Wednesday, August 24, 2011

Horology

85 HOROLOGY CLOCK & WATCH MAKING & REPAIR BOOKS ON DVD ROM!
This is the largest collection of horology, clock & watch making & repair books you will find anywhere!


On Sale Now! $9.99


This collection will teach you everything you need to know about horology, clock and watch making and repair so that you can be the ultimate watch and clock maker and repairer. Build your own clocks and watches the way the skilled artisans and watchmaking families have throughout time with all the secrets of the trade revealed! From the tools you need to get started and have a successful business to the secrets of the artisans and pros on watchmaking. How to work with the watch balance and springing and adjusting of watches and create your own and even build your own tower clock, this is the only collection you will ever need to have everything covered. And no larger or more comprehensive collection exists anywhere on the web. There are even extra bonus materials available exclusively through this collection. You will find an extensive collection like this nowhere else.   This DVD-ROM contains 85 horology, clock & watch making & repair books. This is the largest and most complete horology collection you will find anywhere.

        You will not find a larger or more thorough collection anywhere else.
85 HOROLOGY CLOCK & WATCH MAKING & REPAIR BOOKS ARE INCLUDED HERE!

Collected together on one unique DVD-Rom this is the only collection you will ever need..


HOROLOGY CLOCK & WATCH MAKING & REPAIR 85 BOOKS ON DVD ROM
All 84 books are included on the DVD-ROM:

1. Clock and Watch Work 1855 – 189 pages
2. A Practical Course in Horology 1944 – 193 pages
3. American Horological Journal – Devoted to Practical Horology Vol 1 1869 – 287 pages
4. A Treatise on Modern Horology in Theory and Practice 1887 – 895 pages
5. A Practical Treatise on the Balance Spring 1876 – 150 pages
6. A Rudimentary Treatise on Clock and Watch Making 1850 – 304 pages
7. A Rudimentary Treatise on Clocks, Watches and Bells for Public Purposes 1903 434 pages
8. A Description of a Clepsydra or Water-Clock 1753 – 8 pages
9. A Treatise on the Teeth of Wheels 1868 – 213 pages
10. A Ttreatise on Watch-Work, Past and Present 1873 – 320 pages
11. Abbott’s American Watchmaker and Jeweler 1898 – 383 pages
12. Accutron Service Manual Series 214 – 39 pages
13. Accutron Service Manual Series 218 – 52 pages
14. A Portion of the Papers Relating to the Great Clock 1848 – 55 pages
15. An Analysis of the Lever Escapement 1895 – 94 pages
16. Art of Engraving 1904 – 205 pages
17. Bangerters Inventions His Marvelous Time Clock 1911 – 92 pages
18. Catalogue of Waltham Watch material 1909 – 158 pages
19. Chats on Old Clocks 1917 – 299 pages
20. A Catalogue of Books, Manuscripts, Specimens of Clocks, Watches and Watchwork 1875 – 114 pages
21. Clocks and Watches 1922 – 147 pages
22. Description of an Astronomical Clock 1837 – 2 pages
23. Directions for Using Bottum’s Patent 1852 – 23 pages
24. Former Clock & Watchmakers and Their Work 1894 – 402 pages
25. Friction, Lubrication and the Lubricants in Horology 1896 – 93 pages
26. Government and Industry Interactions in the Development of Clock Technology 1981 – 22 pages
27. Horology – A Popular Sketch of Clock and Watch Making 1849 – 70 pages
28. Horology 1868 – 100 pages
29. How to Keep the Clock Right by Observations of the Fixed Stars 1876 – 98 pages
30. Isochronism of Balance-Springs 1862 – 30 pages
31. Kemlo’s Watch-Repairer’s Handbook – 1882 – 117 pages
32. Lessons in Horology Vol 1 1905 – 286 pages
33. Mechanical Philosophy, Horology, and Astronomy 1857 – 586 pages
34. Modern Electro Plating 1897 – 191 pages
35. Modern Letter Engraving in Theory and Practice – A Manual for the Use of Watchmakers 1898 – 185 pages
36. Modern Methods in Horology 1904 – 257 pages
37. Observations for Proving the Going of Mr. Ellicott’s Clock 1761 – 6 pages
38. Old Clocks and Watches and Their Makers 1904 – 744 pages
39. Old Clocks and Watches and Their Makers 1922 – 832 pages
40. Old Scottish Clockmakers 1921 – 499 pages
41. On the Springing and Adjusting of Watches 1898 – 153 pages
42. Practical Course in Adjusting 1901 – 251 pages
43. Prize Essay on the Construction of a Simple and Mechanically Perfect Watch 1891 – 92 pages
44. Prize-Essay on the Detached Lever Escapement for Watches and Timepieces 1866 – 377 pages
45. Rules and Practice for Adjusting Watches 1920 – 121 pages
46. The American Watchmaker and Jeweler 1868 – 96 pages
47. The American Watchmaker and Jeweler 1873 – 99 pages
48. The Artificial Clock-Maker 1734 – 165 page
49. The Clock Makers’ Guide to Practical Clock Work 1813 – 18 pages
50. The Evolution of Automatic Machinery 1896 – 148 pages
51. The Horological Journal Vol 11 1869 – 291 pages
52. The Horological Journal Vol 13 1871 – 449 pages
53. The Horological Journal Vol 20 1878 – 337 pages
54. The Horological Journal Vol 26 1883 – 64 pages
55. The Jewelers Review – Devoted to Horologists Volume 32 – 249 pages
56. The Jewelers’ Circular and Horological Review, Volume 23 – 731 pages
57. The Jewelers’ circular, Volume 75, Issue 2 1917 – 1064 pages
58. The Jewelers’ Circular, Volume 78, Issue 1 1919 – 1326 pages
59. The Polishing and Plating of Metals 1904 365 pages
60. The Tower Clock 1903 – 64 pages
61. The Tower Clock and How to Make It 1903 – 63 pages
62. The Universal Clock Adjuster 1887 – 59 pages
63. The Watch Adjuster’s Manual 1894 – 385 pages
64. The Watch and Clock Makers’ Handbook, Dictionary and Guide 1896 – 459 pages
65. The Watch and Clockmakers’ Handbook 1881 – 177 pages
66. The Watch and the Clock 1883 – 18 pages
67. The Watch Balance and its Jeweling 1912 – 17 pages
68. The Watch Factories of America, Past and Present 1888 – 145 pages
69. The Watch Its Construction, Its Merits and Defects 1860 – 63 pages
70. The Watch Jobber’s Handybook 1889 – 190 pages
71. Watches at Wholesale Prices 1890 – 27 pages
72. The Watchmakers’ Hand-Book 1881 – 529 pages
73. The Watchmakers’ Hand-Book 1881 – 564 pages
74. The WatchmakersLathe 1903 – 273 pages
75. The Wenzel Pneumatic Clock 1883 – 20 pages
76. Time and Time-Tellers 1875 – 199 pages
77. Time and Timekeepers 1842 – 203 pages
78. Time Telling Through The Ages 1919 – 394 pages
79. Tower Clocks 1911 – 72 pages
80. Turning and Mechanical Manipulation 1850 – 466 pages
81. Watch and Clock Escapements 1904 – 188 pages
82. Watch and Clock Making 1885 – 360 pages
83. The Watchmaker’s and Jeweler’s Hand-book 1866 – 39 pages
84. Watchmakers’ and Jewelers’ Practical Receipt Book – A Workshop Companion 1892 – 127 pages

