The striker inside a bell is called a "clapper." The clapper is typically a metal or wooden piece that strikes the bell when it swings, producing sound. In some bells, especially smaller ones, the clapper is fixed inside, while in larger bells, it may be free to move.
Cub Stricker is 5 feet 3 inches tall. He weighs 138 pounds. He bats right and throws right.
Big Ben, although to be strictly accurate, Big Ben is actually the 14 ton bell inside the clock tower.
Big Ben, nickname of the main bell, officially called the Great Bell, weighs 13.7 tons.
Its name comes from the largest bell in the clock tower, The Great Bell. It was nicknamed after Sir Benjamin Hall, a politician of the time and commissioner of works, whose name is inscribed on a plaque on The Great Bell. The Clock Tower is often erroneously referred to as Big Ben, but is actually called... Clock Tower.
Big Ben is the name of a bell in a clock. The clocktower forms part of the Palace of Westminster.
clapper
A clapper.
The metal pendulum inside a bell is called a clapper. It strikes the sides of the bell to produce sound when the bell is rung.
It's called a 'clapper'
The part of the bell that makes the sound is called the clapper. This is the hanging piece inside the bell that strikes its sides to create the ringing sound.
The nob is called a clapper. It is a part of a bell that moves inside the bell to create the ringing sound when struck against the sides.
morientes
The ball in the middle of a bell is called a "clapper." It is the component that strikes the bell to produce sound when the bell is rung. The clapper swings back and forth inside the bell, creating vibrations that generate the characteristic ringing sound.
The striker inside a bell is called a "clapper." The clapper swings back and forth when the bell is struck, producing sound. It is typically made of a dense material, such as metal, to ensure a clear and resonant tone when it hits the bell's interior.
Salomon Stricker died in 1898.
Salomon Stricker was born in 1834.
Robert Stricker died in 1944.