As a well-known Outdoor Clock supplier, the following describes the structure of the Outdoor Clock.
Outdoor Clock refers to a large clock installed on a tower-like building or in a church spire. It is now a large quartz Outdoor Clock installed on a large, high-rise public building. In addition to reminding people of time, the tower also plays a role in decorating and beautifying the building.
The structure of the Outdoor Clock is generally of two types: mechanical and electromechanical. The mechanical Outdoor Clock uses the heavy hammer as the power source, and the mechanical transmission drives the mechanism to indicate the time, and beats the specially-made "clock" to report the time. This type of Outdoor Clock has a large structure and poor precision, and it only exists in ancient buildings.
The structure of the Outdoor Clock is generally of two types: mechanical and electromechanical.
The needle-moving system of the electromechanical Outdoor Clock is mechanical, and the control system is in the form of a sub-master clock. The Outdoor Clock is a sub-clock, which receives the electric pulse signal periodically issued by the high-precision master clock, drives the movement mechanism to indicate the time through the stepping (or synchronous) motor, and runs synchronously with the master clock. The chime bell or music is sent by audio tape or program control.
The control system of modern quartz Outdoor Clocks has been developed to use microcomputer control. This control system is small in size and has many functions. The Outdoor Clock is highly automated and easy to grasp and maintain.






