Posted 7 years ago
rlwindle
(151 items)
The Television division of the Pennwood Corporation produced six ships wheel clocks between 1945 and 1955, models 951, 952 Ships Wheel, , 955 The Catalina, and 956 The Nautilus. The 951 models feature a small vignette, the most common of these are a New York Harbor, and a Florida Coastline Scene (picture one), The third 951 model is the rarest it features a Hawaiian beach scene with Hula dancer and a fishing boat with people at a Luau on the beach. For some unknown reason known only to Pennwood they did not manufacture many of these Hawaiian beach clocks, they rarely come up for auction, the one in the second picture is the first one I have every seen on eBay so I bought it, when they do, they are not in good shape usually, thus mine,
The 952 Ships Wheel, , 955 The Catalina (Advertisement in picture 3), and 956, The Nautilus (picture 4) are pretty generic plain brass clocks with or without wooden bases. I own two of Nautilus models, one the one pictured in picture 4 was a presentation piece. Some of these clocks feature "Glolite" a lighted readout. The Nautilus, model 956, is a weather station also featuring a barometer and a thermometer on each side of the clock.
Copyright 2018 RLW
RLW, I like these clocks. Have to go on the hunt again.
Dave
pw-collector, good luck Dave.
Hello. Thanks for this post. I recently found one of these on ebay listed as 'parts only'. Opened it up cleaned it up wired it up and seems to run just fine and keeps time well. One thing I noticed before I put it back together, the motor seems to get awful hot after a couple hours and since it will be housed inside this metal enclosure with no real ventilation - I was wondering if that was normal and thought maybe you might has some input on the subject. TIA for any info you can share.
The motors are fine and they do get hot, if you want, place a thin piece of aluminum (not foil) next to the motor to dissipate the heat.
RLW
I think I may have a 951