BONUS MATERIAL ALSO INCLUDED ON THIS DVD-ROM!!


Watchmaker’s and Jeweler’s Practical Hand Book – A Reliable Compendium of Valuable Receipts and Suggestions Carefully Selected from Private Formulas and the Best Authorities – 1892 – 133 pages

This book will teach you how to become the ultimate watchmaker. This book covers improved processes of doing watchmaking and the valuable techniques professionals use in the watchmaking trade that are highly guarded secrets they either have paid thousands for or are family heirlooms passed down that only remain known to the watchmakers family. From the best tools needed, to the materials employed by watchmakers, their treatment and application to the tricks and secrets of the trade this text will make you into an experienced and highly precise and skilled watchmaker with the old skills previously only passed down between watchmaking families and highly treasured.



On Sale Now! $9.99

  HOROLOGY CLOCK & WATCH MAKING & REPAIR 85 BOOKS ON DVD ROM - The largest and most extensive collection you will find anywhere!


About our DVD-ROM:
Please note that these are electronic books. You will receive all manuals and books in pdf format on 1 DVD-ROM. The manuals and books are all in PDF format which means that you will need to have Adobe Reader installed on your computer to read them or a similar program. Adobe Reader is free and if you do not already have it on your computer, you can download it free from Adobe. This is a data DVD for use on your computer only (requires DVD-Rom drive). It will not work in a CD-player or the DVD player connected to your TV.

No comments:

Post a Comment