When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: clock dial

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Clock face - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clock_face

    A second type of clock face is the 24-hour analog dial, widely used in military and other organizations that use 24-hour time. This is similar to the 12-hour dial above, except it has hours numbered 1–24 (or 0–23) around the outside, and the hour hand makes only one revolution per day.

  3. 24-hour analog dial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24-hour_analog_dial

    The 24-hour analog dial continued to be used, but primarily by technicians, astronomers, scientists, and clockmakers. John Harrison, Thomas Tompion, and Mudge [7] built a number of clocks with 24-hour analog dials, particularly when building astronomical and nautical instruments. 24-hour dials were also used on sidereal clocks.

  4. Radium dial - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Radium_dial

    Radium dials are watch, clock and other instrument dials painted with luminous paint containing radium-226 to produce radioluminescence. Radium dials were produced throughout most of the 20th century before being replaced by safer tritium -based luminous material in the 1970s and finally by non-toxic, non-radioactive strontium aluminate ...

  5. Clock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clock

    Early clock dials did not indicate minutes and seconds. A clock with a dial indicating minutes was illustrated in a 1475 manuscript by Paulus Almanus, [48] and some 15th-century clocks in Germany indicated minutes and seconds. [49] An early record of a seconds hand on a clock dates back to about 1560 on a clock now in the Fremersdorf collection.

  6. 24-hour clock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/24-hour_clock

    The Prague Astronomical Clock struck according to the Old Bohemian Clock until its destruction in 1945. The variant with counting from dawn is also rarely documented and used, e.g. on a 16th-century cabinet clock in the Vienna Art-History Museum. [14] German (Gallic) hours (half-dial): 2×12 hour system starting at midnight and restarted at noon.

  7. Dial (measurement) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dial_(measurement)

    A wall clock with three dials. A dial is generally a flat surface, circular or rectangular, with numbers or similar markings on it, used for displaying the setting or output of a timepiece, radio, clock, watch, or measuring instrument. [1] Many scientific and industrial instruments use dials with pointers to indicate physical properties.