Chrome Neptune Clock on Plinth
Our Neptune range instruments have chunky cast brass casings, 5" in diameter and either lacquered or chrome plated, with bevelled glass fronts. They can either be screwed to a wall... Read More
£95.00
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95.00
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Personalised Product Information
£0.00 per line for up to 50 characters including space per line (max 6 lines).
Additional characters £0.00 each
Express delivery will take an extra day for all personalised products.
to order please enter the full address within the personalisation boxes that you wish to be at the centre, including postcode. Please note:we cannot personalise this item with a chosen name. Personalisation boxes are for address details only, which are to be used for the Quad Map print. Blueeye
Additional characters £0.00 each
Express delivery will take an extra day for all personalised products.
to order please enter the full address within the personalisation boxes that you wish to be at the centre, including postcode. Please note:we cannot personalise this item with a chosen name. Personalisation boxes are for address details only, which are to be used for the Quad Map print. Blueeye
Details
Our Neptune range instruments have chunky cast brass casings, 5" in diameter and either lacquered or chrome plated, with bevelled glass fronts. They can either be screwed to a wall or bulkhead or mounted on a choice of mahogany or black-stained hardwood plinths for desktop use. Clocks are quartz movement, requiring 1xAA battery. Barometers have aneroid movements and show pressure in inches and millibars. Single display plinths are 6" wide, double display plinths are 12" wide, and overall height is 7".

Chrome Plated
Chromium plating is an electroplating technique to apply a thin layer of chromium onto a metal object to provide a resistance to corrosion and make cleaning easier as well as for decorative effect.

Quartz Movement
Quartz (silicon dioxide) crystals possess the remarkable property of oscillating at a very regular and predictable frequency when subjected to an electrical current. The first commercially available clocks to exploit this appeared in the late 1920s, and went on to supersede mechanical movements thanks to their accuracy and reduced need for maintenance.
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