рік тому +1

      And they are still running.

    • @1943vermork
      @1943vermork Рік тому +1

      Clock works were the rocket science of its time.
      Cutting edge research and development on materials and mechanical components back then.

  • @charlesxix
    @charlesxix Рік тому +2

    What an absolute work of art, even as an ornament it is beautiful, the fact you can tell the time with it is a bonus. Great video, thanks.

  • @TheGearhead222
    @TheGearhead222 Рік тому +1

    A fascinating video and a genius of a Clocksmith!-John in Texas

  • @HarryWHill-GA
    @HarryWHill-GA Рік тому +6

    It is hard to overstate what an accurate ship's clock meant to navigation. I highly recommend "The Longitude Prize" to anyone interested.

  • @BrackenClockWorks
    @BrackenClockWorks Рік тому +3

    We have one of these made by Comitti for sale, and on display, in our shop in Berea, Ohio! The craftsmanship is extraordinary!!

  • @JoeyPinter
    @JoeyPinter Рік тому +4

    i went to England just to see a couple things. Blighs grave, Greenwich and Harrison's clocks. great video. i would love to have one.

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Рік тому +1

      I wonder how Bligh navigated the launch with no time. Maybe a watch? They left him his sextant. His journal of that voyage is quite a read.

    • @JoeyPinter
      @JoeyPinter Рік тому

      @@stevek8829 Bligh had a watch, no chronometer. he also had "sailing directions" it was the 18th century version of the Nautical Almanack that we have today. he had very few tables like we have today. in actual fact in 1789 there weren't a lot of preprinted calculations, all the navigation in those days had to be mathematically worked out or as a navigator would say "reduce the sight" and "dead reconning". Bligh made a log line which figured the speed they're going and combined with his genius level navigating and boat handling..

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Рік тому +1

      @@JoeyPinter it's been a long time since reading his log of that voyage. I don't remember him mentioning navigation at all. Loaded to the gunnels, dehydrated and starving, he brought all but one thousands of miles. One was killed by locals who didn't appreciate diversity.
      I don't see how he could know where he was after a few days. Maybe sunrise tables helped guess longitude. He sure proved technical competence.

  • @stevekiberd3474
    @stevekiberd3474 Рік тому +3

    Such amazing skill. If I ever become rich i will buy one of these clocks and the pocket watch.

  • @nathonbrown3596
    @nathonbrown3596 2 роки тому +1

    that clock is beyond words

  • @andrzejkowal1752
    @andrzejkowal1752 2 роки тому +5

    Amazing masterpiece. Buying this clock seems to be like bringing the Harrison's clock home :)

    • @ozimerman111
      @ozimerman111 Рік тому

      No. Look at any picture of H1-4. These are fake and the price is ridiculous.

  • @fokkerd3red618
    @fokkerd3red618 Рік тому

    Amazing craftsmanship. Why did Parliament wait 40 years to pay this Genius.

  • @OVATSUG2
    @OVATSUG2 2 роки тому +1

    Wow!!! beautiful watch!!!😱

  • @jamesnicholson3313
    @jamesnicholson3313 2 роки тому +3

    Not only extremely interesting but ever so beautiful to look at, Thankyou so much. Jim from AUSTRALIA.

  • @chuckjunod1264
    @chuckjunod1264 4 роки тому +8

    I have a Comitti Great Wheel and the Comitti Barograph. I have always admired this Navigator and will someday own one. This is a great video to see how they are made.

  • @davidlong6173
    @davidlong6173 Рік тому

    Great video so interesting.

  • @jean-pierrem34
    @jean-pierrem34 Рік тому

    Love it!

  • @briancarpenter6961
    @briancarpenter6961 Рік тому

    Amazing engineering.

  • @fishtree2636
    @fishtree2636 Рік тому +10

    John Harrison was despised by the Longitude board who backed the Royal patronage of Flamstead's Moons of Jupiter, the board did all they could to frustrate and prevent Harrison from winning the £10,000 prize. The real lesson from Harrison's achievements is that while he or rather his son finally won through to collect the prize, the real story is how regulators and stakeholder self interest delayed innovation and obstructed Harrison from being recognised during his lifetime. As an inventor of improved energy efficiency above and beyond that recognised in regulations, my experience is that of being told that my invention saves too much gas and therefore discredits the statements of the regulatory authorities.

