After converting 3-4 F clocks to japanese quartz movements — ( not easy , remote D battery , lots of improv to use old hands etc , the setting knob ends up behind clock , no EL lighting on hands— see Timesavers web site) —I decided to look this time more at the nice looking stock clock . I had never seen one working right even after a clock guy “fixed “ one for me long ago for 150$ etc . lasted a month . I was prompted by opening one in perfect shape from a low mileage car , but not working at all . Thinking is , once balance wheel and second hand is running rest of it is geared down highly reduced speed high torque should all work .And all brass , should not rust etc So —I found out a problem ,present in all of them . When contact to wind the spring drive closes every few minutes , it literally “ throws “ a wheel and spring rather violently back to stretch the spring and run clock ; I had noticed in the past that the long arm (not the spring side of this set up ) mounted on the drive coil hinge was often flailing around inside but it worked again — if re positioned right . Careful inspection : there is a little brass flap (square thing in picture 1) supposed to limit back recoil of that long piece , —-the stop flap soon bends at food crease (!) after thousands of hits and then the arm swings way out ( instead of 1/4” it should move ) so it will never wind again . Even worse it hits a brass mount post in the clock and being live turns on the coil steady which blows fuse . aha !! I bent brass flap back to stop it , clock works! But within an hour it bent again . Fatigued thin brass ! a design error. Flap is too weak . So I added a 1/4” x 2/56 screw as a backup stop by drilling a tiny hole in phenolic back and tapping . (picture 2) Clock running 3 days perfect time . Went on line about ? oil balance wheel or not . Some dissension but 80/20 yes with lightest mobil 1 or watch oil . A tiny drop on tip of a wire . Does not impact time , but can impact first start up from off . Saw that . Second : surprising — very high current pulse but extremely short —- 4 amps , maybe 1/100 second — comparable to ignition point current . Average draw is very low , thousandths of amp . Arm has no contact protection , standard fare now in relay EE .... as no small diodes were around at design time in 50’s so I added an arc suppression diode ( 1 N4007 ) across the coil , will extend contact life 25x ! There will be no more arc , picture 3 . Polarity critical , bar or cathode end of diode goes to inlet + 12 v — solder there , other end to solder tab on the drive coil end . I really wish I had looked carefully long ago , instead of “ they are always junk clocks “ “ never work” I was wrong .. adjusted nothing , accurate within 30 seconds after 3 days . One more thing working well ! John G Sent from my iPhone not by choice -- For archives go to http://www.forwardlook.net/300-archive/search.htm#querylang --- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "Chrysler 300 Club International" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to chrysler-300-club-international+unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/chrysler-300-club-international/3350B37F-E226-40B8-BE67-A243FD9C4179%40gradyresearch.com.