Frisien Tail Clock Dua bandul. Berbunyi tiap 30
menit . Merk Warmink , Wuba.
Mesin buatan Kieninger Jerman. Tertulis J A K ,Original
Kieninger. Made in Jerman .
Frisien Tail Clock , bandul ditarik mingguan,
Total panjang 115 cm.
Klik : http://youtu.be/bdefONgAsXI
T E R J U A L
Klik : http://youtu.be/bdefONgAsXI
T E R J U A L
A History of Kieninger
The beginning
Joseph Kieninger
established Kieninger clocks in June 1912, in Mönchweiler near St.
Georgen. There, he built technical drives and timers which were mainly used for
gas lamps to light the street. Unskilled workers, mostly farmers from nearby,
produced the parts, and then skilled workers assembled the movements.
Joseph Kieninger was from the
beginning very focused on producing mechanisms of the highest quality and in
fact before any mechanism left the factory Joseph personally inspected it
himself. The reliability and quality of the products led to a an increase in
demand for Kieninger clocks and by January 1913, the company employed 18
workers.
Very quickly the premises in
Mönchweiler became too small and the search was on to find the right location
which would allow the company to expand. In 1917 Joseph Kieninger
discovered a site in the “Saarstraße” which would allow them to expand as the
need arose. It was in 1921 that the new factory went into production and
the business continued to grow with the need to add another building in 1927.
Josephs sons (Fritz, Josef &
Wilhelm) were working alongside him in the company and in 1930 thanks to
Wilhelm Kieninger, the company developed the H-series mechanism which although
has been refined and had additional features added, is still similar to the
high precision H-movement which is produced today. A significant feature
of the movement produced in 1930 was that it had an automatic strike
regulator.
In 1932 Kieninger started to produce
precision measuring instruments for the company Carl Mahr in Esslingen.
The requirement was for instruments with extreme precision and Kieninger were
in a great position to be able to produce these. The extra work from this
contract allowed Kieninger to stay in business during the Second World War as
precision instruments were used in the production of armaments.
In 1936 Joseph Kieninger died and
the running of the company fell to the three sons and despite the difficult
conditions created by the war the company continued to produce clocks of high
quality and by 1939 was employing 78 people. Throughout the war period
Kieninger continued to sell clocks to customers in both Germany and Northern
Europe.
After the war there was a shortage
of materials for a few years, however, by 1948 the economic situation had
started to improve. Germany was building lots of new properties and thus
the need for furniture and more importantly clocks increased. Furthermore
the clocks which Kieninger produced were being exported to over 50 countries
and as a result by 1960 the company was employing over 150 workers.
The range of clocks produced was
vast from tradition to modern designs including the first battery operated
movement.
During the 60s the next generation
of the Kieninger family joined the company with Gottfried Kieninger (Josef's
son) taking over as the commercial manager in 1962. Wilhelm Kieninger’s
son Gerhard Kieninger, took over the engineering and his brother Rudolf joined
the company in 1969.
Difficult times were ahead however
and although 1974 was a great year for the company which now employed 200
people, in 1975 things started to change as the German economy dramatically
contracted along with the world economy. Kieninger had to reduced the
precision instrument making side of the business and decided to focus on the
production of clocks.
Changing Times
In the 1970's quartz clocks were
being produced on a large scale and as a result many of the German clock
companies shifted to producing quartz clocks. However, as cheap quartz
movements were being produced in the Far East many of these companies were
forced to close.
Kieninger managed to survive the
difficult times with the production of electronic precision measuring
instruments for the company Feinprüf in Göttingen in 1976 and through
developing new high quality movements such as the HT-caliber chain movement
with Westminster chime on tubular gongs.
Also in that year Kieninger
developed the „Vienna Laterndl” cable regulator – a high-quality clock which
followed closely to the design of the original Vienna clocks. This stunning
clock was in great demand and very quickly 1000 of these clocks were
manufactured and sold all over world.
What was significant about this
mechanism, was that the weights now hung on bronze cables rather than the
traditional chains. Today it remains that many of the Kieninger clocks
have cable mechanisms.
In 1977 Kieninger also produced a high quality
triple chime mechanism which is still very popular today. The highly
polished bells are made by hand on a diamond lathe and carefully tuned to
produced a delightful sound
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