    • @every1665
      @every1665 Рік тому +2

      So often I notice that the really great ideas, inventions, discoveries, art works, compositions etc are the product of a single mind. Committees seem only to get in the way and ruin things. Anyone who has worked for a government organization or large corporation will know this.

    • @andrewgillis3073
      @andrewgillis3073 Рік тому +3

      Actually, the full prize was never awarded to Harrison or his son. The king gave him a grant because the board, led by Sir Haley, of Haley’s comet fame, refused to award the prize.

  • @minicar47
    @minicar47 2 роки тому +1

    Prachtig wat zou ik graag in deze werkplaats eens willen kijken. Om dat ik klok verzamelaar ben het is mijn grote hobby 👌

  • @trecker59
    @trecker59 Рік тому

    What a great vid

  • @rewind9536
    @rewind9536 Рік тому

    And after all this work for thousands of years, it turns out time is relative.

  • @tadeuszmironowicz4737
    @tadeuszmironowicz4737 3 роки тому

    Super!!!

  • @lewiemcneely9143
    @lewiemcneely9143 Рік тому

    BRAVO!

  • @paulnicholson1906
    @paulnicholson1906 4 місяці тому

    Even though the chronometer revolutionized navigation the lunar distance method of determining longitude was more widely used for a long time since chronometers were not easy to come by or cheap. H1 was only a prototype and was never used although it did go to sea to test.

  • @SisyphusTwo
    @SisyphusTwo 2 роки тому

    Niiiiiice story..

  • @johnmorrison1180
    @johnmorrison1180 Рік тому +11

    Doesn’t tell the whole story of Harrison’s famous final masterpiece, that giant clock shown wasn’t his final design, look again at his portrait, the time piece shown was about one quarter the size the size and no swinging weights, he never did receive the full prize money as offered in the competition despite Captain Cook taking his final clock to sea and declaring it to be perfect.

    • @charlesgantz5865
      @charlesgantz5865 Рік тому +5

      It took the King intervening for Harrison to finally get his money. The reason for the delay was that the Astronomer Royal had a competing method to measure longitude involving complicated measurements of the moon. The Astronomer Royal was responsible for approving Harrison's clock, and since the Astronomer Royal was also hoping to win the prize money, he slow rolled the approval and kept putting more conditions on the acceptance. The lunar method never did really work, and it was far too complicated for use at sea.

    • @charleslayton9463
      @charleslayton9463 Рік тому +2

      Yes, I seem to remember reading years ago that the balanced pendulum style clocks like the one featured here were subtly thrown off their accuracy by one or another of the specific motions that a ship makes. Don't remember if it was rolling, pitching, or turning, though I think it might have been turning. Also, those clocks were massive and so exceedingly delicate that life at sea wasn't for them. As John Morrison said, the actual winning instrument was the chronograph that was the shape of a very large pocket watch. I don't remember if Harrison's first was mounted in a box on gimbals or not, in the same way that mechanical ships chronometers are still mounted (though of course, almost no seafarers rely on a mechanical chronometer any more. Between radio signals for time and GPS, it is truly an antique.) On most ships that used a chronometer, that wasn't the instrument that actually gave the person using the sextant the time. Instead, there was a second, portable chronometer watch that was calibrated to the ship's chronometer frequently. A lovely video about very interesting modern clocks. Thanks so much!

    • @johnmorrison1180
      @johnmorrison1180 Рік тому

      The disgraceful thing is Harrison never was paid the full amount of prise money as advertised in the competition despite the kings intervention. I surmise the astronomer royal was defiantly holding a goodly portion back in order to pay himself a share as well. Corruption in high places wasn’t unheard of.

    • @robertridgeway4727
      @robertridgeway4727 Рік тому

      @@charleslayton9463 no MK

    • @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039
      @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039 Рік тому +2

      And he wasn't taken seriously because he was by trade a cabinet maker and knew nothing about working in brass. If you want to know how badly he was treated watch the movie Longitude.

  • @davidbrazier9246
    @davidbrazier9246 Рік тому

    I iove the Scouse commentary.

