Escapement - definizione. Che cos'è Escapement
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Cosa (chi) è Escapement - definizione

MECHANISM IN CLOCKS
Cylinder escapement; Escapements; Spring detent escapement; Escapement gear; Detent escapement; Liquid-driven escapement; Mechanical escapement; Mechanical escapements; Cross beat escapement; Crossbeat escapement; Cross-beat escapement; Pinwheel escapement; Duplex escapement; Gravity escapement; Constant escapement; Electromechanical escapement; Electromechanical escapements; Hipp clock; Escapement mechanism; Kommahemmung
  • Animation of [[anchor escapement]], widely used in [[pendulum clock]]s
  • Animation of anchor escapement
  • Duplex escapement, showing (A) escape wheel, (B) locking tooth, (C) impulse tooth, (D) pallet, (E) ruby disk. The pallet and disk are attached to the balance wheel arbor, but the wheel is not shown.
  • page=108}}</ref> showing: (a) escape wheel (b) pallets (c) pendulum crutch.
  • Double three-legged gravity escapement
  • South Mymms]] tower clock
  • Illustration of the Constant Escapement by Girard-Perregaux
  • Animation of a verge escapement

Escapement         
·noun Way of escape; vent.
II. Escapement ·noun The act of escaping; escape.
III. Escapement ·noun The contrivance in a timepiece which connects the train of wheel work with the pendulum or balance, giving to the latter the impulse by which it is kept in vibration;
- so called because it allows a tooth to escape from a pallet at each vibration.
escapement         
[?'ske?pm(?)nt, ?-]
¦ noun
1. a mechanism in a clock or watch that connects and regulates the motive power.
2. a mechanism in a typewriter that shifts the carriage a small fixed amount to the left after a key is pressed and released.
3. the part of the mechanism in a piano that enables the hammer to fall back as soon as it has struck the string.
Origin
C18: from Fr. echappement, from echapper 'to escape'.
Escapement         
An escapement is a mechanical linkage in mechanical watches and clocks that gives impulses to the timekeeping element and periodically releases the gear train to move forward, advancing the clock's hands. The impulse action transfers energy to the clock's timekeeping element (usually a pendulum or balance wheel) to replace the energy lost to friction during its cycle and keep the timekeeper oscillating.

Wikipedia

Escapement

An escapement is a mechanical linkage in mechanical watches and clocks that gives impulses to the timekeeping element and periodically releases the gear train to move forward, advancing the clock's hands. The impulse action transfers energy to the clock's timekeeping element (usually a pendulum or balance wheel) to replace the energy lost to friction during its cycle and keep the timekeeper oscillating. The escapement is driven by force from a coiled spring or a suspended weight, transmitted through the timepiece's gear train. Each swing of the pendulum or balance wheel releases a tooth of the escapement's escape wheel, allowing the clock's gear train to advance or "escape" by a fixed amount. This regular periodic advancement moves the clock's hands forward at a steady rate. At the same time, the tooth gives the timekeeping element a push, before another tooth catches on the escapement's pallet, returning the escapement to its "locked" state. The sudden stopping of the escapement's tooth is what generates the characteristic "ticking" sound heard in operating mechanical clocks and watches.

The first mechanical escapement, the verge escapement, was invented in medieval Europe during the 13th century, and was the crucial innovation which led to the development of the mechanical clock. The design of the escapement has a large effect on a timepiece's accuracy, and improvements in escapement design drove improvements in time measurement during the era of mechanical timekeeping from the 13th through the 19th century.

Escapements are also used in other mechanisms besides timepieces. Manual typewriters used escapements to step the carriage as each letter (or space) was typed. Historically, a liquid-driven escapement was used for a washstand design in ancient Greece and the Hellenistic world, particularly Ptolemaic Egypt, while liquid-driven escapements were applied to clockworks beginning in Tang dynasty China and culminating during the Song dynasty.