Build Your Own Handbell Tree From Off-the-Shelf Parts - E-book - ePub

Edition en anglais

Note moyenne 
 D. Rod Lloyd - Build Your Own  Handbell Tree  From Off-the-Shelf Parts.
Make your own handbell tree from off-the-shelf parts available at any home store for about $60. This complete set of details instructions guides you step... Lire la suite
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Résumé

Make your own handbell tree from off-the-shelf parts available at any home store for about $60. This complete set of details instructions guides you step by step in buying the parts and putting it together. Just take the manual to the store, and they will help you pick out the parts. There is a picture of each part to make it foolproof. When you get home, just screw it together and off you go. The only tools you will need are a drill and a wrench.
Three different designs to choose from

Caractéristiques

  • Date de parution
    14/01/2023
  • Editeur
  • ISBN
    8215540374
  • EAN
    9798215540374
  • Format
    ePub
  • Caractéristiques du format ePub
    • Protection num.
      pas de protection

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À propos de l'auteur

Biographie de D. Rod Lloyd

As a kid, whenever I saw an old clock at a jumble sale or going cheap, I would buy it and take it apart to see how it worked. I don't think I ever got one back together again, but I enjoyed tinkering with them. Twenty years later when I was getting married, now living in the USA, Auntie Florrie wrote to me saying I could now have my Grandfathers clock. I arranged to have the clock shipped over and it was proudly placed in the entrance hall to my home.
It was built in about 1880 in Maghull England by a local clockmaker, [before the electric light was invented], had a stately mahogany case, hand-painted dial and ran nicely. After a few years, it stopped. I was frustrated that I didn't know what was wrong with it or how to get it going. I ended up having it serviced by a local repair shop and it ran again. I was fascinated with the clock. In 1995, my family decided to spend a year in England including putting the kids in school.
It was a big challenge to arrange to swap houses with an English family. Finally, we were settled, and the kids started school, my wife was volunteering at a local charity shop and suddenly I had time on my hands. I read the paper that morning and came across an ad for a clock course starting nearby at Manchester City College. I called the college and they told me it was a three-year course, one day per week.
I explained I was only in the country for one year, so I persuaded them to let me take the course, coming all three days. I enjoyed the course and did very well. The final exam took several weeks, making a 'suspension bridge' from scratch to exact specifications, restoring several old clocks and watches. I documented the process and took the extensive final written exam all set by BHI [British Horological Institute].
I did pass the exams and became a Horologist. 25 years later I teach clock repair classes and 'pass it on'. This is the class workbook.

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