  • @debusinha9015
    @debusinha9015 3 роки тому +2

    Just think British empire wouldn't have been a world colonizer without this invention....

    • @peterfireflylund
      @peterfireflylund Рік тому +1

      No. It took a while after Harrison’s clocks before they were truly practical and widespread. What people used instead was astronomical observations and books full tables for when various moons would appear around Jupiter (and maybe also Saturn).

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Рік тому

      @@peterfireflylund Wrong, very wrong. Astronomical observations require time for their elevation measurement to have any relevance. What drivel, the moons of Jupiter! Their relative motion is slow while the earth turns fast.
      Study celestial navigation and see what you have minus time.

  • @kevp6488
    @kevp6488 2 роки тому +4

    I would love to see someone attempt making a clock using only the tools Harrison used.
    Edit- Cmon Royal Family, this guy helped you conquer the frickin sea. Pay the man his money!!

    • @marktuggle5609
      @marktuggle5609 2 роки тому +6

      You should take a look at clickspring. On his channel, he makes a clock by hand from scratch.

    • @kevp6488
      @kevp6488 2 роки тому +1

      @@marktuggle5609 Legend, thanks bro.

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Рік тому +1

      A price offered by the British Parliament is not the Royal Family

  • @VenturiLife
    @VenturiLife Рік тому

    A real Time Lord.

  • @zogzog1063
    @zogzog1063 Рік тому

    Wow! Double Wow!!

  • @romanregman1469
    @romanregman1469 Рік тому

    We depend on timekeeping instruments which depend on matter acting in a timely fashion which depends on time which depends on how matter acts which depends on time which.... Is there such a thing as time or matter, since matter is dependent on time and time depends on matter?

  • @petersmith5199
    @petersmith5199 Рік тому

    Some 40 odd years ago or more, the company I worked for, Beech and Son in Swanley kent used O Comitti and Sons in Clerkenwell London for spare parts for Barometers as far as I remember. I was not aware until watching this that they made clocks? There is also a comment below referring to Sinclair Harding. Could they be the maunufacter of Beauch Girod watches? (Forgive my spelling) I went to Hackney

    • @petersmith5199
      @petersmith5199 Рік тому

      I went to Hackney Poly with a chap called Terry, a super piano player in the pub at lunchtime, when we did our BHI course there...

  • @j.lietka9406
    @j.lietka9406 Рік тому

    Mr Barker, have you, or your esteemed colleagues, ever made an "Orrey"? Or an "Armillary" (although not a clock)? Thank you 🤓

  • @williamfraser
    @williamfraser 2 роки тому

    Would the Graham deadbeat escapement also work for this type of balanced pendulum motion?

    • @robertnorwood9480
      @robertnorwood9480 2 роки тому +2

      I do not believe so. This uses the grasshopper escapement.

  • @toml.8210
    @toml.8210 Рік тому

    I wouldn't mind having one of the scratched or dented rejects!
    I adjust most of my watches and clocks weekly, according to my atomic clock.

  • @gowdsake7103
    @gowdsake7103 Рік тому +3

    OK they are hand built, but honestly all CNC so shakes head at 12000 quid

  • @amaurirodrigues212
    @amaurirodrigues212 Рік тому

    BOM DIA. QUANTO CUSTA UM RELOGIO COMO ESTE QUE FOI MONTADO DURANTE O VIDEO?? E PARA ENVIAR PARA O BRASIL? OBRIGADO

  • @josepeixoto3384
    @josepeixoto3384 Рік тому

    Holly smokes! humankind never ceases to amaze me; no longer a need for that,cellphones tell the time with precision avoid

  • @openclockclubarchive325
    @openclockclubarchive325 Місяць тому

    Is that Alexi Sayle doing the Narration?

  • @vahteddineker8701
    @vahteddineker8701 Рік тому

    Seri üretim yapılıyormu ustan

  • @benjamindejonge3624
    @benjamindejonge3624 Рік тому

    Would be great to have the blueprint of it

  • @TobailaGib
    @TobailaGib Рік тому

    The irony of someone discussing accuracy and talking about inches.

  • @xusmico187
    @xusmico187 Рік тому

    h1 cut by hand, wow

  • @tietduy5874
    @tietduy5874 2 роки тому

    Tuyệt vời xin tham khảo giá cảm ơn!

