It moves faster.
The pointer is lose.
It is torsion and tension while tightening, and pure tension when tightened
To slow down a swinging clock pendulum, one must make it longer. In mechanical clocks, the majority of the mass of the pendulum is contained in the "bob" (a disk or weight) usually at the bottom of the pendulum. If you lower the pendulum bob, the pendulum is lengthened and the pendulum runs slower. This is usually done by turning a nut on a threaded portion of the pendulum just below the bob. Make sure the bob drops as you lower the nut or nothing will change. To raise the rate of the pendulum (make it run faster), you just turn the nut the opposite way.
If it assembled into a tapped hole, it is a screw. It is tightened (torqued) at the head. If it used witha nut, it is a bolt. It is tightened (torqued) at the nut. Otherwise, it is the same piece of hardware, only the use is different
No
There is no specific pinion nut torque. The pinion nut has to be tightened until the proper pinion preload is established. Pinion preload is what matters
21mm tightened to 76 ft. lbs.
There is a nut on the bottom of the pendulum to adjust the speed. Turning it clockwise speeds it up, counter clockwise slows it down
Rust Over tightened nut Cross threaded nut Defective stud Impact Metal fatigue
its actually called a castle nut, it only works on the right type of bolt, once its tightened on just simply push the pin(it should come with a pin)through the nut and bolt and it locks in place.
the wiper is held on by a nut where the arm pivots most likely the nut ont the non moving arm needs to be tightened there is a cap covering the nut remove the cap and tighten the nut when you have the arm in the proper posistion
To build a homemade pendulum, you will need a weight (such as a metal bolt or nut) attached to a string or wire. The weight should be suspended so it can swing freely. You can create a stand to hold the pendulum and mark positions for it to swing from to observe its movement. It's important to ensure the length of the string and the weight of the pendulum are consistent for accurate results.