This Seth Thomas electric Westminster chime clock was badly worn! I think someone cleaned the movement without taking it apart, and the resulting rust acted as an abrasive, wearing away the arbors (shafts). The photo below shows the mainspring barrels when I received the clock:
I replaced the following badly worn parts: C1 (chime main arbor), S1 (strike main arbor), chime mainspring barrel, strike mainspring barrel, strike mainspring (rusty and broken), T5 and T6 (time gears number 5 and 6). T5 had the tips worn off the teeth, T6 had bad tooth wear.
This clock uses the reliable Sangamo motor. I cleaned and lubricated the motor, and it runs very quietly. See my post Seth Thomas Falcon Electric Clock, Made in 1940 for photos of the Sangamo motor.
Job 6381. I polished the pivots and installed 20 bushings. This movement is like a Seth Thomas No. 124 movement that is electric instead of windup. The motor continuously winds two small mainsprings, one for the quarter-hour chime, and one for the hour strike. Each mainspring has a brace end that lets it slip around the barrel so it won’t overwind. I adjusted the braces so that the strike mainspring winds 7 turns before slipping, and 6 1/2 turns before slipping for the chime mainspring. Around 6 to 7 1/2 turns is good. If the spring winds fully before slipping (9 or more turns) it will put excessive pressure on the gears.
These old Sangamo motors are great! The only weak point is the wires – the attachment to the coil is fragile on some, and they can break off.
The movement has the date code 1-49 (January 1949).