  • @markiskool
    @markiskool Рік тому

    So now I know where the phrase Greenwich Mean time comes from!

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Рік тому

      Congrats Jr. How old are you?

  • @jimaanders7527
    @jimaanders7527 Рік тому +1

    These are beautiful clocks for about 15K-16K USD

    • @philgiglio7922
      @philgiglio7922 Рік тому

      A Patek Phillipe will set you back about $100,000 for a top line watch.

  • @robertgift
    @robertgift Рік тому

    Surprised when cotton gloves are worn only on one hand.
    On ships were the clocks suspended on ropes which allowed them to swing and remain less affected by the ship's movement?

    • @philgiglio7922
      @philgiglio7922 Рік тому +1

      Usually mounted in a wooden box with gimbals to keep it 'level'. As an aside, US Navy ships carried 3 such chronometers. After the war swiss watch execs inspected the Bulova, Elgin, and Benrus plants. When told how many of each type of watch made they said they couldn't have accomplished it. Also these plants were the only wartime plants under 24/7/365 Marine guard

  • @tonyking9235
    @tonyking9235 Рік тому +1

    WISH I COULD AFORD ONE . HO WELL AT LEAST I GET TO LOOK

  • @jorges1985
    @jorges1985 Рік тому

    🙏😀

  • @brianingarfill1773
    @brianingarfill1773 Рік тому

    Great video. I knew the story (didn't know that he had to wait 40 years to get his money-perhaps the Tory's were in power!!!) LOL LOL

  • @alo1236546
    @alo1236546 Рік тому

    The invisible inertia enemy

  • @erwinpatio8160
    @erwinpatio8160 2 роки тому

    Time Lord - reminds me of Dr. Who

  • @frydemwingz
    @frydemwingz Рік тому

    the reason it's such a classic story is that the useless government didnt want to pay the money they owed Harrison

  • @locomotech6302
    @locomotech6302 Рік тому

    👍👍👍👍👍👍👍🎩

  • @vizmortlock
    @vizmortlock Рік тому

    shame about the flashing bits near the top of the video. Had to skip it and should have had a warning.

  • @wilkinson8707
    @wilkinson8707 3 роки тому

    Chipping Ongar Essex, not London.

  • @santatigerclaus
    @santatigerclaus Рік тому

    we got 10 gallon containers of cyanide in at Motor Wheel for pickling the steel

  • @nebojsanesic5326
    @nebojsanesic5326 Рік тому

    How good can it actually be if it was designed by Da Vinchi? The man didn't made a single machine in his entire life! It took him over 30 years to paint a single portrait!!!

  • @sblack48
    @sblack48 Рік тому

    Why did the admiralty keep jerking Harrison around long after he had provided an accurate practical chronometer? Was it because members had personal investments in his competitors for the prize?

    • @2adamast
      @2adamast Рік тому

      Who knows, maybe the price = 1/3 of a ship

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Рік тому

      Maybe they're Welsh?

  • @jamespython5147
    @jamespython5147 Рік тому

    7:27 you would think after all that he would be wearing cotton gloves.

  • @mohikan2226
    @mohikan2226 Рік тому

    is that scott rea???!? voicing?

  • @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039
    @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039 Рік тому

    These people are talking about setting their machines to nano tolerances, yet John Harrison built all of his clocks and later, watches by hand. Where has this skill gone, did it die out altogether or are there still men or women who still build clocks and watches by hand in Britain today.

    • @zumwild
      @zumwild 7 місяців тому

      Yes it died out altogether. A UK professor purchased tools from widows of watchmakers and in a few cases collected descriptions of their use from the last few watchmakers. Sadly he died before writing it up. George Daniels (Author of Watchmaking) examined and repaired old watches after looking at the tools, but in many cases it was guesswork and experimentation. Daniels wrote his method up in the book on watchmaking. Malcom Wild wrote a book on making gears without CNC, describing how to make gear cutters. Those two books are bibles really and watchmakers are making watches from raw materials using these methods, a few without CNC. There are drawings of children powering lathes with their hands and feet for the old watchmakers, so powered lathes are OK I guess. Richard Smith has some good videos on UA-cam, one of him cutting gears on a Lathe with a milling attachment.

