John Harrison's H1 chronometer. A wooden working replica
A 3/4 scale model of John Harrison's first sea clock of 1735 known as H1. It is made largely in wood and retains many of the innovative features in his original clock that made it the wonder of the age and led on to the development of his other clocks. His 4th timepiece satisfied the Board of Longitude that its accuracy was sufficient to find longitude at sea and thus qualify for the £20,000 prize. Further information can be found at www.woodenclockspot.blogspot.com

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Larcum Kendall 'K1' - Captain Cook's historic chronometer watch at Greenwich – With the BHI

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Clocktime: John Harrison Wooden Regulator Longcase 1726, 05 The Movement

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COMITTI - The Navigator Clock

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A Detailed Study of H4 - John Harrison's Longitude Timekeeper Reconstruction

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A wooden Perpetual Calendar from a design by Dr.Ludwig Oechslin

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The Medieval Clock That Changed Time Forever

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Clocktime: John Harrison Wooden Regulator Longcase 1726, 02 The Dial & Case

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Trump Gets Booed and Falls Asleep at NBA Finals, Spreads Deranged CA Election Lies: A Closer Look

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The longitude problem: history's deadliest riddle

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A model of the remontoire action on John Harrisons longitude watch H4

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making of.mp4

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How Did The Chronometer Change The World? (John Harrison Marine Chronometer & The Longitude Problem)

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The Marine Chronometer and John Harrison - a brief history

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John Arnold's Marine Timekeeper #4

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The Longitude Problem - Improving Navigation with the Harrison Clocks

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Clocktime: John Harrison Wooden Regulator Longcase 1726, 04 Gridiron Pendulum

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John Harrison’s Secret Battle With Invisible Physics

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The Clock That Changed the World (BBC History of the World)

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From Weights to Chimes: The Inner Workings of a Grandfather Clock

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