  • @DNModels
    @DNModels 2 місяці тому

    Someone should make a video what exactly government paid Harrison for the result.

  • @lawrencebishton9071
    @lawrencebishton9071 Рік тому

    Ye old glory ye old qauntum qaurts clock a qauntum16 bit 2 32 is a highly precise clock so ive clocked has noted to B gold particles may not be of information that is owned by another but rather of me so when your ready

  • @wilcaroll1410
    @wilcaroll1410 Рік тому

    Is that Ricky Tomlinson my arse i have a comitti clock

  • @stevek8829
    @stevek8829 Рік тому

    If Wales wasn't part of UK, would parliament have Welched?

  • @MrStevos
    @MrStevos Рік тому

    I was hoping to see how John Harrison Built his first clock ! Not some CNC computer... 😞

    • @WICKEDMAN85
      @WICKEDMAN85 Рік тому

      Plenty of other videos on how John Harrison built his legendary clocks on UA-cam!

    • @MrStevos
      @MrStevos Рік тому

      @@WICKEDMAN85 yes but not what the title of video said ?

  • @andrewgillis3073
    @andrewgillis3073 Рік тому +1

    This is totally misleading. Harrison’s first three clocks did not keep time well enough at sea. This video shows the first design. It wasn’t until his fourth design that he achieved his goal. H-4 looked like a large pocket watch.

  • @elizajayne2888
    @elizajayne2888 Рік тому

    I see now .
    I understand now .
    The clock that produced energy due to the speed of the windings.
    The crown seeks the power of the time machine...
    Ever see a clock produce energy ?
    I have ...
    While you use a 12 hour disk , we used a 24 hour disk .
    A clock that produces energy due to the spinning face ....
    I built a self perpetual energy producing clock ...
    It’s the drive for my time machine that runs on disk drive ...
    How about that ....
    A clock is the engine of my time machine that produces energy...

  • @Slarti
    @Slarti Рік тому

    What's with the music playing? Bach, Handel and Mozart.
    Surely only Handel would be appropriate.

  • @moshesabag6004
    @moshesabag6004 Рік тому

    After long struggles,the prize was given to his grandson...

  • @jamespython5147
    @jamespython5147 Рік тому

    The music is too racy! I feel totally rushed! You don't need all that noise!

  • @kopynd1
    @kopynd1 11 місяців тому

    manfacturing is simple compared to harrison, gearing is genius maths

    • @kopynd1
      @kopynd1 11 місяців тому

      nothing much has changed with the government, still takes 40yrs to get yu money

  • @locomotech6302
    @locomotech6302 Рік тому

    Very very nice achievements!!
    And even an honorable history in the field
    But when you say: maritime nation??
    Of course, you don't mean aquatic creatures
    So be careful not to confuse aggression against other "beyound of sea peoples", with beautiful technologies!
    Marine nation, do you mean they lived under the sea, or carried cannons that burned coastal cities?
    If this is the case, then let it be, no matter how proud you are, it will remain a mere “interfering” with the goods of peoples and exclusion, and even killing the indigenous people relentlessly!
    If some maritime... want to continue benefiting from tolerance or simply neglecting peoples and for your accountability before the peoples can be delayed, then be proud of your technology
    And you cannot be proud of the wars and hardships you have caused to the inhabitants of beyond your seas

    • @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039
      @iamcarbonandotherbits.8039 Рік тому

      You can't build the greatest empire the world has ever known without casualties.

    • @locomotech6302
      @locomotech6302 Рік тому

      ah "world"
      Why don't you consider the world with us to be our great empire for all times and for everyone. I hope you don't underestimate "everyone".
      We do not become strong, do not differentiate, do not deceive each other, and do not have to fight until we see the greatness?
      Civilizations and with them what I called empires come and go with their goodness and greatness
      But only her "actions" remain, especially if it includes crimes and the initiation of extra wars. There is no talk at that about the good, and is there any point in talking about causality?

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Рік тому

      @@locomotech6302 nothing like a pretend moralistic moronic child for entertainment. Thanks! Loco

  • @p.istaker8862
    @p.istaker8862 Рік тому

    Such a shame that a Taiwanese built machining centre is being used in the manufacture.

  • @lawrencebishton9071
    @lawrencebishton9071 Рік тому

    Why thejoseph who son of the other is mapping me for the car to g e o grathi

  • @union310
    @union310 Рік тому +1

    As soon as you see a cnc machine you know they are not the best.

    • @charlesgantz5865
      @charlesgantz5865 Рік тому +2

      Why do you say that?

    • @union310
      @union310 Рік тому +2

      @@charlesgantz5865 How can you claim quality of craftsmanship when a cnc machine profiles everything. A cnc machine is not a craftsman.
      Craftsmanship is using human skill to produce a quality item in finish and working ability.

    • @rozinant1237
      @rozinant1237 Рік тому +1

      Why would you say that? The CNC machine is simply cutting out the frame, and it does so to an accuracy of 10 microns. For a human to make something to that accuracy would take a huge amount of time. Instead they use the human touch at the end, to fine tune the accuracy of the timekeeping.

    • @union310
      @union310 Рік тому

      @@rozinant1237 Your comment my friend answered exactly what I said, I can and that is skill. There is no skill in a numeric machine.

    • @rozinant1237
      @rozinant1237 Рік тому +1

      You have no idea what you are talking about! There isn’t a watch or clock made today that isn’t built with sophisticated machinery. I suppose a lathe is OK to use, but a CNC machine is not? What nonsense.

  • @jhvorlicky
    @jhvorlicky Рік тому +3

    "The people from the British Isles are extraordinarily innovative."
    This sort of historically ignorant and superior statement does rather spoil an otherwise good video. I don't take what "my" country represents for granted, but let's not pretend the ability to innovate is anything other than randomly distributed.

    • @bloggalot4718
      @bloggalot4718 Рік тому

      The British invented, among other things, the television, the jet engine, the internet and the first electronic computer which was used in World War Two.

    • @stevek8829
      @stevek8829 Рік тому

      Why don't you pretend it is randomly distributed. But, it isn't and wasn't.

  • @keithbrister1904
    @keithbrister1904 3 роки тому +1

    Nice clock, but you could buy something real decent for £12k

    • @donaldasayers
      @donaldasayers 3 роки тому

      How does that compare to the Sinclair Harding version of the same clock?

  • @entertainme7523
    @entertainme7523 Рік тому

    it's made in England? 😂😂😂

  • @ozimerman111
    @ozimerman111 Рік тому

    This is not a replica of any of Harrison’s clocks. It has a smell of H1. The guy deceives by saying J. Harrison was a carpenter, but he does not say H1-4 are made of wood, the gear is made with lignum Vitae. They looked at H1-4 and said, stupid people will pay a lot of money for a “replica,” and H1 looks interesting so people will buy it. Do not fool yourself, these are not timekeepers, they are fake. I bet H1 is more accurate than these fake.

  • @neilbarnett3046
    @neilbarnett3046 Рік тому +1

    Stopped listening earlier than I expected, I couldn't bear any more haych-1 clocks. The narrator sounds like Parker for Thunderbirds.
    It's pronounced "aitch". Hexcept hin bloomin' Hessex and the hestuary, hinnit?

  • @vinylrecords7597
    @vinylrecords7597 Рік тому +1

    Nothing speciall.. Swiss clockmaker are the best..

    • @dalane5196
      @dalane5196 Місяць тому

      Yes, but they are working in the footsteps of the real inventors and masters of quality and accurate time keepers, the British. British Chronometers were know the world over and coveted for their accuracies, back in a time when keeping accurate time was a matter of life and death, not a nice designer dress watch. The British invented and developed the most accurate time keepers, then moved onto other things like trains and railways, Radio, Television, stainless steel, steam ships, Geology, Oceanography, computers, Penicillin, vaccines and just about everything else in daily use in the modern world. While the Swiss stayed playing around perfecting and making watches, very good watches that the world no longer really needs. That is why its called GMT Greenwich Mean Time, not BMT or Bern Mean Time. Between the British and the Swiss, there is no comparison in inventiveness, the British are in a league all of their own. But the Swiss should not be to worried about that, every other nation on the planet is in the same position, the Japanese University of Technology estimated that 78% of everything in common use today was developed by the British.